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Wikipedia

BDSM

BDSM is a variety of often erotic practices or roleplaying involving bondage, discipline, dominance and submission, sadomasochism, and other related interpersonal dynamics. Given the wide range of practices, some of which may be engaged in by people who do not consider themselves to be practising BDSM, inclusion in the BDSM community or subculture often is said to depend on self-identification and shared experience.

BDSM
Woman wearing a collar with attached chain
Aspects
B&D, B/D, or BDBondage and discipline
D&s, D/s, or DsDominance and submission
S&M, S/M, or SMSadism and masochism
Roles
Top/dominantPartner who performs or controls the activity
Bottom/submissivePartner who receives or is controlled
SwitchSwitches between roles
The BDSM initialism

The initialism BDSM is first recorded in a Usenet post from 1991,[1] and is interpreted as a combination of the abbreviations B/D (Bondage and Discipline), D/s (Dominance and submission), and S/M (Sadism and Masochism). BDSM is now used as a catch-all phrase covering a wide range of activities, forms of interpersonal relationships, and distinct subcultures. BDSM communities generally welcome anyone with a non-normative streak who identifies with the community; this may include cross-dressers, body modification enthusiasts, animal roleplayers, rubber fetishists, and others.

Activities and relationships in BDSM are often characterized by the participants' taking on roles that are complementary and involve inequality of power; thus, the idea of informed consent of both the partners is essential. The terms submissive and dominant are often used to distinguish these roles: the dominant partner ("dom") takes psychological control over the submissive ("sub"). The terms top and bottom are also used; the top is the instigator of an action while the bottom is the receiver of the action. The two sets of terms are subtly different: for example, someone may choose to act as bottom to another person, for example, by being whipped, purely recreationally, without any implication of being psychologically dominated, and submissives may be ordered to massage their dominant partners. Although the bottom carries out the action and the top receives it, they have not necessarily switched roles.

The abbreviations sub and dom are frequently used instead of submissive and dominant. Sometimes the female-specific terms mistress, domme, and dominatrix are used to describe a dominant woman, instead of the sometimes gender-neutral term dom. Individuals who change between top/dominant and bottom/submissive roles—whether from relationship to relationship or within a given relationship—are called switches. The precise definition of roles and self-identification is a common subject of debate among BDSM participants.[2]

Fundamentals

 
A handcuffed and blindfolded man
 
A man with gagged mouth and clamped nipples

BDSM is an umbrella term for certain kinds of erotic behavior between consenting adults, encompassing various subcultures. Terms for roles vary widely among the subcultures. Top and dominant are widely used for those partner(s) in the relationship or activity who are, respectively, the physically active or controlling participants. Bottom and submissive are widely used for those partner(s) in the relationship or activity who are, respectively, the physically receptive or controlled participants. The interaction between tops and bottoms—where physical or mental control of the bottom is surrendered to the top—is sometimes known as "power exchange", whether in the context of an encounter or a relationship.[3]

BDSM actions can often take place during a specific period of time agreed to by both parties, referred to as "play", a "scene", or a "session". Participants usually derive pleasure from this, even though many of the practices—such as inflicting pain or humiliation or being restrained—would be unpleasant under other circumstances. Explicit sexual activity, such as sexual penetration, may occur within a session, but is not essential.[4] For legal reasons, such explicit sexual interaction is seen only rarely in public play spaces and is sometimes banned by the rules of a party or playspace. Whether it is a public "playspace"—ranging from a party at an established community dungeon to a hosted play "zone" at a nightclub or social event—the parameters of allowance can vary. Some have a policy of panties/nipple sticker for women (underwear for men) and some allow full nudity with explicit sexual acts.[3]

The fundamental principles for the exercise of BDSM require that it be performed with the informed consent of all parties. Since the 1980s, many practitioners and organizations have adopted the motto (originally from the statement of purpose of GMSMA—a gay SM activist organization) safe, sane and consensual (SSC), which means that everything is based on safe activities, that all participants are of sufficiently sound mind to consent, and that all participants do consent.[5] Mutual consent makes a clear legal and ethical distinction between BDSM and such crimes as sexual assault and domestic violence.[6]

 
Flogging of the bare buttocks as seen in this New York street fair is a common practice in BDSM.

Some BDSM practitioners prefer a code of behavior that differs from SSC. Described as "risk-aware consensual kink" (RACK), this code shows a preference for a style in which the individual responsibility of the involved parties is emphasized more strongly, with each participant being responsible for their own well-being. Advocates of RACK argue that SSC can hamper discussion of risk because no activity is truly "safe", and that discussion of even low-risk possibilities is necessary for truly informed consent. They further argue that setting a discrete line between "safe" and "not-safe" activities ideologically denies consenting adults the right to evaluate risks versus rewards for themselves; that some adults will be drawn to certain activities regardless of the risk; and that BDSM play—particularly higher-risk play or edgeplay—should be treated with the same regard as extreme sports, with both respect and the demand that practitioners educate themselves and practice the higher-risk activities to decrease risk. RACK may be seen as focusing primarily upon awareness and informed consent, rather than accepted safe practices.[7]

Consent is the most important criterion. The consent and compliance for a sadomasochistic situation can be granted only by people who can judge the potential results. For their consent, they must have relevant information (the extent to which the scene will go, potential risks, if a safeword will be used, what that is, and so on) at hand and the necessary mental capacity to judge. The resulting consent and understanding is occasionally summarized in a written "contract", which is an agreement of what can and cannot take place.[8]

BDSM play is usually structured such that it is possible for the consenting partner to withdraw their consent at any point during a scene;[9] for example, by using a safeword that was agreed on in advance.[10][11] Use of the agreed safeword (or occasionally a "safe symbol" such as dropping a ball or ringing a bell, especially when speech is restricted) is seen by some as an explicit withdrawal of consent. Failure to honor a safeword is considered serious misconduct and could constitute a crime, depending on the relevant law,[10] since the bottom or top has explicitly revoked their consent to any actions that follow the use of the safeword. For other scenes, particularly in established relationships, a safeword may be agreed to signify a warning ("this is getting too intense") rather than explicit withdrawal of consent; and a few choose not to use a safeword at all.

Terminology and subtypes

 
A male bondage rigger demonstrates to the audience how to do rope bondage at the 2015 BoundCon event in Germany. The bondage technique used here is box tie, a basic form of arm and breast bondage.[12]

The initialism BDSM stands for:[13]

These terms replaced sadomasochism, as they more broadly cover BDSM activities and focus on the submissive roles instead of psychological pain.[13] The model is only an attempt at phenomenological differentiation. Individual tastes and preferences in the area of human sexuality may overlap among these areas.

Under the initialism BDSM, these psychological and physiological facets are also included:

The term bondage describes the practice of physical restraint. Bondage is usually, but not always, a sexual practice.[14] While bondage is a very popular variation within the larger field of BDSM, it is nevertheless sometimes differentiated from the rest of this field.[15] A 2015 study of over 1,000 Canadians showed that about half of all men held fantasies of bondage, and almost half of all women did as well.[16] In a strict sense, bondage means binding the partner by tying their appendages together; for example, by the use of handcuffs or ropes, or by lashing their arms to an object. Bondage can also be achieved by spreading the appendages and fastening them with chains or ropes to a St. Andrew's cross or spreader bars.[17]

The term discipline describes psychological restraining, with the use of rules and punishment to control overt behavior.[citation needed] Punishment can be pain caused physically (such as caning), humiliation caused psychologically (such as a public flagellation) or loss of freedom caused physically (for example, chaining the submissive partner to the foot of a bed). Another aspect is the structured training of the bottom.[18]

Dominance and submission (also known as D&s, Ds or D/s) is a set of behaviors, customs and rituals relating to the giving and accepting of control of one individual over another in an erotic or lifestyle context. It explores the more mental aspect of BDSM. This is also the case in many relationships not considering themselves as sadomasochistic; it is considered to be a part of BDSM if it is practiced purposefully. The range of its individual characteristics is thereby wide.[19]

 
Strappado with rope and a spreader bar. This practice has a distinct effect of immobilization and pain.

Often, BDSM contracts are set out in writing to record the formal consent of the parties to the power exchange, stating their common vision of the relationship dynamic.[3] The purpose of this kind of agreement is primarily to encourage discussion and negotiation in advance and then to document that understanding for the benefit of all parties. Such documents have not been recognized as being legally binding, nor are they intended to be. These agreements are binding in the sense that the parties have the expectation that the negotiated rules will be followed. Often other friends and community members may witness the signing of such a document in a ceremony, and so parties violating their agreement can result in loss of face, respect or status with their friends in the community.

