Masters points out that the heterosexuals were at a disadvantage, as they do not benefit from what he called “gender empathy.” Doing unto your partner as you would do unto yourself only works well when you’re gay. “Since rapid forceful stroking was the pattern of choice during male masturbation,” Masters wrote, “it was also a consistent pattern during the male’s manipulation of his female partner’s clitoris.” The lesbians’ lighter touch was “generally the more acceptable….” For no doubt similar reasons, the straight women, their husbands told the researchers, “did not grasp the shaft of the penis tightly enough.”
But the empathy gap is not insurmountable. One has only to speak one’s mind. The other hugely important difference Masters and Johnson found between the heterosexual and homosexual couples was that the gay couples talked far more easily, often, and openly about what they did and didn’t enjoy. Gay men and women simply seemed more comfortable in the world of sex. Masters gives the example of the heterosexual men’s finger insertions: “Though many heterosexual women evidenced little pleasure…and were obviously distracted by [it],…only twice did they ask their husbands to desist.”
It seems to me that heterosexuals have come a long way since 1979. The media’s ubiquitous coverage of sex and sex research—as well as the genesis and population explosion of TV, radio, and newspaper sex advisors—have chipped away at the taboos that kept couples from talking openly with each other about the sex they were having. Bit by bit, sex research has unraveled the hows, whys, why-nots, and how-betters of arousal and orgasm. The more the researchers and the sexperts and the reporters talked about sex, the easier it became for everyone else to. As communication eases and knowledge grows, inhibitions dissolve and confidence takes root.
Sadly, the main thing people recall about
Homosexuality in Perspective
, if they recall anything at all, is that Masters and Johnson spent the second half of the book touting a therapy for helping homosexuals convert to heterosexuality. The team went out of their way to assure readers that they screened clients carefully, accepting only those who had turned to homosexuality after a traumatic experience with heterosexuality (rape or abuse, for instance). They insisted that no gay man or woman who came to them for therapy was ever pressured or encouraged to pursue heterosexuality. However, as one critic pointed out, many should probably have been encouraged
not
to pursue it.
But let’s give Masters and Johnson their due. And while we’re at it, Alfred Kinsey and Robert Latou Dickinson and Old Dad and everyone else in these pages. The laboratory study of sex has never been an easy, safe, or well-paid undertaking. Study by study, the gains may seem small and occasionally silly, but the aggregation of all that has been learned, the lurching tango of academe and popular culture, has led us to a happier place. Hats and pants off to you all.
acknowledgments
s
ex research is a little like sex in that most people who engage in it are more comfortable without an audience. The researchers who invited me into their labs did so at the peril of their funding, their privacy, their academic standing, their sanity. For saying “yes” when “no” was the sensible answer, I am deeply grateful to Jing Deng, Anne Marie Hedeboe, Geng-Long Hsu, Barry Komisaruk, Roy Levin, Ken Maravilla, Ahmed Shafik, Marcalee Sipski, and Margot Yehia. I am extravagantly indebted to Kim Wallen for his contributions to not one, but two, chapters, and to Cindy Meston, my sex research swami, for all the help, hospitality, and hilarity.
For graciously enduring my demands on their time, I thank Kim Airs, Jennifer Bass, Irwin Goldstein, Stephanie Mann, Robert Nachtigall, Michael Perelman, Anne Pigue, Carol Queen, Harold Reed, Arlene Shaner, Ira Sharlip, Marty Tucker, and Alice Wen.
This is my third book with W. W. Norton, and there is good reason for that. The list of Norton folks to whom I’m indebted is practically their phone directory. Boldface must be applied to a few of those names: Jill Bialosky, whose editing pencil should be bronzed should she ever retire (an event I will do everything in my power to prevent); Erin Lovett and Winfrida Mbewe, who make me feel bad for every author whose book is launched by someone else; and Bill Rusin, a man born to sell books. I thank you all for your commitment, creativity, and enthusiasm.
Beyond the halls of Norton, praises must ring for photo curator Deirdre O’Dwyer. My agent, Jay Mandel, deserves another 15 percent, and my husband, Ed, deserves a medal.
bibliography
Foreplay
Allgeier, Elizabeth Rice. “The Personal Perils of Sex Researchers: Vern Bullough and William Masters.”
SIECUS Report,
March 1984, pp. 16–19.
one | The Sausage, the Porcupine, and the Agreeable Mrs. G.
Boas, Ernst P., and Ernst. F. Goldschmidt.
The Heart Rate.
Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas, 1932.
Buckley, Kerry W.
