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Fluidity in Women's Sexuality
Abstract
Sexual fluidity has been proposed as a key component of women’s sexuality. However,
not all women acknowledge or experience fluidity in their sexual attractions and behaviors.
Because this is the case, what proportion of women are experiencing sexual fluidity?
Research has concluded that a “sizeable minority” of women are experiencing sexual
fluidity, with the highest levels found among those that identify as a sexual minority.
Furthermore, certain individual differences have been found to be associated with
a heightened (or weakened) likelihood of experiencing or embracing sexual fluidity.
Through extensive literature reviews on women’s sexuality and sexual fluidity, it
has been concluded that sexual orientation identity status, as well as psychological,
biological, and social factors, all play roles in the expression or degree of sexual
fluidity experienced. This means that certain personal and environmental factors have
the ability to both hinder and/or nurture fluidity in a woman’s sexual attractions,
behaviors, and experiences. Accepting that women’s sexuality is fluid and teaching
about the variability sometimes observed in women’s sexuality allows us to not only
see that experiencing same-sex attractions, desires, or experiences is not necessarily
abnormal, but also that it may be more common than originally assumed, which has the
potential to reduce societal stigma associated with homosexuality.
Type
Master's thesisDepartment
Graduate Liberal StudiesPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12633Citation
Johonnot, Karli (2016). Fluidity in Women's Sexuality. Master's thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12633.Collections
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