In general, as compared to conventional relationships, BDSM participants go to greater lengths to negotiate the important aspects of their relationships in advance, and to contribute significant effort toward learning about and following safe practices.[20]

In D/s, the dominant is the top and the submissive is the bottom. In S/M, the sadist is usually the top and the masochist the bottom, but these roles are frequently more complicated or jumbled (as in the case of being dominant, masochists who may arrange for their submissive to carry out S/M activities on them). As in B/D, the declaration of the top/bottom may be required, though sadomasochists may also play without any power exchange at all, with both partners equally in control of the play.[citation needed]

Etymology

The term sadomasochism is derived from the words sadism and masochism. These terms differ somewhat from the same terms used in psychology since those require that the sadism or masochism cause significant distress or involve non-consenting partners.[21] Sadomasochism refers to the aspects of BDSM surrounding the exchange of physical or emotional pain. Sadism describes sexual pleasure derived by inflicting pain, degradation, humiliation on another person or causing another person to suffer. On the other hand, the masochist enjoys being hurt, humiliated, or suffering within the consensual scenario.[3] Sadomasochistic scenes sometimes reach a level that appears more extreme or cruel than other forms of BDSM—for example, when a masochist is brought to tears or is severely bruised—and is occasionally unwelcome at BDSM events or parties.[citation needed] Sadomasochism does not imply enjoyment through causing or receiving pain in other situations (for example, accidental injury, medical procedures).[citation needed]

The terms sadism and masochism are derived from the names of the Marquis de Sade and Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, based on the content of the authors' works. Although the names of de Sade and Sacher-Masoch are attached to the terms sadism and masochism respectively, the scenes described in de Sade's works do not meet modern BDSM standards of informed consent.[22] BDSM is solely based on consensual activities, and based on its system and laws. The concepts presented by de Sade are not in accordance with the BDSM culture, even though they are sadistic in nature.[citation needed] In 1843, the Ruthenian physician Heinrich Kaan published Psychopathia Sexualis (Psychopathy of Sex), a writing in which he converts the sin conceptions of Christianity into medical diagnoses. With his work, the originally theological terms perversion, aberration and deviation became part of the scientific terminology for the first time.[dubious ] The German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing introduced the terms sadism and masochism to the medical community in his work Neue Forschungen auf dem Gebiet der Psychopathia sexualis (New research in the area of Psychopathy of Sex) in 1890.[23]

In 1905, Sigmund Freud described sadism and masochism in his Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality as diseases developing from an incorrect development of the child psyche and laid the groundwork for the scientific perspective on the subject in the following decades. This led to the first time use of the compound term sado-masochism (German sado-masochismus) by the Viennese psychoanalytic Isidor Isaak Sadger in their work, "Über den sado-masochistischen Komplex" ("Regarding the sadomasochistic complex") in 1913.[24]

In the later 20th century, BDSM activists have protested against these conceptual models, as they were derived from the philosophies of two singular historical figures. Both Freud and Krafft-Ebing were psychiatrists; their observations on sadism and masochism were dependent on psychiatric patients, and their models were built on the assumption of psychopathology.[25] BDSM activists[who?] argue that it is illogical to attribute human behavioural phenomena as complex as sadism and masochism to the "inventions" of two historic individuals. Advocates of BDSM[who?] have sought to distinguish themselves from widely held notions of antiquated psychiatric theory by the adoption of the term BDSM as a distinction from the now common usage of those psychological terms, abbreviated as S&M.[citation needed]

Behavioral and physiological aspects

 
BDSM is commonly misconceived to be "all about pain".[26] This 1921 art of a clothed male, naked female is an illustration of male dominance and female submission.

BDSM is commonly mistaken as being "all about pain".[26] Freud was confounded by the complexity and counterintuitiveness of practitioners' doing things that are self-destructive and painful.[27] Rather than pain, BDSM practitioners are primarily concerned with power, humiliation, and pleasure.[26] The aspects of D/s and B/D may not include physical suffering at all, but include the sensations experienced by different emotions of the mind.[26]

Of the three categories of BDSM, only sadomasochism specifically requires pain, but this is typically a means to an end, as a vehicle for feelings of humiliation, dominance, etc.[citation needed] In psychology, this aspect becomes a deviant behavior once the act of inflicting or experiencing pain becomes a substitute for or the main source of sexual pleasure.[28] In its most extreme, the preoccupation on this kind of pleasure can lead participants to view humans as insensate means of sexual gratification.[29]

Dominance and submission of power are an entirely different experience, and are not always psychologically associated with physical pain. Many BDSM activities involve no pain or humiliation, but just the exchange of power and control.[26] During the activities, the participants may feel endorphin effects comparable to "runner's high" and to the afterglow of orgasm.[30] The corresponding trance-like mental state is also called subspace, for the submissive, and domspace, for the dominant. Some use body stress to describe this physiological sensation.[31] The experience of algolagnia is important, but is not the only motivation for many BDSM practitioners. The philosopher Edmund Burke called the sensation of pleasure derived from pain "sublime".[32] Couples engaging in consensual BDSM tend to show hormonal changes that indicate decreases in stress and increases in emotional bonding.[33]

There is an array of BDSM practitioners who take part in sessions in which they do not receive any personal gratification. They enter such situations solely with the intention to allow their partners to indulge their own needs or fetishes. Professional dominants do this in exchange for money, but non-professionals do it for the sake of their partners.[citation needed]

In some BDSM sessions, the top exposes the bottom to a range of sensual experiences, such as pinching; biting; scratching with fingernails; erotic spanking; erotic electrostimulation; and the use of crops, whips, liquid wax, ice cubes, and Wartenberg wheels.[34] Fixation by handcuffs, ropes, or chains may occur. The repertoire of possible "toys" is limited only by the imagination of both partners. To some extent, everyday items, such as clothespins, wooden spoons, and plastic wrap, are used in sex play.[35] It is commonly considered that a pleasurable BDSM experience during a session depends strongly on the top's competence and experience and the bottom's physical and mental state. Trust and sexual arousal help the partners enter a shared mindset.[36][37]

Types of play

 
Erotic humiliation: A submissive woman publicly caged at the Folsom Street Fair in U.S., with cane markings on her body.

Following are some of the types of BDSM play:

Safety

 
A woman being put in suspension bondage at BoundCon, Germany, 2013. Since the submissive is vulnerable to a potential fall, it is important that great care is taken.

Besides safe sex, BDSM sessions often require a wider array of safety precautions than vanilla sex (sexual behaviour without BDSM elements).[10] To ensure consent related to BDSM activity, pre-play negotiations are commonplace, especially among partners who do not know each other very well. In practice, pick-up scenes at clubs or parties may sometimes be low in negotiation (much as pick-up sex from singles bars may not involve much negotiation or disclosure). These negotiations concern the interests and fantasies of each partner and establish a framework of both acceptable and unacceptable activities.[38] This kind of discussion is a typical "unique selling proposition" of BDSM sessions and quite commonplace.[39] Additionally, safewords are often arranged to provide for an immediate stop of any activity if any participant should so desire.[40]

Safewords are words or phrases that are called out when things are either not going as planned or have crossed a threshold one cannot handle. They are something both parties can remember and recognize and are, by definition, not words commonly used playfully during any kind of scene. Words such as no, stop, and don't, are often inappropriate as a safeword if the roleplaying aspect includes the illusion of non-consent.

The traffic light system (TLS) is the most commonly used set of safewords.

  • Red – meaning: stop immediately and check the status of your partner
  • Yellow – meaning: slow down, be careful[41]
  • Green – meaning: I'm all good, we can start. If used it's normally uttered by everyone involved before the scene can start.[42][43]

At most clubs and group-organized BDSM parties and events, dungeon monitors (DMs) provide an additional safety net for the people playing there, ensuring that house rules are followed and safewords respected.

BDSM participants are expected to understand practical safety aspects, such as the potential for harm to body parts. Contusion or scarring of the skin can be a concern. Using crops, whips, or floggers, the top's fine motor skills and anatomical knowledge can make the difference between a satisfying session for the bottom and a highly unpleasant experience that may even entail severe physical harm.[44] The very broad range of BDSM "toys" and physical and psychological control techniques often requires a far-reaching knowledge of details related to the requirements of the individual session, such as anatomy, physics, and psychology.[45][46][47] Despite these risks, BDSM activities usually result in far less severe injuries than sports like boxing and football, and BDSM practitioners do not visit emergency rooms any more often than the general population.[48]

It is necessary to be able to identify each person's psychological "squicks" or triggers in advance to avoid them. Such losses of emotional balance due to sensory or emotional overload are a fairly commonly discussed issue. It is important to follow participants' reactions empathetically and continue or stop accordingly.[10][49] For some players, sparking "freakouts" or deliberately using triggers may be the desired outcome. Safewords are one way for BDSM practices to protect both parties. However, partners should be aware of each other's psychological states and behaviors to prevent instances where the "freakouts" prevent the use of safewords.

After any BDSM activities, it is important that the participants go through sexual aftercare, to process and calm down from the activity. After the sessions, participants can need aftercare because their bodies have experienced trauma and they need to mentally come out of the role play.[50]

Social aspects

Roles

Top and bottom
 
 
Left: A typical slave collar, along with ring for possible attachment of a leash. Such collars are worn by bottoms on their neck as a symbol of ownership to their masters. Right: The ring of O as a finger ring.

At one end of the spectrum are those who are indifferent to, or even reject physical stimulation. At the other end of the spectrum are bottoms who enjoy discipline and erotic humiliation but are not willing to be subordinate to the person who applies it. The bottom is frequently the partner who specifies the basic conditions of the session and gives instructions, directly or indirectly, in the negotiation, while the top often respects this guidance. Other bottoms, often called "brats", try to incur punishment from their tops by provoking them or "misbehaving". Nevertheless, a purist "school" exists within the BDSM community, which regards such "topping from the bottom" as rude or even incompatible with the standards of BDSM relations.[51]

Types of relationships

Play

BDSM practitioners sometimes regard the practice of BDSM in their sex life as roleplaying and so often use the terms play and playing to describe activities where in their roles. Play of this sort for a specified period of time is often called a session, and the contents and the circumstances of play are often referred to as the scene. It is also common in personal relationships to use the term kink play for BDSM activities, or more specific terms for the type of activity. The relationships can be of varied types.[citation needed]

Long term

Early writings on BDSM both by the academic and BDSM community spoke little of long-term relationships with some in the gay leather community suggesting short-term play relationships to be the only feasible relationship models, and recommending people to get married and "play" with BDSM outside of marriage. In recent times though writers of BDSM and sites for BDSM have been more focused on long-term relationships.