Mechanical Man: John Broadus Watson and the Beginnings of Behaviorism.
New York: Guilford Press, 1989.
Cohen, David.
J. B. Watson, the Founder of Behaviorism: A Biography
. London, Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979.
Dickinson, Robert Latou.
Atlas of Human Sex Anatomy.
Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1949.
Gathorne-Hardy, Jonathan.
Sex: The Measure of All Things.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2000.
Jones, James H.
Alfred C. Kinsey: A Public/Private Life
. New York: W. W. Norton, 1997.
Kinsey, Alfred C., et al.
Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.
Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, 1953.
Klumbies, G., and H. Kleinsorge. “Circulatory Dangers & Prophylaxis During Orgasm.” In
Sex, Society and the Individual
. Bombay: International Journal of Sexology, 1953.
Magoun, H. W. “John B. Watson and the Study of Human Sexual Behavior.”
Journal of Sex Research
17 (4): 368–378 (1981).
Masters, William H., and Virginia E. Johnson.
Human Sexual Response.
Boston: Little, Brown, 1966.
Pomeroy, Wardell.
Dr. Kinsey and the Institute for Sex Research.
New York: Harper & Row, 1972.
two | Dating the Penis-Camera
Alzate, Heli, and Maria Ladi Londoño. “Vaginal Erotic Sensitivity.”
Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy
10 (1): 49–57 (1984).
Archibald, Timothy.
Sex Machines: Photographs and Interviews.
Los Angeles: Daniel 13/Process, 2005.
Frank, Robert T. “The Formation of an Artificial Vagina Without Operation.”
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
14: 712–718 (1927).
Levins, Hoag.
American Sex Machines: The Hidden History of Sex at the U.S. Patent Office.
Holbrook, Mass.: Adams Media, 1996.
Tiefer, Leonore. “Historical, Scientific, Clinical, and Feminist Criticisms of ‘The Human Sexual Response Cycle’ Model.”
Annual Review of Sex Research
2: 1–23 (1991).
three | The Princess and Her Pea
Barker-Benfield, Ben. “Sexual Surgery in Late-Nineteenth-Century America.”
International Journal of Health Services
5 (2): 279–298 (1975).
Bertin, Celia.
Marie Bonaparte, A Life.
New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982.
Bonaparte, Marie. “Les Deux Frigidités de la Femme.”
Bulletin de la société de sexologie
1: 161–170 (1932).
Fisher, C. M. “Phantom Erection After Amputation of Penis.”
Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences
26 (1): 53–56 (1999).
Freud, Sigmund.
New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis
. New York: W. W. Norton, 1965.
Hoch, Zwi. “Vaginal Erotic Sensitivity by Sexological Examination.”
Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica
65: 767–773 (1986).
Levin, R. J. “Wet and Dry Sex—The Impact of Cultural Influence in Modifying Vaginal Function.”
Sexual and Relationship Therapy
20 (4): 465–474 (2005).
———. “VIP, Vagina, Clitoral and Periurethral Glans—An Update on Human Female Genital Arousal.”
Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology
98 (2): 61–69 (1991).
Lewis, Carolyn Herbst. “Waking Sleeping Beauty: The Premarital Pelvic Exam and Heterosexuality During the Cold War.”
Journal of Women’s History
17 (4): 87–110 (2005).
Lloyd, Jillian, et al. “Female Genital Appearance: ‘Normality’ Unfolds.”
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
112: 643–646.
Mondaini, N., et al. “Penile Length Is Normal in Most Men Seeking Penile Lengthening Procedures.”
International Journal of Impotence Research
14: 283–286 (2002).
Narjani, A. E. [Marie Bonaparte]. “Considérations sur les causes anatomiques de la frigidité chez la femme.”
Bruxelles-Médical
No. 42, Ap. 27: 768–778 (1924).
Neuhaus, Jessamyn. “The Importance of Being Orgasmic: Sexuality, Gender, and Marital Sex Manuals in the United States, 1920–1963.”
Journal of the History of Sexuality
9 (4): 447–473 (2000).
Velde, Theodoor H. van de.
Ideal Marriage
. New York: Random House, 1930.
Zeigerman, Joseph H., and Jay Gillenwater. “Coitus per Urethram and the Rigid Hymen.”
Journal of the American Medical Association
194 (8): 167–168 (1965).
four | The Upsuck Chronicles
Beck, Joseph. “How Do the Spermatozoa Enter the Uterus?”
American Journal of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children
VII (3): 353–395 (1874).
Fox, C. A., and Beatrice Fox. “A Comparative Study of Coital Physiology, with Special Reference to the Sexual Climax.”
