SEXUALITY DEFINED IN SUMMARY

Given the extremely diverse nature of society and the many different cultures which have influenced our own values and sexual morality, it would be an oversimplification to draw any direct parallel between the cultures of the past and contemporary sex life in America. Much has been made of the impact of Victorianism on our own sexual attitudes; and at least up until the last thirty years, it is probably the case that the public morality of mainstream America is most accurately described in Victorian terms. Certainly, ours has been a sexually repressed society, and much of this can be attributed to the influence of the Victorian era. But, as we have seen, the Victorians did not introduce the double standard between men and women. The origin of this custom is lost in antiquity and can be traced back at least as far as the Old Testament. Similarly the sanctity of marriage as the proper and only place for sex has an equally long and complex history. The manner in which we define sexual deviance and our social and legal efforts to control sexual misconduct today are not unlike social mechanisms in a number of ancient cultures. Victorianism then did not initiate these values and customs it merely lent its particular stamp of approval (or disapproval) to these practices.

In the final analysis, our culture now provides for a very wide latitude of individual expression. Obviously, there are those who are heavily influenced by Protestant values, Catholic values, Jewish values, etc.; and a case may even be made that there are elements in our society who share the values reflected by the ancient Greeks.

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Men's Health-Erectile Dysfunction