A 2003 study, the first to look at these relationships, fully demonstrated that "quality long-term functioning relationships" exist among practitioners of BDSM, with either sex being the top or bottom (the study was based on 17 heterosexual couples).[52] Respondents in the study expressed their BDSM orientation to be built into who they are, but considered exploring their BDSM interests an ongoing task, and showed flexibility and adaptability in order to match their interests with their partners.[53] The "perfect match" where both in the relationship shared the same tastes and desires was rare, and most relationships required both partners to take up or put away some of their desires.[53] The BDSM activities that the couples partook in varied in sexual to nonsexual significance for the partners who reported doing certain BDSM activities for "couple bonding, stress release, and spiritual quests".[54] The most reported issue amongst respondents was not finding enough time to be in role with most adopting a lifestyle wherein both partners maintain their dominant or submissive role throughout the day.[55]

Amongst the respondents, it was typically the bottoms who wanted to play harder, and be more restricted into their roles when there was a difference in desire to play in the relationship.[55][56] The author of the study, Bert Cutler, speculated that tops may be less often in the mood to play due to the increased demand for responsibility on their part: being aware of the safety of the situation and prepared to remove the bottom from a dangerous scenario, being conscious of the desires and limits of the bottom, and so on.[56] The author of the study stressed that successful long-term BDSM relationships came after "early and thorough disclosure" from both parties of their BDSM interests.[56]

Many of those engaged in long-term BDSM relationships learned their skills from larger BDSM organizations and communities.[57] There was a lot of discussion by the respondents on the amount of control the top possessed in the relationships but "no discussion of being better, or smarter, or of more value" than the bottom.[58] Couples were generally of the same mind of whether or not they were in an ongoing relationship, but in such cases, the bottom was not locked up constantly, but that their role in the context of the relationship was always present, even when the top was doing non-dominant activities such as household chores, or the bottom being in a more dominant position.[58] In its conclusion the study states:

The respondents valued themselves, their partners, and their relationships. All couples expressed considerable goodwill toward their partners. The power exchange between the cohorts appears to be serving purposes beyond any sexual satisfaction, including experiencing a sense of being taken care of and bonding with a partner.[59]

The study further goes on to list three aspects that made the successful relationships work: early disclosure of interests and continued transparency, a commitment to personal growth, and the use of the dominant/submissive roles as a tool to maintain the relationship.[60] In closing remarks, the author of the study theorizes that due to the serious potential for harm, couples in BDSM relationships develop increased communication that may be higher than in mainstream relationships.[61]

Professional services

A professional dominatrix or professional dominant, often referred to within the culture as a pro-dom(me), offers services encompassing the range of bondage, discipline, and dominance in exchange for money. The term dominatrix is little-used within the non-professional BDSM scene. A non-professional dominant woman is more commonly referred to simply as a domme, dominant, or femdom (short for female dominance). Professional submissives ("pro-subs"), although far more rare, do exist.[62] A professional submissive consents to their client's dominant behavior within negotiated limits, and often works within a professional dungeon. Most of the people who work as subs normally have tendencies towards such activities, especially when sadomasochism is involved.[citation needed] Males also work as professional "tops" in BDSM, and are called masters or doms. However, it is much rarer to find a male in this profession.[citation needed]

Scenes

In BDSM, a "scene" is the stage or setting where BDSM activity takes place, as well as the activity itself.[63][64][65][66] The physical place where a BDSM activity takes place is usually called a dungeon, though some prefer less dramatic terms, including playspace or club. A BDSM activity can, but need not, involve sexual activity or sexual roleplay. A characteristic of many BDSM relationships is the power exchange from the bottom to the dominant partner, and bondage features prominently in BDSM scenes and sexual roleplay.

"The Scene" (including use of the definite article the) is also used in the BDSM community to refer to the BDSM community as a whole. Thus someone who is on "the Scene", and prepared to play in public, might take part in "a scene" at a public play party.[67]

A scene can take place in private between two or more people and can involve a domestic arrangement, such as servitude or a casual or committed lifestyle master/slave relationship. BDSM elements may involve settings of slave training or punishment for breaches of instructions.

A scene can also take place in a club, where the play can be viewed by others. When a scene takes place in a public setting, it may be because the participants enjoy being watched by others, or because of the equipment available, or because having third parties present adds safety for play partners who have only recently met.[68]

Etiquette

Most standard social etiquette rules still apply when at a BDSM event, such as not intimately touching someone you do not know, not touching someone else's belongings (including toys), and abiding by dress codes.[69] Many events open to the public also have rules addressing alcohol consumption, recreational drugs, cell phones, and photography.[70]

A specific scene takes place within the general conventions and etiquette of BDSM, such as requirements for mutual consent and agreement as to the limits of any BDSM activity. This agreement can be incorporated into a formal contract. In addition, most clubs have additional rules which regulate how onlookers may interact with the actual participants in a scene.[71] As is common in BDSM, these are founded on the catchphrase "safe, sane, and consensual".

Parties and clubs

BDSM play parties are events in which BDSM practitioners and other similarly interested people meet in order to communicate, share experiences and knowledge, and to "play" in an erotic atmosphere. BDSM parties show similarities to ones in the dark culture, being based on a more or less strictly enforced dress code; often clothing made of latex, leather or vinyl/PVC, lycra and so on, emphasizing the body's shape and the primary and secondary sexual characteristics. The requirement for such dress codes differ. While some events have none, others have a policy in order to create a more coherent atmosphere and to prevent outsiders from taking part.[72]

At these parties, BDSM can be publicly performed on a stage, or more privately in separate "dungeons".[73] A reason for the relatively fast spread of this kind of event is the opportunity to use a wide range of "playing equipment", which in most apartments or houses is unavailable. Slings, St. Andrew's crosses (or similar restraining constructs), spanking benches, and punishing supports or cages are often made available. The problem of noise disturbance is also lessened at these events, while in the home setting many BDSM activities can be limited by this factor. In addition, such parties offer both exhibitionists and voyeurs a forum to indulge their inclinations without social criticism. Sexual intercourse is not permitted within most public BDSM play spaces or not often seen in others, because it is not the emphasis of this kind of play. In order to ensure the maximum safety and comfort for the participants, certain standards of behavior have evolved; these include aspects of courtesy, privacy, respect and safewords.[10] Today BDSM parties are taking place in most of the larger cities in the Western world.

This scene appears particularly on the Internet, in publications, and in meetings such as at fetish clubs (like Torture Garden), SM parties, gatherings called munches, and erotic fairs like Venus Berlin. The annual Folsom Street Fair held in San Francisco is the world's largest BDSM event.[74] It has its roots in the gay leather movement. The weekend-long festivities include a wide range of sadomasochistic erotica in a public clothing optional space between 8th and 13th streets with nightly parties associated with the organization.[75]

There are also conventions such as Living in Leather and Black Rose.

Psychology

Research indicates that there is no evidence that a preference for BDSM is a consequence of childhood abuse.[76] Some reports suggest that people abused as children may have more BDSM injuries and have difficulty with safe words being recognized as meaning stop the previously consensual behavior,[77] thus, it is possible that people choosing BDSM as part of their lifestyle, who also were previously abused, may have had more police or hospital reports of injuries. There is also a link between transgender individuals who have been abused and violence occurring in BDSM activities.[78]

Joseph Merlino, author and psychiatry adviser to the New York Daily News, said in an interview that a sadomasochistic relationship, as long as it is consensual, is not a psychological problem:

It's a problem only if it is getting that individual into difficulties, if he or she is not happy with it, or it's causing problems in their personal or professional lives. If it's not, I'm not seeing that as a problem. But assuming that it did, what I would wonder about is what is his or her biology that would cause a tendency toward a problem, and dynamically, what were the experiences this individual had that led him or her toward one of the ends of the spectrum.[79]

Some psychologists agree that experiences during early sexual development can have a profound effect on the character of sexuality later in life. Sadomasochistic desires, however, seem to form at a variety of ages. Some individuals report having had them before puberty, while others do not discover them until well into adulthood. According to one study, the majority of male sadomasochists (53%) developed their interest before the age of 15, while the majority of females (78%) developed their interest afterward (Breslow, Evans, and Langley 1985). The prevalence of sadomasochism within the general population is unknown. Despite female sadists being less visible than males, some surveys have resulted in comparable amounts of sadistic fantasies between females and males.[80] The results of such studies demonstrate that one's sex does not determine preference for sadism.[81]

Following a phenomenological study of nine individuals involved in sexual masochistic sessions who regarded pain as central to their experience,[82] sexual masochism was described as an addiction-like tendency, with several features resembling that of drug addiction: craving, intoxication, tolerance and withdrawal. It was also demonstrated how the first masochistic experience is placed on a pedestal, with subsequent use aiming at retrieving this lost sensation, much as described in the descriptive literature on addiction. The addictive pattern presented in this study suggests an association with behavioral spin as found in problem gamblers.[83]

