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The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States
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1995
Year
HomosexualityUnited StatesSocial SciencesSexual CommunicationSexual CulturesGender IdentityGender StudiesMonogamous SexSocial OrganizationIntersectionalitySexual PracticesAlternative SexualitySexual RightSexual BehaviorSexual HealthSociologySexual IdentitySexual OrientationHuman Sexuality
This survey of sexual practices in the United States has been combed by the media for items of interest to the public: monogamous sex is much more widespread in this country than has been thought; infidelity is less frequent than presumed; vaginal intercourse is the defining experience of heterosexual behavior; watching one's partner undress is stimulating to many people; married couples have more sex than single people (unmarried, cohabiting couples have the most sex of all); the majority of couples experience sex twice a week to several times a month; 2.8% of men identify themselves as homosexual and 1.4% of women do so, but a higher percentage of people consider a same-gender experience to have some appeal; 75% of men always experience orgasm compared with 28.6% of women, but more nearly equal numbers of men and women declare themselves satisfied with their sexual experiences. The book is, in fact, a