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VOICES FROM THE PAST

Sexual Behavior in the Human Mai


Alfred C. Kinsey, Wardell R. Pomeroy, and Clyde E, Martin. Sexual
Behavior in the Human Male. Philadelphia, Pa: W.B. Saunders:
1948: 610-666.

HOMOSEXUAL OUTLET

[A] CONSIDERABLE PORTION OF THE


population, perhaps the major portion of the male
population, has at least some homosexual experi-
ence between adolescence and old age. In addi-
tion, about 60 per cent of the pre-adolescent boys
engage in homosexual activities, and there is an
additional group of adult males who avoid overt
contacts but who are quite aware of their poten-
tialities for reacting to other males.
The social significance of the homosexual is
considerably emphasized hy fhe fact that both
Jewish and Christian churches have considered
this aspect of human sexuality to be abnormal
and immoral. Social custom and our Anglo-
American law are sometimes very severe in
penalizing one who is discovered to have had
homosexual relations....
It is, therefore, peculiarly difficult to secure fac-
tual data concerning the nature and the extent of
the homosexual in Western European or Ameri-
can cultures, and even more difficult to find
strictly objective presentations of such data as are
available., ..
Until the extent of any type of human behavior
is adequately known, it is difficult to assess its sig-
nificance, either to the individuals who are in-
volved or to society as a whole; and until the ex-
tent of tbe homosexual is known, it is practically
impossible to understand its biologic or social ori-
gins. It is one thing if we are dealing with a lype
of activity that is unusual, without precedent
among other animals, and restricted to peculiar
types of individuals within the human population.

Photo of Alfred C. Kinsey, DSc, courtesy of The Kinsey


Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and
Reproduction Inc.

894 I Voices From the Past American Journal of Public Health ', June 2003, Vol 93, No. 6
It is ancjther thing if the phenom- nearly half of the population ent section of this chapter, are
enon proves to be a fundamental which has had sexual contacts based on those persons who
part, not only of human sexual- with, or reacted psychically to, have had physical contacts with
ity, hut of mammalian patterns as individuals of their own as well other males, and who were
a whole. as of the opposite sex. Actually, brought to orgasm as a result of
of course, one must learn to such contacts. By any strict defi-
DEFINITION recognize every combination of nition such contacts are homo-
heterosexuality and homosexual- sexual, irrespective of the extent
For nearly a century the term ity in the histories of various of the psychic stimulation in-
homosexual in connection with individuals. volved, of the techniques em-
human behavior has hecn ap- It would encourage clearer ployed, or of the relative impor-
plied to sexual relations, either thinking on these matters if per- tance of the homosexu^ and the
overt Of psychic, between indi- sons were not characterized as heterosexual in the history of
viduals of the same sex. Derived heterosexual or homosexual, but such an individual. These are
from this Greek root homo rather as individuals who have had cer- not data on the number of per-
than frcm the Latin word for tain amounts of heterosexual ex- sons who are "homosexual," but
man, the term emphasizes the perience and certain amounts of on the number of persons who
sameness of the two individuals homosexual experience. Instead have had at least some homo-
who arei involved in a sexual re- of using these terms as substan- sexual experience. . . .
lation. The word is, of course, tives which stand for persons, or In these terms (of physical
patterned after and intended to even as adjectives to describe contact to the point of orgasm),
represent the antithesis of the persons, they may better be used the data in the present study in-
word heiterosexual, which applies to describe the nature of the dicate that at least 37 percent of
to a reltLtion between individuals overt sexual relations, or of the the male population has some
of different sexes. . .. stimuli to which an individual homosexual experience between
It is amazing to observe how eroticaily responds. the beginning of adolescence
many psychologists and psychia- and old age. This is more than
trists have . . . come to believe PREVIOUS ESTIMATES one male in three of the persons
that homosexual males and fe- OF INCIDENCE that one may meet as he passes
males aj-e discretely different along a city street. Among the
from persons who merely have Satisfactory incidence figures males who remain unmarried
homosexual experience, or who on the homosexual camiot be ob- until the age of 35, almost ex-
react sometimes to homosexual tained by any technique short of actly 50 per eent have homosex-
stimuli. Sometimes such an inter- a carefully planned population ual experience between the be-
pretation allows for only two survey. The data should cover ginning of adolescence and that
kinds of males and two kinds of every segment of the total popu- age. . . . TTiese figures are, of
females, namely those who are lation. . . . In order to secure data course, considerably higher than
heterosexual and those who are that have any relation to the real- any which have previously been
homosexual. But as subsequent ity, it is imperative that the cases estimated. . . .
data . . , wiU show, there is only be derived from as careful a dis- We ourselves were totally un-
about half of the male population tribution and stratification of the prepared to find such incidence
whose sexual behavior is exclu- sample as the public opinion data when this research was orig-
sively heterosexual, and there are polls employ, or as we have em- inally undertaken. Over a period
a few percent who are exclu- ployed in the present study. . . . of several years we were repeat-
sively hcimosexual. Any restric- edly assailed with doubts as to
tion of tlie term homosexuality to INCIDENCE DATA IN whether we were getting a fair *
individuals who are exclusively PRESENT STUDY cross section of the total popula-'
so demands, logically, that the tion or whether a selection of
term heterosexual be applied The statistics given through- cases was biasing the results. It
only to those individuals who are out this volume on the incidence has been our experience, how-
exclusivfily heterosexual; and this of homosexual activity, and the ever, that each new group into
makes no allowance for the statistics to be given in the pres- which we have gone has pro-