Prevalence

 
Flogging of a bound man by a dominatrix at the Exxxotica adult event at the Jersey Shore, New Jersey, U.S.
Two professional dominatrices interviewed by David Shankbone about the psychological aspects of some of their stranger requests[84]

BDSM occurs among people of all genders and sexual orientations, and in varied occurrences and intensities.[85][86][87] The spectrum ranges from couples with no connections to the subculture outside of their bedrooms or homes, without any awareness of the concept of BDSM, playing "tie-me-up-games", to public scenes on St. Andrew's crosses at large events such as the Folsom Street Fair in San Francisco. Estimation on the overall percentage of BDSM-related sexual behaviour varies.[88]

Alfred Kinsey stated in his 1953 nonfiction book Sexual Behavior in the Human Female that 12% of females and 22% of males reported having an erotic response to a sadomasochistic story.[89] In that book erotic responses to being bitten were given as:[89]

Erotic responses By females By males
Definite and/or frequent 26% 26%
Some response 29% 24%
Never 45% 50%
Number of cases 2200 567

A non-representative survey on the sexual behaviour of American students published in 1997 and based on questionnaires had a response rate of about 8–9%. Its results showed 15% of homosexual and bisexual males, 21% of lesbian and female bisexual students, 11% of heterosexual males and 9% of female heterosexual students committed to BDSM related fantasies.[90] In all groups the level of practical BDSM experiences were around 6%. Within the group of openly lesbian and bisexual females, the quote was significantly higher, at 21%. Independent of their sexual orientation, about 12% of all questioned students, 16% of lesbians and female bisexuals and 8% of heterosexual males articulated an interest in spanking. Experience with this sexual behaviour was indicated by 30% of male heterosexuals, 33% of female bisexuals and lesbians, and 24% of the male gay and bisexual men and female heterosexual women.[90] Even though this study was not considered representative, other surveys indicate similar dimensions in differing target groups.[91][92][93]

A representative study done from 2001 to 2002 in Australia found that 1.8% of sexually active people (2.2% men, 1.3% women but no significant sex difference) had engaged in BDSM activity in the previous year. Of the entire sample, 1.8% of men and 1.3% of women had been involved in BDSM. BDSM activity was significantly more likely among bisexuals and homosexuals of both sexes. But among men in general, there was no relationship effect of age, education, language spoken at home or relationship status. Among women, in this study, activity was most common for those between 16 and 19 years of age and least likely for females over 50 years. Activity was also significantly more likely for women who had a regular partner they did not live with, but was not significantly related with speaking a language other than English or education.[76]

Another representative study, published in 1999 by the German Institut für rationale Psychologie, found that about 2/3 of the interviewed women stated a desire to be at the mercy of their sexual partners from time to time. 69% admitted to fantasies dealing with sexual submissiveness, 42% stated interest in explicit BDSM techniques, 25% in bondage.[94] A 1976 study in the general US population suggests three percent have had positive experiences with Bondage or master-slave roleplaying. Overall 12% of the interviewed females and 18% of the males were willing to try it.[95][96] A 1990 Kinsey Institute report stated that 5% to 10% of Americans occasionally engage in sexual activities related to BDSM. 11% of men and 17% of women reported trying bondage.[97][98] Some elements of BDSM have been popularized through increased media coverage since the middle 1990s. Thus both black leather clothing, sexual jewelry such as chains and dominance roleplay appear increasingly outside of BDSM contexts.

According to yet another survey of 317,000 people in 41 countries, about 20% of the surveyed have at least used masks, blindfolds or other bondage utilities once, and 5% explicitly connected themselves with BDSM.[99] In 2004, 19% mentioned spanking as one of their practices and 22% confirmed the use of blindfolds or handcuffs.[99]

A 1985 study found 52 out of 182 female respondents (28%) were involved in sadomasochistic activities.[100]

Recent surveys

A 2009 study on two separate samples of male undergraduate students in Canada found that 62 to 65%, depending on the sample, had entertained sadistic fantasies, and 22 to 39% engaged in sadistic behaviors during sex. The figures were 62 and 52% for bondage fantasies, and 14 to 23% for bondage behaviors.[101] A 2014 study involving a mixed sample of Canadian college students and online volunteers, both male and female, reported that 19% of male samples and 10% of female samples rated the sadistic scenarios described in a questionnaire as being at least "slightly arousing" on a scale that ranged from "very repulsive" to "very arousing";[102] the difference was statistically significant.[102] The corresponding figures for the masochistic scenarios were 15% for male students and 17% for female students, a non-significant difference.[102] In a 2011 study on 367 middle-aged and elderly men recruited from the broader community in Berlin, 21.8% of the men self-reported sadistic fantasies and 15.5% sadistic behaviors;[103] 24.8% self-reported any such fantasy and/or behavior.[103] The corresponding figures for self-reported masochism were 15.8% for fantasy, 12.3% for behavior, and 18.5% for fantasy and/or behavior.[103] In a 2008 study on gay men in Puerto Rico, 14.8% of the over 425 community volunteers reported any sadistic fantasy, desire or behavior in their lifetime; the corresponding figure for masochism was 15.7%.[104] A 2017 cross-sectional representative survey among the general Belgian population demonstrated a substantial prevalence of BDSM fantasies and activities; 12.5% of the population performed one of more BDSM-practices on a regular basis.[105]

Lifetime BDSM behaviors among North American medical students[106] Straight men Gay men Bisexual men Straight women Gay women Bisexual women
Has been restrained for pleasure 12% 20% 13% 19% 38% 55%
Has restrained someone else for pleasure 17.5% 17% 13% 13% 36% 51%
Has received pain for pleasure 4% 6.5% 18% 8% 10% 36%
Has inflicted pain for pleasure 5% 6% 9% 4% 6.5% 26%

Medical categorization

Reflecting changes in social norms, modern medical opinion is now moving away from regarding BDSM activities as medical disorders, unless they are nonconsensual or involve significant distress or harm.

DSM

In the past, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the American Psychiatric Association's manual, defined some BDSM activities as sexual disorders.[107] Following campaigns from advocacy organizations including the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom,[107] the current version of the DSM, DSM-5, excludes consensual BDSM from diagnosis when the sexual interests cause no harm or distress.[108]

ICD

The World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases (ICD) has made similar moves in recent years.

Section F65 of the current revision, ICD-10, indicates that "mild degrees of sadomasochistic stimulation are commonly used to enhance otherwise normal sexual activity". The diagnostic guidelines for the ICD-10 state that this class of diagnosis should only be made "if sadomasochistic activity is the most important source of stimulation or necessary for sexual gratification".[109]

In Europe, an organization called ReviseF65 has worked to remove sadomasochism from the ICD.[110] In 1995, Denmark became the first European Union country to have completely removed sadomasochism from its national classification of diseases. This was followed by Sweden in 2009, Norway in 2010 and Finland 2011.[111][112][113] Recent surveys on the spread of BDSM fantasies and practices show strong variations in the range of their results.[114] Nonetheless, researchers assume that 5 to 25 percent of the population practices sexual behavior related to pain or dominance and submission. The population with related fantasies is believed to be even larger.[114]

The ICD is in the process of revision, and recent drafts have reflected these changes in social norms.[115] As of July 2018, the final advance preview of the ICD-11 has de-pathologised most things listed in ICD-10 section F65, characterizing as pathological only those activities which are either coercive, or involving significant risk of injury or death, or distressing to the individual committing them, and specifically excluding consensual sexual sadism and masochism from being regarded as pathological.[116][117][118] The ICD-11 classification consider sadomasochism as a variant in sexual arousal and private behaviour without appreciable public health impact and for which treatment is neither indicated nor sought."[119]

According to the WHO ICD-11 Working Group on Sexual Disorders and Sexual Health, stigmatization and discrimination of fetish- and BDSM individuals are inconsistent with human rights principles endorsed by the United Nations and the World Health Organization.[119]

The final advance text is to be officially presented to the members of the WHO in 2019, ready to come into effect in 2022.[120]

Coming out

 
BDSM activists at Taiwan Pride 2005, Taipei
 
A sulky cart drawn by a pony-girl, an example of petplay at the Folsom Parade, 2012. She is wearing a bit gag and a neck collar, to which are attached a ring of O and a leash. Bells are hung from her pierced nipples. All these symbols indicate she is roleplaying a 'pet slave'.
 
A bondage pornography shoot in the U.S., 2011

Some people who are interested in or curious about BDSM decide to come out of the closet, although many sadomasochists remain closeted. Depending upon a survey's participants, about 5 to 25 percent of the US population show affinity to the subject.[90][121] Other than a few artists and writers,[122] practically no celebrities are publicly known as sadomasochists.

Public knowledge of one's BDSM lifestyle can have detrimental vocational and social effects for sadomasochists. Many face severe professional consequences[123] or social rejection if they are exposed, either voluntarily or involuntarily, as sadomasochists.

