⊕ PSYCHOLOGY | SEXUALITY
THE INVENTION
OF
'HETEROSEXUALITY'
One hundred years ago, people had a very different idea of what it means to be heterosexual. Understanding that shift in thinking can tell us a lot about fluid sexual identities today. |
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While heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity, the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is a very recent invention (Credit: Getty Images)
Oscar Wilde's trial for 'gross indecency' is often considered a pivotal moment in the formation of the gay identity (Credit: Alamy)
Karl Maria Kertbeny created the label 'heterosexual" (Credit: Wikimedia Commons)
It was only at the turn of the 20th Century that thinkers began to divorce sexual desire (depicted here in Rodin's The Kiss) from reproduction (Credit: Alamy)
The anonymity of city life in the 19th Century was often blamed for freer - and more 'immoral' - sexual behaviour (Credit: Alamy)
Alfred Kinsey (centre) may have relaxed the taboo around sex, but his reports reaffirmed the existing categories of homosexual and heterosexual behaviour (Credit: Getty Images)
The writer James Baldwin balked at defining people as straight or gay, arguing that "it answers a false argument, a false accusation" (Credit: Alamy)
As gay rights are increasingly recognised, many people also describe their sexual desires as lying on a spectrum (Credit: Alamy)
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