Sexuality (from Greek,0) ", Eros-0 "Desire0 ")) there is a quality that causes sexual feelings,[1] as well as a philosophical musings related to the aesthetics of sexual desire, lust and romantic love. This quality can be found in any form of artwork, including painting, sculpture, photography, drama, film, music or literature. It can also be found in advertising. The term can also refer to the state of sexual arousal or such anticipation - an insistent sexual impulse, desire, or pattern of thought.
As the French novelist Honoire de Balzak said, sexuality depends not only on a person's sexual ethics, but also the culture and time in which a person lives. [2] [3] [4]
Because the nature of what is erotic is fluid,[5] the initial definition of the word attempted to conceive sexuality as some form of erotic or romantic love or as human sex drive (libido); For example, the encyclopedia of 1755 says that erotic 0 There is an adjective that applies to everything with regard to the love of the sexes; One employs it especially for the specialty.. । An insolubleity, an excess 0 "। [6]
Because sexuality is entirely dependent on the viewer's culture and personal taste, in fact, defines erotic,[7][8] critics often [how often?] with pornography confused with sexuality, with anti-pornography activist Andrea Dworkin saying, 0 "Erotica is simply high-class pornography; Better production, better imagination, better executed, better packed, designed for a better class of consumer.0 "[9] This confusion, Lynn Hunt writes, 0 "Demonstrating the difficulty of drawing... A clear general demarcation between erotic and porn0 ": Actually arguably 0 "The history of the separation of pornography from sexuality ... Remains to be written [10]
Modern French notions of sexuality can be traced to the age of knowledge,[15] when in the eighteenth century 0 ", dictionaries defined erotic who related love ... Sexuality was something that was on base private to infiltrate into the public domain0 "। [16] This subject of infiltration or crime was taken in the twentieth century by the French philosopher Georges Batele, who argued that sexuality is an act of breaching boundaries between human subjectivity and humanity, a crime that dissolves the rational world , but is always temporary,[17] as well as, 0 "Desire in sexuality is the desire that triumphs over the taboo. It's the prevalue of the man in conflict with himself's. "। [18] For Batel, as well as for many French theorists, sexuality, unlike simple sexual activity, is a psychological discovery... Sexuality is giving consent to life even in death 0 "। [19]
Gay theory and LGBT studies consider the concept from a non-heterosexual perspective, viewing psychoanalytic and modernist ideas of sexuality as both archaic[20] and oddity,[21] primarily and elite, a0 of heterosexualism. "Written for a handful, bourgeois men[22] who 0. "Your repressed sexual provenments are misunderstood0 "[23] as the norm. [24]
Theorists like Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,[25] Gail S. Rubin[26] and Marilyn Fry[27] all write extensively about sexuality from heterosexual, gay and separatist viewpoints respectively, seeing sexuality as both political power[28] and culturally marginalized Criticism for lying groups [29] or Mario Vargas Losa briefly: 0 "Sexuality has its own moral justification because it says happiness is enough for me; This is a statement of the person's sovereignty[30]
A kind of feminist negotiating power of Audrey Lorde, a Caribbean American writer and spoke out erotic is being specific to women.0 "There are many kinds of power [...] Sensual is a resource within each of us that lies in a deep female and spiritual plane, firmly rooted in the power of our latent or unfamiliar feelings[31] in sister uses erotic within the outsider, she discusses how erotic sharing comes from , but if we recognize its presence instead of erotic pressing, it takes on a different form. Rather than enjoying and sharing with each other, it is objective, which he says translates into abuse as we attempt to hide and suppress our experiences. [32]
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