Within feminist circles, the discussion is split roughly into two camps: some who see BDSM as an aspect or reflection of oppression (for example, Alice Schwarzer) and, on the other side, pro-BDSM feminists, often grouped under the banner of sex-positive feminism (see Samois); both of them can be traced back to the 1970s.[124] Some feminists have criticized BDSM for eroticizing power and violence and reinforcing misogyny. They argue that women who engage in BDSM are making a choice that is ultimately bad for women.[125] Feminist defenders of BDSM argue that consensual BDSM activities are enjoyed by many women and validate the sexual inclinations of these women.[126] They argue that there is no connection between consensual kinky activities and sex crimes, and that feminists should not attack other women's sexual desires as being "anti-feminist". They also state that the main point of feminism is to give an individual woman free choices in her life; which includes her sexual desire. While some feminists suggest connections between consensual BDSM scenes and non-consensual rape and sexual assault, other sex-positive ones find the notion insulting to women.[127][128]

Roles are not fixed to gender, but personal preferences. The dominant partner in a heterosexual relationship may be the woman rather than the man, or BDSM may be part of male/male or female/female sexual relationships. Finally, some people switch, taking either a dominant or submissive role on different occasions. Several studies investigating the possibility of a correlation between BDSM pornography and the violence against women also indicate a lack of correlation. In 1991, a lateral survey came to the conclusion that between 1964 and 1984, despite the increase in amount and availability of sadomasochistic pornography in the U.S., Germany, Denmark and Sweden, there is no correlation with the national number of rapes to be found.[129]

Operation Spanner in the U.K. proves that BDSM practitioners still run the risk of being stigmatized as criminals. In 2003, the media coverage of Jack McGeorge showed that simply participating and working in BDSM support groups poses risks to one's job, even in countries where no law restricts it.[130] Here a clear difference can be seen to the situation of homosexuality.[clarification needed] The psychological strain appearing in some individual cases is normally neither articulated nor acknowledged in public. Nevertheless, it leads to a difficult psychological situation in which the person concerned can be exposed to high levels of emotional stress.[131]

In the stages of "self-awareness", he or she realizes their desires related to BDSM scenarios or decides to be open for such. Some authors call this internal coming-out. Two separate surveys on this topic independently came to the conclusion that 58 percent and 67 percent of the sample respectively, had realized their disposition before their 19th birthday. Other surveys on this topic show comparable results.[132][133] Independent of age, coming-out can potentially result in a difficult life crisis, sometimes leading to thoughts or acts of suicide. While homosexuals have created support networks in the last decades, sadomasochistic support networks are just starting to develop in most countries. In German-speaking countries they are only moderately more developed.[134] The Internet is the prime contact point for support groups today, allowing for local and international networking. In the U.S., Kink Aware Professionals (KAP) a privately funded, non-profit service provides the community with referrals to psychotherapeutic, medical, and legal professionals who are knowledgeable about and sensitive to the BDSM, fetish, and leather community.[135] In the U.S. and the U.K., the Woodhull Freedom Foundation & Federation, National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF) and Sexual Freedom Coalition (SFC) have emerged to represent the interests of sadomasochists. The German Bundesvereinigung Sadomasochismus is committed to the same aim of providing information and driving press relations. In 1996, the website and mailing list Datenschlag went online in German and English providing the largest bibliography, as well as one of the most extensive historical collections of sources related to BDSM.

Social (non-medical) research

Richters et al. (2008) found that people who engaged in BDSM were more likely to have experienced a wider range of sexual practices (e.g., oral or anal sex, more than one partner, group sex, phone sex, viewed pornography, used a sex toy, fisting, rimming, etc.). They were, however, not any more likely to have been coerced, unhappy, anxious, or experiencing sexual difficulties. On the contrary, men who had engaged in BDSM scored lower on a psychological distress scale than men who did not.[76]

There have been few studies on the psychological aspects of BDSM using modern scientific standards. Psychotherapist Charles Moser has said there is no evidence for the theory that BDSM has common symptoms or any common psychopathology, emphasizing that there is no evidence that BDSM practitioners have any special psychiatric other problems based on their sexual preferences.[131]

Problems sometimes occur with self-classification. During the phase of the "coming-out", self-questioning related to one's own "normality" is common. According to Moser, the discovery of BDSM preferences can result in fear of the current non-BDSM relationship's destruction. This, combined with the fear of discrimination in everyday life, leads in some cases to a double life which can be highly burdensome. At the same time, the denial of BDSM preferences can induce stress and dissatisfaction with one's own "vanilla"-lifestyle, feeding the apprehension of finding no partner. Moser states that BDSM practitioners having problems finding BDSM partners would probably have problems in finding a non-BDSM partner as well. The wish to remove BDSM preferences is another possible reason for psychological problems since it is not possible in most cases. Finally, the scientist states that BDSM practitioners seldom commit violent crimes. From his point of view, crimes of BDSM practitioners usually have no connection with the BDSM components existing in their life. Moser's study comes to the conclusion that there is no scientific evidence, which could give reason to refuse members of this group work- or safety certificates, adoption possibilities, custody or other social rights or privileges. The Swiss psychoanalyst Fritz Morgenthaler shares a similar perspective in his book, Homosexuality, Heterosexuality, Perversion (1988). He states that possible problems result not necessarily from the non-normative behavior, but in most cases primarily from the real or feared reactions of the social environment towards their own preferences.[136] In 1940 psychoanalyst Theodor Reik reached implicitly the same conclusion in his standard work Aus Leiden Freuden. Masochismus und Gesellschaft.[137]

Moser's results are further supported by a 2008 Australian study by Richters et al. on the demographic and psychosocial features of BDSM participants. The study found that BDSM practitioners were no more likely to have experienced sexual assault than the control group, and were not more likely to feel unhappy or anxious. The BDSM males reported higher levels of psychological well-being than the controls. It was concluded that "BDSM is simply a sexual interest or subculture attractive to a minority, not a pathological symptom of past abuse or difficulty with 'normal' sex."[138]

Gender differences in research

Several recent studies have been conducted on the gender differences and personality traits of BDSM practitioners. Wismeijer and van Assen (2013) found that "the association of BDSM role and gender was strong and significant" with only 8% of women in the study being dominant compared to 75% being submissive.;[139] Hébert and Weaver (2014) found that 9% of women in their study were dominant compared to 88% submissive;[140] Weierstall1 and Giebel (2017) likewise found a significant difference, with 19% of women in the study as dominant compared to 74% as submissive, and a study from Andrea Duarte Silva (2015) indicated that 61.7% of females who are active in BDSM expressed a preference for a submissive role, 25.7% consider themselves a switch, while 12.6% prefer the dominant role. In contrast, 46.6% of men prefer the submissive role, 24% consider themselves to be switches and 29.5% prefer the dominant role.[141] They concluded that "men more often display an engagement in dominant practices, whereas females take on the submissive part. This result is inline with a recent study about mate preferences that has shown that women have a generally higher preference for a dominant partner than men do (Giebel, Moran, Schawohl, & Weierstall, 2015). Women also prefer dominant men, and even men who are aggressive, for a short-term relationship and for the purpose of sexual intercourse (Giebel, Weierstall, Schauer, & Elbert, 2013)".[142] Similarly, studies on sexual fantasy differences between men and women show the latter prefer submissive and passive fantasies over dominant and active ones, with rape and force being common.[143]

Gender differences in masochistic scripts

 
A whipping scene where both dominant and submissives are female, Paris, 1930

One common belief of BDSM and kink is that women are more likely to take on masochistic roles than men. Roy Baumeister (2010) actually had more male masochists in his study than female, and fewer male dominants than female. The lack of statistical significance in these gender differences suggests that no assumptions should be made regarding gender and masochistic roles in BDSM. One explanation why we might think otherwise lies in our social and cultural ideals about femininity; masochism may emphasize certain stereotypically feminine elements through activities like feminization of men and ultra-feminine clothing for women. But such tendencies of the submissive masochistic role should not be interpreted as a connection between it and the stereotypical female role—many masochistic scripts do not include any of these tendencies.[144]

Baumeister found that masochistic males experienced greater: severity of pain, frequency of humiliation (status-loss, degrading, oral), partner infidelity, active participation by other persons, and cross-dressing. Trends also suggested that male masochism included more bondage and oral sex than female (though the data was not significant). Female masochists, on the other hand, experienced greater: frequency in pain, pain as punishment for 'misdeeds' in the relationship context, display humiliation, genital intercourse, and presence of non-participating audiences. The exclusiveness of dominant males in a heterosexual relationship happens because, historically, men in power preferred multiple partners. Finally, Baumeister observes a contrast between the 'intense sensation' focus of male masochism to a more 'meaning and emotion' centred female masochistic script.[144]

Prior argues that although some of these women may appear to be engaging in traditional subordinate or submissive roles, BDSM allows women in both dominant and submissive roles to express and experience personal power through their sexual identities. In a study that she conducted in 2013, she found that the majority of the women she interviewed identified as bottom, submissive, captive, or slave/sex slave. In turn, Prior was able to answer whether or not these women found an incongruity between their sexual identities and feminist identity. Her research found that these women saw little to no incongruity, and in fact felt that their feminist identity supported identities of submissive and slave. For them, these are sexually and emotionally fulfilling roles and identities that, in some cases, feed other aspects of their lives. Prior contends that third wave feminism provides a space for women in BDSM communities to express their sexual identities fully, even when those identities seem counter-intuitive to the ideals of feminism. Furthermore, women who do identify as submissive, sexually or otherwise, find a space within BDSM where they can fully express themselves as integrated, well-balanced, and powerful women.[145]

Women in S/M culture

Levitt, Moser, and Jamison's 1994 study provides a general, if outdated, description of characteristics of women in the sadomasochistic (S/M) subculture. They state that women in S/M tend to have higher education, become more aware of their desires as young adults, are less likely to be married than the general population. The researchers found the majority of females identified as heterosexual and submissive, a substantial minority were versatile—able to switch between dominant and submissive roles—and a smaller minority identified with the dominant role exclusively. Oral sex, bondage and master-slave script were among the most popular activities, while feces/watersports were the least popular.[146]

Orientation observances in research

BDSM is considered by some of its practitioners to be a sexual orientation.[147] The BDSM and kink scene is more often seen as a diverse pansexual community. Often this is a non-judgmental community where gender, sexuality, orientation, preferences are accepted as is or worked at to become something a person can be happy with.[148] In research, studies have focused on bisexuality and its parallels with BDSM, as well as gay-straight differences between practitioners.