Journal of Reproduction and Fertility
24: 319–336 (1971).
Gallup, Gordon G., Jr., Rebecca L. Burch, and Steven M. Platek. “Does Semen Have Antidepressant Properties?”
Archives of Sexual Behavior
31 (3): 289–293 (2002).
Goldfoot, D. A., et al. “Behavioral and Physiological Evidence of Sexual Climax in the Female Stump-Tailed Macaque.”
Science
208: 1477–1478 (1980).
Kinsey, Alfred C., Clyde E. Martin, and Wardell B. Pomeroy.
Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.
Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, 1948.
Kunz, G., et al. “The Dynamics of Rapid Sperm Transport Through the Female Genital Tract: Evidence from Vaginal Sonography of Uterine Peristalsis and Hysterosalpingoscintigraphy.”
Human Reproduction
11 (3): 627–632 (1996).
Levin, Roy J. “The Involvement of the Human Cervix in Reproduction and Sex.”
Sexual and Relationship Therapy
20 (2): 251–260 (2005).
———. “The Physiology of Sexual Arousal in the Human Female: A Recreational and Procreational Synthesis.”
Archives of Sexual Behavior
31 (5): 405–411 (2002).
Madsen, Mads Thor, Johnny Mathiasen, and Dorthe Rønn Olesen. “Effect of Human Stimulation of Sows on Oxytocin in the Blood During Artificial Insemination.” National Committee for Pig Production, Report No. 532, January 11, 2001.
Perry, Enos.
The Artificial Insemination of Farm Animals
. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1952.
Spallanzani, Lazzaro.
Dissertations Relative to the Natural History of Animals and Vegetables
. London: J. Murray, 1789.
Talmey, B. S. “Birth Control and the Physician.”
New York Medical Journal.
June 23, 1917, pp. 1185–1192.
VanDemark, N. L., and R. L. Hays. “Uterine Motility Responses to Mating.”
American Journal of Physiology
170: 518–552 (1952).
Yamonaka, Herbert S., and A. L. Soderwall. “Transport of Spermatozoa Through the Female Genital Tract of Hamsters.”
Fertility and Sterility
11: 470–474 (1960).
five | What’s Going On in There?
Deng, Jing, et al. “Real-Time Three-Dimensional Ultrasound Visualization of Erection and Artificial Coitus.”
International Journal of Andrology
29: 374–379 (2006).
Foldes, P., and O. Buisson. “Clitoris and G Spot: An Intimate Affair.”
Gynécologie obstétrique & fertilité
35: 3–5 (2007).
Gallup, Jr., Gordon, et al. “The Human Penis as a Semen Displacement Device.”
Evolution and Human Behavior
24 (4): 277–289 (2003).
Meizner, Israel. “Sonographic Observation of in Utero Fetal ‘Masturbation.’”
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine
6 (2): 111 (1987). Morris, A. G. “On the Sexual Intercourse Drawings of Leonardo da Vinci.”
South African Medical Journal
69: 510–513 (1986).
Sabelis, Ida. “To Make Love as a Testee.” Acceptance speech for 2000 Ig Nobel Prize. www.improbable.com/airchives/paperair/volume7/v7i1/sabel-speech-7-1.html.
Schultz, Willibrord Weijmar, et al. “Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Male and Female Genitals During Coitus and Female Sexual Arousal.”
British Medical Journal
319: 1596–1600 (1999).
six | The Taiwanese Fix and the Penile Pricking Ring
Berardinucci, D., et al. “Surgical Treatment of Penile Veno-Occlusive Dysfunction: Is It Justified?”
Urology
47 (1): 88–92 (1996).
Chen, Shyh-Chyan, et al. “The Progression of the Penile Vein: Could It Be Recurrent?”
Journal of Andrology
26 (1): 53–59 (2005).
Darmon, Pierre.
Trial by Impotence: Virility and Marriage in Pre-Revolutionary France.
London: Chatto & Windus, Hogarth Press, 1985.
Howe, Joseph W.
Excessive Venery, Masturbation, and Continence: The Etiology, Pathology, and Treatment of the Diseases Resulting from Venereal Excesses, Masturbation, and Continence.
New York: E. B. Treat, 1896.
Institoris, Heinrich.
Malleus Maleficarum.
New York: Benjamin Blom, 1970 (originally published 1491).
Levin, R. J. “Masturbation and Nocturnal Emissions: Possible Mechanisms for Minimising Teratozoospermie and Hyperspermie in Man.”
Medical Hypotheses
1: 130–131 (1975).