Friday, March 15, 2019
Readings on Sexuality and Racism :: Sexuality Sex Racism Racist Essays
Readings on Sexuality As I begun to demonstrate chapter four I thought that it would be one of the most fire and informative for me. The further I got in to the reading I cognise I couldnt relate too much of what was said. The first purpose I chose was a basic for the chapter, sexuality is non instinctive except elateed from our families, our peers, sex education in school, popular culture, negotiations with partners, and listening to our feature bodies. I have never thought about my sexuality in that way. As I read I was asking myself, where did I learn to be so sexual, where did it come from? I never realized what I had learned along the way or who from.The second concept I found arouse was that of the term vagina. As the book has said, for many women the give voice vagina is associated with shame, embarrassment, and silencing, even violation. As I remember I saw a version of The Vagina Monologues at Portland State a few years screening and as comfortable as I thought I was with my gender and sexuality I did feel embarrassed. I felt a small(a) ashamed, but as the production went on I found it entertaining. I grew more and more comfortable as the play went on. I in like manner found interesting V-Day College Initiative, a nationwide project to celebrate women and mate sexual violence. I have never heard of this V-Day, a twenty-four hour period for women to come together. One fact I found very interesting was that of the law passed in the state of Alabama on the ban on the sale or distribution of vibrators and other devices designed or marketed as primarily useful for the stimulation of human genital organs. Politics, religion, and other affable institutions put limitations on womens sexuality and sexual expression. Its not fair for old men passing these laws to tell me what I squirt and cannot do with my own body it disgusts me and it hard to think that it still happens today. The ternary concept happens to be a definition that struck me as interesting, virgin. The word virgin did not originally mean a woman whose vagina was unswayed by any penis, but a free woman, one not married, not bound to, not possessed by any man. A woman who is sexually and socially her own person. Why has that definition changed into something held to such high standards?
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