Comparison between gay and straight men in S/M

Demographically, Nordling et al.'s (2006) study found no differences in age, but 43% of gay male respondents compared to 29% of straight males had university-level education. The gay men also had higher incomes than the general population and tended to work in white-collar jobs while straight men tended toward blue-collar ones. Because there were not enough female respondents (22), no conclusions could be drawn from them.

Sexually speaking, the same 2006 study by Nordling et al. found that gay males were aware of their S/M preferences and took part in them at an earlier age, preferring leather, anal sex, rimming, dildos and special equipment or uniform scenes. In contrast, straight men preferred verbal humiliation, mask and blindfolds, gags, rubber/latex outfits, caning, vaginal sex, straitjackets, and cross-dressing among other activities. From the questionnaire, researchers were able to identify four separate sexual themes: hyper-masculinity, giving and receiving pain, physical restriction (i.e. bondage), and psychological humiliation. Gay men preferred activities that tended towards hyper-masculinity while straight men showed greater preference for humiliation, significantly higher master/madame-slave role play at ≈84%. Though there were not enough female respondents to draw a similar conclusion with, the fact that there is a difference in gay and straight men suggests strongly that S/M (and BDSM in general) can not be considered a homogenous phenomenon. As Nordling et al. (2006) puts it, "People who identify as sadomasochists mean different things by these identifications." (54)[149]

Bisexuality

In Steve Lenius' original 2001 paper, he explored the acceptance of bisexuality in a supposedly pansexual BDSM community. The reasoning behind this is that 'coming-out' had become primarily the territory of the gay and lesbian, with bisexuals feeling the push to be one or the other (and being right only half the time either way). What he found in 2001, was that people in BDSM were open to discussion about the topic of bisexuality and pansexuality and all controversies they bring to the table, but personal biases and issues stood in the way of actively using such labels. A decade later, Lenius (2011) looks back on his study and considers if anything has changed. He concluded that the standing of bisexuals in the BDSM and kink community was unchanged, and believed that positive shifts in attitude were moderated by society's changing views towards different sexualities and orientations. But Lenius (2011) does emphasize that the pansexual promoting BDSM community helped advance greater acceptance of alternative sexualities.[150][151]

Brandy Lin Simula (2012), on the other hand, argues that BDSM actively resists gender-conforming and identified three different types of BDSM bisexuality: gender-switching, gender-based styles (taking on a different gendered style depending on the gender of partner when playing), and rejection of gender (resisting the idea that gender matters in their play partners). Simula (2012) explains that practitioners of BDSM routinely challenge our concepts of sexuality by pushing the limits on pre-existing ideas of sexual orientation and gender norms. For some, BDSM and kink provides a platform in creating identities that are fluid, ever-changing.[152]

History of psychotherapy and current recommendations

Psychiatry has an insensitive history in the area of BDSM. There have been many involvements by institutions of political power to marginalize subgroups and sexual minorities.[88] Mental health professionals have a long history of holding negative assumptions and stereotypes about the BDSM community. Beginning with the DSM-II, Sexual Sadism and Sexual Masochism have been listed as sexually deviant behaviours. Sadism and masochism were also found in the personality disorder section.[153] This negative assumption has not changed significantly which is evident in the continued inclusion of Sexual Sadism and Sexual Masochism as paraphilias in the DSM-IV-TR.[154] The DSM-V, however, has depathologized the language around paraphilias in a way that signifies "the APA's intent to not demand treatment for healthy consenting adult sexual expression".[155] These biases and misinformation can result in pathologizing and unintentional harm to clients who identify as sadists and/or masochists and medical professionals who have been trained under older editions of the DSM can be slow to change in their ways of clinical practice.

According to Kolmes et al. (2006), major themes of biased and inadequate care to BDSM clients are:

  • Considering BDSM to be unhealthy
  • Requiring a client to give up BDSM activities in order to continue in treatment
  • Confusing BDSM with abuse
  • Having to educate the therapist about BDSM
  • Assuming that BDSM interests are indicative of past family/spousal abuse
  • Therapists misrepresenting their expertise by stating that they are BDSM-positive when they are not actually knowledgeable about BDSM practices

These same researchers suggested that therapists should be open to learning more about BDSM, to show comfort in talking about BDSM issues, and to understand and promote "safe, sane, consensual" BDSM.[88]

There has also been research which suggests BDSM can be a beneficial way for victims of sexual assault to deal with their trauma, most notably by Corie Hammers, but this work is limited in scope and to date, has not undergone empirical testing as a treatment.[citation needed]

Clinical issues

Nichols (2006) compiled some common clinical issues: countertransference, non-disclosure, coming out, partner/families, and bleed-through.[156]

Countertransference is a common problem in clinical settings. Despite having no evidence, therapists may find themselves believing that their client's pathology is "self-evident". Therapists may feel intense disgust and aversive reactions. Feelings of countertransference can interfere with therapy. Another common problem is when clients conceal their sexual preferences from their therapists. This can compromise any therapy. To avoid non-disclosure, therapists are encouraged to communicate their openness in indirect ways with literature and artworks in the waiting room. Therapists can also deliberately bring up BDSM topics during the course of therapy. With less informed therapists, sometimes they over-focus on clients' sexuality which detracts from original issues such as family relationships, depression, etc. A special subgroup that needs counselling is the "newbie". Individuals just coming out might have internalized shame, fear, and self-hatred about their sexual preferences. Therapists need to provide acceptance, care, and model positive attitude; providing reassurance, psychoeducation, and bibliotherapy for these clients is crucial. The average age when BDSM individuals realize their sexual preference is around 26 years.[88] Many people hide their sexuality until they can no longer contain their desires. However, they may have married or had children by this point.[citation needed]

History

Origins

 
A fresco in the Etruscan Tomb of the Whipping, 5th century BC
 
Copper engraving, about 1780
 
Flagellation scene, illustration to Fanny Hill by Édouard-Henri Avril, 1907

Practices of BDSM survive from some of the oldest textual records in the world, associated with rituals to the goddess Inanna (Ishtar in Akkadian). Cuneiform texts dedicated to Inanna which incorporate domination rituals. In particular, she points to ancient writings such as Inanna and Ebih (in which the goddess dominates Ebih), and Hymn to Inanna describing cross-dressing transformations and rituals "imbued with pain and ecstasy, bringing about initation [sic?] and journeys of altered states of consciousness; punishment, moaning, ecstasy, lament and song, participants exhausting themselves in weeping and grief."[157][158]

During the 9th century BC, ritual flagellations were performed in Artemis Orthia, one of the most important religious areas of ancient Sparta, where the Cult of Orthia, a pre-Olympic religion, was practiced. Here, ritual flagellation called diamastigosis took place, in which young adolescent men were whipped in a ceremony overseen by the priestess.[159] These are referred to by a number of ancient authors, including Pausanius (III, 16: 10–11).[160]

One of the oldest graphical proofs of sadomasochistic activities is found in the Etruscan Tomb of the Whipping near Tarquinia, which dates to the 5th century BC. Inside the tomb, there is a fresco which portrays two men who flagellate a woman with a cane and a hand during an erotic situation.[161] Another reference related to flagellation is to be found in the sixth book of the Satires of the ancient Roman Poet Juvenal (1st–2nd century A.D.),[162] further reference can be found in Petronius's Satyricon where a delinquent is whipped for sexual arousal.[163] Anecdotal narratives related to humans who have had themselves voluntary bound, flagellated or whipped as a substitute for sex or as part of foreplay reach back to the 3rd and 4th century BC.[citation needed]

In Pompeii, a whip-mistress figure with wings is depicted on the wall of the Villa of Mysteries, as part of an initiation of a young woman into the Mysteries. The whip-mistress role drove the sacred initiation of ceremonial death and rebirth.[164] The archaic Greek Aphrodite may too once have been armed with an implement, with archaeological evidence of armed Aphrodites known from a number of locations in Cythera, Acrocorinth and Sparta,[165] and which may have been a whip.[164]

The Kama Sutra of India describes four different kinds of hitting during lovemaking, the allowed regions of the human body to target and different kinds of joyful "cries of pain" practiced by bottoms. The collection of historic texts related to sensuous experiences explicitly emphasizes that impact play, biting and pinching during sexual activities should only be performed consensually since only some women consider such behavior to be joyful. From this perspective, the Kama Sutra can be considered one of the first written resources dealing with sadomasochistic activities and safety rules. Further texts with sadomasochistic connotation appear worldwide during the following centuries on a regular basis.[166]

There are anecdotal reports of people willingly being bound or whipped, as a prelude to or substitute for sex, during the 14th century. The medieval phenomenon of courtly love in all of its slavish devotion and ambivalence has been suggested by some writers to be a precursor of BDSM.[167][168] Some sources[who?] claim that BDSM as a distinct form of sexual behavior originated at the beginning of the 18th century when Western civilization began medically and legally categorizing sexual behavior (see Etymology).