June 2003. Vol 93, No. 6 | American Journal of Public Heaith


Voices From the Past I 895
VOICES FROM THE PAST

ONE OF THE |VK)ST INaUENTIAL barked on a massive and metlcu^ tercourse, and the techniques of
A m e r i c ^ of flie 20th century, bus Darwinian case study of the contraception, as were h^ ^irited
Alfred Charles Kinsey conducted evolutionary taxonomy of the denunciations of repre^ive laws

Alfred C. landmark studies of male and fe-


male serial behavior that helped
usher in the 'sexual revolution"
gall wasp. After identifying sev-
eral new species, Kinsey received
his doctor of science degree in
and sodal attitudes. He also at-
tempted
ideas of
to replace conventional
normal sexual behavior

Kinsey: of the 1960s and 1970s. He was


bom in Hoboken, NJ, on June
23, 1894, the son of Alfi-ed
1919 and joined the faculty of
Indiana Universi^ the following
year. In 1924, he married Qara
with a new biological definition:
"nearly all the so-called sexual
perversions fall within the range .
Seguine Kin^y wd Sarah Ann ^ McMillen, then an out- - ' of biological normality."^"'-"^' As- . >
Charles,, Hte father, a zealously iemistry student at In- ' liis recent biographer Jam^ H.
religious and intimidating man, diana University, Alfred and |ones observes, Kinsey was using
A Pioneer of and a teacher at Stevens Institute Clara had 4 children, 3 of whom the marriage course to "transfbmi
of Technology, insisted that his survived into adulthood. his private struggle against
Victorian moralit}' into a public
Sex Research son put aside his early interest in
biology and instead enroll in
Kinsey advanced up the aca-
demic ranks, becoming full pro- crusade" and to "protest issues
Stevens to study engineering. fessor in 1929,-In 1936, he that had bedeviled him for
After 2 iadc^ster years, Alfred Vie Call Wasp Genus . decades."'"''^''" The Indiana stth -
rebelled arid left for Bowdoin : A Study of the Origin of dents responded enthusiadically,
College in Maine, where he en- Species in 1930 and TTie Origin and his course enrollnwats grew
rolled as a biology student Fa- of Higher Categories in Cynips. to 400 by 1940,
ther and son never reconciled; Although both were well re- Kinsey now shifted his re-
when Alfred graduated with high ceived by specialists, Kinsey was search focus as well, transferring
honors in 1916, his father re- deeply disappointed that he was his obsessive concern with varia-
fused to attend commencement.' not offered a professorship at a tion among gall wasps to the vari-
Alfred became a student of ap- more prestigious university. eties of human sexual experience.
plied biolcm- at Harvard, where Perhaps because of tliis dis^- He required students in his mar- .
he came under the influence of pfHntment, Kinsey made an un- ' riage course to have private con-,:
William Morton Wheeler, an em- usi^ career move in 1938: he ferences in which he took their
inent field biologist staunch Dar- agreed to lead a team-tau^t sexual histories. On weekends
winian, and confidant of the ir- course on marriage and the fam- and vacations, he conducted simi-
reverent H. L. Mencken, With ily instituted in response to a stu- lar interviews in nearby conrniu-
Wheeler as his mentor, Kinsey dent petition. High points of the nities, and later in such cities as
jettisoned most of his religious course were Kinsey's illustrated Gary, Chicago, St Louis, and
ideasalthough not all of his lectiires on the biology of sexual Philadelphia, Kinsey received re-
repressive upbringingand em- stimul^on. the medianics of in- ,^ search support from tlie Na^onal ^

