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Sexual Behavior in the Human Male [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 824 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, kaal: 1306 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-May-1998
  • Kirjastus: Indiana University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0253334128
  • ISBN-13: 9780253334121
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 824 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, kaal: 1306 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-May-1998
  • Kirjastus: Indiana University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0253334128
  • ISBN-13: 9780253334121
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When published in 1948 this volume encountered a storm of condemnation and acclaim. It is, however, a milestone on the path toward a scientific approach to the understanding of human sexual behavior. Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey and his fellow researchers sought to accumulate an objective body of facts regarding sex. They employed first hand interviews to gather this data. This volume is based upon histories of approximately 5,300 males which were collected during a fifteen year period. This text describes the methodology, sampling, coding, interviewing, statistical analyses, and then examines factors and sources of sexual outlet.



When published in 1948 this volume encountered a storm of condemnation and acclaim. It is, however, a milestone on the path toward a scientific approach to the understanding of human sexual behavior. Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey and his fellow researchers sought to accumulate an objective body of facts regarding sex. They employed first hand interviews to gather this data. This volume is based upon histories of approximately 5,300 males which were collected during a fifteen year period. This text describes the methodology, sampling, coding, interviewing, statistical analyses, and then examines factors and sources of sexual outlet.

This text describes the methodology, sampling, coding, interviewing, statistical analyses, and then examines factors and sources of sexual outlet.