Flagellation practiced within an erotic setting has been recorded from at least the 1590s evidenced by a John Davies epigram,[169][170] and references to "flogging schools" in Thomas Shadwell's The Virtuoso (1676) and Tim Tell-Troth's Knavery of Astrology (1680).[171][172] Visual evidence such as mezzotints and print media is also identified revealing scenes of flagellation, such as "The Cully Flaug'd" from the British Museum collection.[173]

John Cleland's novel Fanny Hill, published in 1749, incorporates a flagellation scene between the character's protagonist Fanny Hill and Mr Barville.[174] A large number of flagellation publications followed, including Fashionable Lectures: Composed and Delivered with Birch Discipline (c. 1761), promoting the names of women offering the service in a lecture room with rods and cat o' nine tails.[175]

 
Foot worship of one of the feet of a dominatrix by a submissive man. Her other foot rests over the man's head, using it as a footstool (human furniture). This sketch is from a 1950 work named Bizarre Honeymoon.

Other sources give a broader definition, citing BDSM-like behavior in earlier times and other cultures, such as the medieval flagellates and the physical ordeal rituals of some Native American societies.[176]

BDSM ideas and imagery have existed on the fringes of Western culture throughout the 20th century.[177] Robert Bienvenu attributes the origins of modern BDSM to three sources, which he names as "European Fetish" (from 1928), "American Fetish" (from 1934), and "Gay Leather" (from 1950).[178] Another source are the sexual games played in brothels, which go back to the 19th century, if not earlier. Charles Guyette was the first American to produce and distribute fetish related material (costumes, footwear, photography, props and accessories) in the U.S. His successor, Irving Klaw, produced commercial sexploitation film and photography with a BDSM theme (most notably with Bettie Page) and issued fetish comics (known then as "chapter serials") by the now-iconic artists John Willie, Gene Bilbrew, and Eric Stanton.

Stanton's model Bettie Page became at the same time one of the first successful models in the area of fetish photography and one of the most famous pin-up girls of American mainstream culture. Italian author and designer Guido Crepax was deeply influenced by him, coining the style and development of European adult comics in the second half of the 20th century. The artists Helmut Newton and Robert Mapplethorpe are the most prominent examples of the increasing use of BDSM-related motives in modern photography and the public discussions still resulting from this.[179]

Alfred Binet first coined the term erotic fetishism in his 1887 book, Du fétichisme dans l'amour[180] Richard von Krafft-Ebing saw BDSM interests as the end of a continuum.[181]

Leather movement

 
Leathermen participating in the Cologne Pride Parade, 2014

Leather has been a predominantly gay male term to refer to one fetish, but it can stand for many more. Members of the gay male leather community may wear leathers such as motorcycle leathers, or may be attracted to men wearing leather. Leather and BDSM are seen as two parts of one whole. Much of the BDSM culture can be traced back to the gay male leather culture, which formalized itself out of the group of men who were soldiers returning home after World War II (1939–1945).[182] World War II was the setting where countless homosexual men and women tasted the life among homosexual peers. Post-war, homosexual individuals congregated in larger cities such as New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. They formed leather clubs and bike clubs; some were fraternal services. The establishment of Mr. Leather Contest and Mr. Drummer Contest were made around this time. This was the genesis of the gay male leather community. Many of the members were attracted to extreme forms of sexuality, for which peak expression was in the pre-AIDS 1970s.[183] This subculture is epitomized by the Leatherman's Handbook by Larry Townsend, published in 1972, which describes in detail the practices and culture of gay male sadomasochists in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[184][185] In the early 1980s, lesbians also joined the leathermen as a recognizable element of the gay leather community. They also formed leather clubs, but there were some gender differences, such as the absence of leatherwomen's bars. In 1981, the publication of Coming to Power by lesbian-feminist group Samois led to a greater knowledge and acceptance of BDSM in the lesbian community.[186] By the 1990s, the gay men's and women's leather communities were no longer underground and played an important role in the kink community.[183]

Today, the leather movement is generally seen as a part of the BDSM-culture instead of as a development deriving from gay subculture, even if a huge part of the BDSM-subculture was gay in the past. In the 1990s, the so-called New Guard leather subculture evolved. This new orientation started to integrate psychological aspects into their play.[citation needed]

The San Francisco South of Market Leather History Alley consists of four works of art along Ringold Alley honoring leather culture; it opened in 2017.[187][188] One of the works of art is metal bootprints along the curb which honor 28 people (including Steve McEachern, owner of the Catacombs, a gay and lesbian S/M fisting club, and Cynthia Slater, a founder of the Society of Janus, the second oldest BDSM organization in the United States) who were an important part of the leather communities of San Francisco.[188][187]

Internet

In the late 1980s, the Internet provided a way of finding people with specialized interests around the world as well as on a local level, and communicating with them anonymously.[10][189] This brought about an explosion of interest and knowledge of BDSM, particularly on the usenet group alt.sex.bondage. When that group became too cluttered with spam, the focus moved to soc.subculture.bondage-bdsm. With an increased focus on forms of social media, FetLife was formed, which advertises itself as "a social network for the BDSM and fetish community". It operates similarly to other social media sites, with the ability to make friends with other users, events, and pages of shared interests.

In addition to traditional sex shops, which sell sex paraphernalia, there has also been an explosive growth of online adult toy companies that specialize in leather/latex gear and BDSM toys. Once a very niche market, there are now very few sex toy companies that do not offer some sort of BDSM or fetish gear in their catalog. Kinky elements seem to have worked their way into "vanilla" markets. The former niche expanded to an important pillar of the business with adult accessories.[190] Today practically all suppliers of sex toys do offer items which originally found usage in the BDSM subculture. Padded handcuffs, latex and leather garments, as well as more exotic items like soft whips for fondling and TENS for erotic electro stimulation, can be found in catalogs aiming at classical vanilla target groups, indicating that former boundaries increasingly seem to shift.

During the last years, the Internet also provides a central platform for networking among individuals who are interested in the subject. Besides countless private and commercial choices, there is an increasing number of local networks and support groups emerging. These groups often offer comprehensive background and health-related information for people who have been unwillingly outed as well as contact lists with information on psychologists, physicians and lawyers who are familiar with BDSM related topics.[191]

University clubs

Increasingly, American universities are witnessing BDSM and kink education by providing student clubs, such as Columbia University's Conversio Virium[192][193] and Iowa State University's Cuffs.[194] University BDSM clubs are also found in the U.K.,[195][196][197][198] Canada,[199][200] Belgium,[201] and Taiwan.[202]

Some American universities—such as Indiana University and Michigan State University—have professors who research and teach classes on BDSM.[203][204][205][206][207][208]

Legal status

Austria

 
Consensual giving or receiving of pain is legal in Austria,[209] showing wax play at the Eros Pyramide sex show in 2009

Section 90 of the Austrian criminal code declares bodily injury (Sections 83–84) or the endangerment of physical security (Section 89) to not be subject to penalty in cases in which the victim has consented and the injury or endangerment does not offend moral sensibilities. Case law from the Austrian Supreme Court has consistently shown that bodily injury is only offensive to moral sensibilities, thus it is only punishable when a "serious injury" (damage to health or an employment disability lasting more than 24 days) or the death of the "victim" results. A light injury is generally considered permissible when the "victim" has consented to it. In cases of threats to bodily well being the standard depends on the probability that an injury will actually occur. If serious injury or even death would be a likely result of a threat being carried out, then even the threat itself is considered punishable.[209]

Canada

In 2004, a judge in Canada ruled that videos seized by the police featuring BDSM activities were not obscene and did not constitute violence, but a "normal and acceptable" sexual activity between two consenting adults.[210]

In 2011, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in R. v. J.A. that a person must have an active mind during the specific sexual activity in order to legally consent. The Court ruled that it is a criminal offence to perform a sexual act on an unconscious person—whether or not that person consented in advance.[211]

Germany

 
Sexual activity may occur in BDSM, but it is not essential part of BDSM.[4] Photo shows erotic humiliation of sexual nature being performed at Wave-Gotik-Treffen music festival, Germany, 2014. The submissive woman is stripped naked, hung upside down, whipped and a master doing sexual roleplay of a devil forces himself on her to cause vagina torture.