vided substantially the same THE HETEROSEXUAL- an intermediate position be- sex is correlated with various
data. Whether the histories were HOMOSEXUAL BALANCE tween the other groups. It is im- physical and mental qualities,
taken in one large djy or an- plied that every individual is in- and with the total personality
other, whether they were taken Concerning patterns of sexual natelyinherentlyeither which makes a homosexual
in large cities, in small towns, or behavior, a great deal of the heterosexual or homosexual. It is male or female physically, psy-
in rural areas, whether they thinking done by scientists and further implied that from the chically, and perhaps spiritually
came from one college or from laymen alike stems from the as- time of birth one is fated to be di.stinct from a heterosexual in-
another, a church school or a sumption that there are persons one thing or the other, and that dividual. It is generally thought
state university or some private who are "heterosexual" and per- there is little chance for one to thai these qualities make a ho-
institution, whether they came sons who are "homosexual," that change bis pattern in the course mosexual person obvious and
from one part of the country or these two types represent an- of a lifetime. recognizable to any one who
from another, the inddence data titheses in the sexual world, and It is quite generally believed has a sufficient understanding
on the homosexual have been that there is only an insignificant that one's preference for a sex- of such matters. Even psychia-
more or less the same..,. class of "bisexuals" who occupy ual partner of one or the other trists discuss "the homosexual

896 I Voices From the Past American Journai of Pubiic Hesith | June 2003, Vol 93, No, 6
VOICES FROM THE PAST

Research Council and the Rocke- tained many revelations about parents enshrouded ' , , NY: Oxford LTriiversity Press; 1999:
feller I'oundation, which allowed sudi matters as women's niastur- sex in shame, heaping 944-949.
him to ^lire research assistants, batory practices, premarital sexu- more than enough guilt on 2, DuBois W,K-R, UePhiladelphia
expand the geographic scope of ality, and orgasxmc experiences. young people to mangle Negro: ,4 Sodal Study. New York. ^FY:
and twist them. This was Benjamin Blom; 1899,
his work, and found the Institute As before. Kinsey doaimented particularly tiue for those 3, Hoffman FL, Race Traits and Ten-
of Sex Research at Indiana Uni- an enojTiious gap between social like Kinsey who aspired dencies of the American Negro. New
versity in 1947, attitudes and actual practices. but failed to achieve moral York. NY: American Hranomu: Assoda-
In Jajuiary 1948, Kinsey and Also as before, the book was a perfection. His great ac- lion; 1896,
complishment was lo take 4, RampersHti A. DiiBois, WilUam Ed-
his collaborators published Sex- media sensation, but thLs time his pain and suffering and ward Blir^hartit, In: narraty JA, ed. Dic-
ual Behavior in the Human Male, the counterattack was so fen)- use it to translbnn hiinself tionary of American Biography. Siippl 7,
the souixe of the excerpt ciousincluding a congressional into an instroiment of,so- 1961-1965, New York, NY:'charles
reprinted here. It made the best- investigation of his finandal sup- cial reform, a secular evan- Scribiicr's Sons; 1981:200-205,

seller list within 3 weeks, despite port-that the Rockefeller Foun- gelist who proclaimed a
new sensibility about
its 804 pages, generally dry sd- dation terminated its fiinding. human sexuality ^'^'"'
entific style, and ponderous Kinsey's health deteriorated
weight of statistics, tables, and under the strain of public attack
graphs. By mid-March, it had and uncertainty about the future ... Theodore M. Brown
sokl 200000 copies, Tbe book. of his institute. He suffered from ' ' "' [ ' Elizabeth Fee
based Oil over 5000 sexual his- heart disease and, after a brief
tories, provided a series of reve- hospitalization for pneumonia,
lations about the prevalence of died in Bloomington on August About the Authors
masturbation, adulterous sexual 25, 1956. In his own mind, his Theodore M. Brown is with the Depart-
tnents oJHistory and of Community and
activity, and homosexuality. One prindpal legacy was to have Preventive Medicine al the Unii-ersity of
religious leader attacked Kinsey brought sdentific rigor to the Rochester. .WY, Elizabeth Fee is with the
for puljlishing "the mcst anti-reli- study of human sexuality. But as History of Medicine Division. National
library of Medicine. National Institutes of
gious book of our times,""' Some his biographer James H, Jones Health, Bethesda. Md.
criticize(J his methods (and con- points out. Kinsey was not only a Requgstsfor reprints shoidd be sent to
clusions) because of inadequate sdentist; he was a reformer who Theodore M. Brown, Phi). Depaiiment of
History, University/of Rochester, Rochester,
sampling techniques; others ex- sought to rid himself of his per- NY 14627 (e-mail: theodore.bmm
travagantly praised him as an- sonal sexual demons, while at u rmc. rochester. edu).
other Galileo or DarwirL the same timerevolutionizingthe ThL"; contribution was accepted
October 9, 2002.
Kinsey's next major project repressive sodety in which he
was Sexual Beha\'ior in the had grown up:
Human Female, published in
His formative years were 1. HoitTC.WE,B, DuBokIn:
1953. Biased on almost 6000 spent in a home and in a Garraty JA. Carnes MC, eds, American
sexual histories, this book con- nation where many middle- Natiomil Biography. Vol <i. New York,'