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This book represents a milestone on the path towards a scientific understanding of human sexual behavior
PREFACE v(2) ALAN GREGG ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii PART I. HISTORY AND METHOD 3(154)
1. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION 3(32) Objectives in the Present Study 5(4) Development of Present Study 9(7) Difficulties encountered 11(2) Cooperating groups 13(3) The Taxonomic Approach 16(5) In biology 17(1) In applied and social sciences 18(2) Statistical basis 20(1) Status of Previous Sex Studies 21(14)
2. INTERVIEWING 35(28) Making Contacts 36(5) Establishing Rapport 41(3) The Confidence of the Record 44(3) Technical Devices in Interviewing 47(12) Putting the subject at ease 47(1) Assuring privacy 47(1) Establishing rapport 48(1) Sequence of topics 48(1) Recognizing the subjects mental status 49(1) Recording at time of interview 50(1) Systematic coverage 50(1) Supplementary exploration 51(1) Standardizing the point of the question 51(1) Adapting the form of the question 52(1) Avoiding bias 52(1) Direct questions 53(1) Placing the burden of denial on the subject 53(1) Avoiding multiple questions 54(1) Rapid-fire questioning 54(1) Cross-checks on accuracy 54(1) Proving the answer 55(1) Forcing a subject 55(1) Limits of the interview 56(1) Avoiding personal identifications 57(1) Avoiding controversial issues 57(1) Overt activities versus attitudes 57(1) Interviewing young children 58(1) The Interviewers Background of Knowledge 59(4)
3. STATISTICAL PROBLEMS 63(57) Nature of the Data 63(8) Coding 71(2) Supplementary Data 73(2) The Twelve-way Breakdown 75(7) Sex 75(1) Race-cultural group 75(1) Marital status 76(1) Age 76(1) Age at adolescence 77(1) Educational level 77(1) Occupational class of subject 77(2) Occupational class of parent 79(1) Rural-urban background 79(1) Religious groups 79(1) Religious adherence 79(2) Geographic origin 81(1) Size of Sample 82(10) Diversification of Sample 92(1) Hundred Percent Samples 93(8) Controlling Partial Samples 101(3) Order of Sampling 104(1) Synthesizing a U.S. Sample 105(4) Statistical Analyses 109(11) Individual frequencies 110(1) Group frequencies 110(1) Frequency curves 111(1) Group averages 111(1) Means 112(1) Standard deviation of the mean 112(1) Medians 113(1) Percents of group outlet 114(1) Percents of group outlet 114(1) Correlation coefficients 114(1) Accumulative incidence curves 114(6)
4. VALIDITY OF THE DATA 120(37) Re-takes 121(4) Comparisons of Spouses 125(3) Other Cross-checks 128(2) Memory versus Physical Findings 130(2) Smooth Trends 132(1) Hundred Percent Samples 133(1) Comparisons of Interviewers 133(10) Stability of Techniques 143(5) Immediate versus Remote Recall 148(2) Older versus Younger Generations 150(1) Conclusions 150(7) PART II. FACTORS AFFECTING SEXUAL OUTLET 157(340)
5. EARLY SEXUAL GROWTH AND ACTIVITY 157(36) Erotic Arousal and Orgasm 157(6) Pre-adolescent Sex Play 163(12) Homosexual play 168(5) Heterosexual play 173(1) Animal contacts 174(1) Pre-adolescent Orgasm 175(7) Adolescence 182(11)
6. TOTAL SEXUAL OUTLET 193(25) Frequency of Total Outlet 193(2) Individual Variation 195(8) Factors Effecting Variation 203(2) Low Frequencies and Sublimation 205(8) High Frequencies of Outlet 213(5)
7. AGE AND SEXUAL OUTLET 218(45) Adolescent Sexual Activity 219(7) Maximum activity 219(2) Social significance 221(2) Institutional problems 223(3) Sexual Aging 226(9) Old Age and Impotence 235(3) Masturbation and Age 238(5) Nocturnal Emissions and Age 243(2) Petting to Climax, and Age 245(4) Pre-marital Intercourse and Age 249(4) Marital Intercourse and Age 253(4) Extra-marital Intercourse and Age 257(2) Homosexual Activity and Age 259(2) Animal Contacts and Age 261(1) Post-marital Outlets and Age 262(1)
8. MARITAL STATUS AND SEXUAL OUTLET 263(34) Social and Legal Limitations 263(5) Total Sexual Outlet 268(5) Sources of Sexual Outlet 273(21) Masturbation 273(4) Nocturnal emissions 277(1) Pre-marital petting 277(1) Heterosexual intercourse 277(8) Homosexual contacts 285(4) Animal contacts 289(5) Post-marital Outlets 294(3)
9. AGE OF ADOLESCENCE AND SEXUAL OUTLET 297(30) Onset of Sexual Activity 299(4) Frequencies of Total Outlet 303(6) Factors Involved 309(4) Sources of Outlet 313(6) Masturbation 313(1) Pre-marital intercourse 313(2) Homosexual outlet 315(1) Other outlets 315(4) Aging versus Early Activity 319(6) Conclusions 325(2)
10. SOCIAL LEVEL AND SEXUAL OUTLET 327(67) Defining Social Levels 329(6) Educational level as a criterion 330(1) Occupational class as a criterion 331(1) Realities of social levels 332(3) Incidences and Frequencies of Sexual Outlet 335(28) Total outlet 335(4) Masturbation 339(4) Nocturnal emissions 343(2) Heterosexual petting 345(2) Pre-marital intercourse 347(4) Intercourse with prostitutes 351(4) Marital intercourse 355(2) Homosexual contacts 357(5) Animal intercourse 362(1) Attitudes on Sexual Techniques 363(11) Sources of erotic arousal 363(2) Nudity 365(2) Manual manipulation 367(2) Oral eroticism 369(4) Positions in intercourse 373(1) Patterns of Behavior 374(10) Masturbation 375(2) Petting 377(4) Pre-marital Intercourse 381(2) Extra-marital intercourse 383(1) Homosexual contacts 383(1) Social Implications 384(9) In clinical practice 386(1) In social service 387(1) In the Army and Navy 388(1) In everyday contacts 389(1) In the law 389(4) Social Levels among Negroes 393(1)
11. STABILITY OF SEXUAL PATTERNS 394(55) Patterns in Successive Generations 394(23) Comparisons of accumulative incidences 396(3) Comparisons of frequencies 399(18) Vertical Mobility: at an Early Age 417(19) Occupational classes 2 and 3 426(1) Occupational class 4 427(6) Occupational class 5 433(1) Occupational class 6 433(3) Occupational class 7 436(1) Vertical Mobility: at Later Ages 436(4) Transmission of Sexual Mores 440(9)
12. RURAL-URBAN BACKGROUND AND SEXUAL OUTLET 449(16) Frequencies of Total Outlet 451(2) Specific Sexual Outlets 453(12) Masturbation 453(1) Nocturnal emissions 453(1) Petting to climax 453(2) Pre-marital intercourse 455(1) Marital intercourse 455(1) Homosexual outlet 455(4) Animal contacts 459(6)
13. RELIGIOUS BACKGROUND AND SEXUAL OUTLET 465(32) Total Sexual Outlet 469(3) Masturbation 472(4) Nocturnal Emissions 476(1) Pre-marital Petting to Climax 477(1) Pre-marital intercourse 477(2) Marital Intercourse 479(3) Homosexual Outlets 482(1) Religious Bases of the Mores 483(14) PART III. SOURCES OF SEXUAL OUTLET 497(239)
14. MASTURBATION 497(20) Definition 497(1) References 498(1) Incidences and Frequencies 499(10) Incidences 499(1) Pre-adolescent activity 499(7) Adolescent activity 506(1) In various groups 507(2) Techniques 509(2) Correlations with Other Outlets 511(1) Significance of Masturbation 512(5)
15. NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS 517(14) References 518(1) Incidences and Frequencies 519(6) Content of Nocturnal Sex Dreams 525(2) Relation to Other Outlets 527(4)
16. HETEROSEXUAL PETTING 531(16) References 532(1) Incidences and Frequencies 533(7) Techniques in Petting 540(2) Social Significance of Petting 542(5)
17. PRE-MARITAL INTERCOURSE 547(16) References 548(1) Incidences and Frequencies 549(8) Nature of Pre-marital Intercourse 557(2) Significance of Pre-marital Intercourse 559(4)
18. MARITAL INTERCOURSE 563(20) References 564(1) Incidence and Significance 564(5) Frequencies 569(2) Coital Techniques in Marriage 571(12) Extent of petting 572(1) Mouth stimulation 573(1) Breast stimulation 574(1) Genital stimulation, manual 575(1) Genital stimulation, oral 576(2) Positions in intercourse 578(1) Anal eroticism 579(1) Speed of male orgasm 579(2) Nudity 581(1) Preferences for light or dark 581(2)
19. EXTRA-MARITAL INTERCOURSE 583(12) References 584(1) Incidences and Frequencies 584(5) Relation to Other Outlets 589(2) Social Significance 591(4)
20. INTERCOURSE WITH PROSTITUTES 595(15) References 596(1) Incidences and Frequencies 597(7) Techniques 604(1) Significance of Prostitution 605(5)
21. HOMOSEXUAL OUTLET 610(57) References 611(1) Definition 612(5) Previous Estimates of Incidence 617(6) Incidence Data in Present Study 623(8) Frequencies 631(5) The Heterosexual-Homosexual Balance 636(20) Bisexuality 656(3) Scientific and Social Implications 659(8)
22. ANIMAL CONTACTS 667(14) References 669(1) Incidences and Frequencies 669(5) Nature of Contacts 674(1) Social Significance 675(6)
23. CLINICAL TABLES 681(55) Definitions 682(3) How To Use the Tables 685(1) Single White Males 686(24) Married White Males 710(20) Previously Married White Males 730(6) APPENDIX ON SAMPLE SIZE 736(30) BIBLIOGRAPHY 766(23) INDEX 789