personality" and many of them that there are persons in the ual histories, both homosexual and goats. Not all things are
believe that preferences for sex- population whose histories are and heterosexual experience black nor all tilings white. It is a
ual partners of a paiticular sex exclusively heterosexual, both in and/or psychic responses. There fundamental of taxonomy that
are merely secondary manifes- regard to their overt experience are some whose heterosexual nature rarely deals with discrete
tations of something that lies and in regard to their psychic experiences predominate, there categories. Only the human mind
much deeper in the totality of reactions. And there are individ- are some whose homosexual ex- invents categories and tries to
that intangible which they call uals in the population whose periences predominate, there force facts into separated pigeon-
the personality, . .. histories are exclusively homo- are some wbo have had quite holes. The living world Ls a con-
The histories which have sexual, both in experience and equal amounts of both types of tinuum in each and eveiy one of
been available in the present in psychic reactions. But the rec- experience, . . . its aspects. The sooner we learn
study make it apparent that the ord also shows that there is a Males do not represent two this concerning human sexual
heterosexuality or homosexual- considerable portion of the pop- discrete populations, heterosex- behavior the sooner we shaU
ity of many individuals is not an tilation whose members have ual and homosexual. The world read! a sound understanding of
all-or-none proposition. It is true combined, within their individ- is not to be divided into sheep the realities of sex, , . .

June 2003. Vol 93, No, 6 i American Journal of Public Health Voices From the Past I 897
VOICES FROM THE PAST

SCIENTIFIC AND SOCIAL species. That patterns of betero- tutional inmate with a homosexual as those of the rest of the social
IMPLICATIONS sexuali^ and patterns of homo- record, are involved in behavior level to which they belong. It is
sexuality represent leamed be- tbat is not fundamentally different not a matter of the individual
In view of the data which we havior which depends, to a From that bad by a fotirth to a hypocrisy whichleads officials
now have on the incidence and considerable degree, upon the third of all of the rest of the popu- witb homosexual histories to be-
frequency of the homosexual, and mores of the particular culture in lation, the activity of the single in- come prosecutors of the bomo-
in particular on its eo-existence which tlie individual is raised, is a dividual acquires a somewhat dif- sexual activity in the commu-
with the heterosexual in the lives possibility tbat must be thor- ferent social significance.... nity. They themselves are tbe
of a considerable portion of the oughly considered before tbere Tbe difficulty of the situation victims of the mores, and tbe
male population, it is difficult to can be any acceptance of tbe idea becomes still more apparent public demand that they protect
maintain the view that psycho- that homosexuality is inherited, when it is realized that these those mores. As long as there
sexual reactions between individ- and that the pattem for each indi- generalizations conceming the are such gaps between the tradi-
uals of the same sex are rare and vidual is so innately fixed that no incidence and frequency of ho- tional custom and the actual be-
therefore abnormal or unnatural, modification of it may be ex- mosexual activity apply in vary- havior of the population, such
or Ihat they constitute within pected within his lifetime.... ing degrees to every social level, inconsistencies will continue
themselves evidence of neuroses to persons in every occupation, to exist....
or even psychoses... . SOCIAL APPLICATIONS and of every age in the commu- The homosexual has been a
The very general occurrence nity. The police force and court significant part of human sexual
of the homosexual in ancient ... Social reactions to the ho- officials who attempt to enforce activity ever since the dawn of
Greece, and its wide occurrence mosexual have obviously been the sex laws, the clergymen and history, primarily because it is an
today in some cultures in which based on the general belief that a business men and every other expression of capacities that are
such activity is not as taboo as it deviant individual is unique and group in the city which periodi- basic in the human animal.
is in our own, suggests that the as such needs special considera- cally calls for enforcement of
capacity of an individual to re- tion. When it is recognized tbat the lawsparticularly the laws
spond erotically to any sort of the particular boy who is discov- against sexual "perversion"
stimulus, whether it is provided ered in homosexual relations in have given a record of inci-
by another person of the same or school, the business man who is dences and frequencies in the
of the opposite sex, is basic in the having such activity, and the insti- homosexual which are as high

898 I Voices From the Past American Journal of Public Health | June 2003, Vol 93, No. 6

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