According to Section 194 of the German criminal code, the charge of insult (slander) can only be prosecuted if the defamed person chooses to press charges. False imprisonment can be charged if the victim—when applying an objective view—can be considered to be impaired in their rights of free movement. According to Section 228, a person inflicting a bodily injury on another person with that person's permission violates the law only in cases where the act can be considered to have violated good morals in spite of permission having been given. On 26 May 2004, the Criminal Panel No. 2 of the Bundesgerichtshof (German Federal Court) ruled that sado-masochistically motivated physical injuries are not per se indecent and thus subject to Section 228.[212]

Following cases in which sado-masochistic practices had been repeatedly used as pressure tactics against former partners in custody cases, the Appeals Court of Hamm ruled in February 2006 that sexual inclinations toward sado-masochism are no indication of a lack of capabilities for successful child-raising.[213]

Italy

In Italian law, BDSM is right on the border between crime and legality, and everything lies in the interpretation of the legal code by the judge. This concept is that anyone willingly causing "injury" to another person is to be punished. In this context, though, "injury" is legally defined as "anything causing a condition of illness", and "illness" is ill-defined itself in two different legal ways. The first is "any anatomical or functional alteration of the organism" (thus technically including little scratches and bruises too); the second is "a significant worsening of a previous condition relevant to organic and relational processes, requiring any kind of therapy". This could make it somewhat risky to play with someone, as later the "victim" may call foul play citing even an insignificant mark as evidence against the partner. Also, any injury requiring over 20 days of medical care must be denounced by the professional medic who discovers it, leading to automatic indictment of the person who caused it.[214]

Nordic countries

In September 2010, a Swedish court acquitted a 32-year-old man of assault for engaging in consensual BDSM play with a 16-year-old woman (the age of consent in Sweden is 15).[215] Norway's legal system has likewise taken a similar position,[216] that safe and consensual BDSM play should not be subject to criminal prosecution. This parallels the stance of the mental health professions in the Nordic countries which have removed sadomasochism from their respective lists of psychiatric illnesses.

Switzerland

The age of consent in Switzerland is 16 years, which also applies to BDSM play. Minors (i.e., those under 16) are not subject to punishment for BDSM play as long as the age difference between them is less than three years. Certain practices, however, require granting consent for light injuries, with only those over 18 permitted to give consent. On 1 April 2002, Articles 135 and 197 of the Swiss Criminal Code were tightened to make ownership of "objects or demonstrations [...] which depict sexual acts with violent content" a punishable offense. This law amounts to a general criminalization of sado-masochism since nearly every sado-masochist will have some kind of media that fulfills this criterion. Critics also object to the wording of the law which puts sado-masochists in the same category as pedophiles and pederasts.[217]

United Kingdom

In British law, consent is an absolute defense to common assault, but not necessarily to actual bodily harm, where courts may decide that consent is not valid, as occurred in the case of R v Brown.[218] Accordingly, consensual activities in the U.K. may not constitute "assault occasioning actual or grievous bodily harm" in law. The Spanner Trust states that this is defined as activities which have caused injury "of a lasting nature" but that only a slight duration or injury might be considered "lasting" in law.[219] The decision contrasts with the later case of R v Wilson in which conviction for non-sexual consensual branding within a marriage was overturned, the appeal court ruling that R v Brown was not an authority in all cases of consensual injury and criticizing the decision to prosecute.[220]

Following Operation Spanner, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in January 1999 in Laskey, Jaggard and Brown v. United Kingdom that no violation of Article 8 occurred because the amount of physical or psychological harm that the law allows between any two people, even consenting adults, is to be determined by the jurisdiction the individuals live in, as it is the State's responsibility to balance the concerns of public health and well-being with the amount of control a State should be allowed to exercise over its citizens. In the Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill 2007, the British Government cited the Spanner case as justification for criminalizing images of consensual acts, as part of its proposed criminalization of possession of "extreme pornography".[221] Another contrasting case was that of Stephen Lock in 2013, who was cleared of actual bodily harm on the grounds that the woman consented. In this case, the act was deemed to be sexual.[222]

United States

 
Spanking with a paddle in a BDSM dungeon in Lower Manhattan

The United States Federal law does not list a specific criminal determination for consensual BDSM acts. Many BDSM practitioners cite the legal decision of People v. Jovanovic, 95 N.Y.2d 846 (2000), or the "Cybersex Torture Case",[223] which was the first U.S. appellate decision to hold (in effect) that one does not commit assault if the victim consents. However, many individual states do criminalize specific BDSM actions within their state borders. Some states specifically address the idea of "consent to BDSM acts" within their assault laws, such as the state of New Jersey, which defines "simple assault" to be "a disorderly persons offense unless committed in a fight or scuffle entered into by mutual consent, in which case it is a petty disorderly persons offense".[224]

Oregon Ballot Measure 9 was a ballot measure in the U.S. state of Oregon in 1992, concerning sadism, masochism, gay rights, pedophilia, and public education, that drew widespread national attention. It would have added the following text to the Oregon Constitution:

All governments in Oregon may not use their monies or properties to promote, encourage or facilitate homosexuality, pedophilia, sadism or masochism. All levels of government, including public education systems, must assist in setting a standard for Oregon's youth which recognizes that these behaviors are abnormal, wrong, unnatural and perverse and they are to be discouraged and avoided.

It was defeated in the 3 November 1992 general election with 638,527 votes in favor, 828,290 votes against.[225]

The National Coalition for Sexual Freedom collects reports about punishment for sexual activities engaged in by consenting adults, and about its use in child custody cases.[226]

Cultural aspects

Today, the BDSM culture exists in most Western countries.[227] This offers BDSM practitioners the opportunity to discuss BDSM relevant topics and problems with like-minded people. This culture is often viewed as a subculture, mainly because BDSM is often still regarded as "unusual" by some of the public. Many people hide their leaning from society since they are afraid of the incomprehension and of social exclusion.[228]

In contrast to frameworks seeking to explain sadomasochism through psychological, psychoanalytic, medical or forensic approaches, which seek to categorize behaviour and desires and find a root "cause", Romana Byrne suggests that such practices can be seen as examples of "aesthetic sexuality", in which a founding physiological or psychological impulse is irrelevant. Rather, sadism and masochism may be practiced through choice and deliberation, driven by certain aesthetic goals tied to style, pleasure, and identity. These practices, in certain circumstances and contexts, can be compared with the creation of art.[229]

Symbols

 
The BDSM rights flag with triskelion-type emblem
 
The leather pride flag, a symbol of the BDSM and fetish subculture

One of the most commonly used symbols of the BDSM community is a derivation of a triskelion shape within a circle.[230] Various forms of triskele have had many uses and many meanings in many cultures; its BDSM usage derives from the Ring of O in the classic book Story of O. The BDSM Emblem Project claims copyright over one particular specified form of the triskelion symbol; other variants of the triskelion are free from such copyright claims.[231]

The leather pride flag is a symbol for the leather subculture and also widely used within BDSM. In continental Europe, the Ring of O is widespread among BDSM practitioners.[232]

The triskelion as a BDSM symbol can easily be perceived as the three separate parts of the acronym BDSM; which are BD, DS, and SM (Bondage & Discipline, Dominance & Submission, Sadism & Masochism). They are three separate items, that are normally associated together.

The BDSM rights flag, shown to the right, is intended to represent the belief that people whose sexuality or relationship preferences include BDSM practises deserve the same human rights as everyone else, and should not be discriminated against for pursuing BDSM with consenting adults.

The flag is inspired by the leather pride flag and BDSM emblem but is specifically intended to represent the concept of BDSM rights and to be without the other symbols' restrictions against commercial use. It is designed to be recognizable by people familiar with either the leather pride flag or BDSM triskelion (or triskele) as "something to do with BDSM"; and to be distinctive whether reproduced in full colour, or in black and white (or another pair of colours).[233]

BDSM and fetish items and styles have been spread widely in Western societies' everyday life by different factors, such as avant-garde fashion, heavy metal, goth subculture, and science fiction TV series,[234] and are often not consciously connected with their BDSM roots by many people. While it was mainly confined to the punk and BDSM subcultures in the 1990s, it has since spread into wider parts of Western societies.

Film and music

  • In music: the Romanian singer-songwriter Navi featured BDSM and Shibari scenes in her music video "Picture Perfect" (2014).[235] The video was banned in Romania for its explicit content.[236] In 2010, Rihanna's song "S&M" and Christina Aguilera's single "Not Myself Tonight" appeared, both full of BDSM imagery.
  • In movies: While BDSM activity appeared initially in subtle form, in the 1960s famous works of literature like Story of O and Venus in Furs were filmed explicitly. With the release of the 1986 film 9½ Weeks, the topic of BDSM was transferred to mainstream cinema. From the 1990s, cinematic representation of alternative sexualities, including BDSM, increased dramatically, as seen in documentary productions such as Graphic Sexual Horror (a 2009 film based on the website Insex), KinK (a 2013 film based on the website Kink.com), and movies such as Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) and its two sequels Fifty Shades Darker (2017) and Fifty Shades Freed (2018).
    • However, mistakenly considered in mainstream society as having BDSM activities that are, rather, abusive are the movies Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) and its two sequels Fifty Shades Darker (2017) and Fifty Shades Freed (2018).[237] "A lot of what happens in the main relationship of Fifty Shades of Grey is domestic abuse, both physical and emotional, and for people whose entire understanding of BDSM now comes from jiggle balls and rooms of pain this is a dangerous misconception to foster."[238]

Theater

Although it would be possible to establish certain elements related to BDSM in classical theater, not until the emergence of contemporary theater would some plays have BDSM as the main theme. Exemplifying this are two works: one Austrian, one German, in which BDSM is not only incorporated but integral to the storyline of the play.

  • Worauf sich Körper kaprizieren, Austria. Peter Kern directed and wrote the script for this comedy which is a present-day adaption of Jean Genet's 1950 film, Un chant d'amour. It is about a marriage in which the wife (film veteran Miriam Goldschmidt) submits her husband (Heinrich Herkie) and the butler (Günter Bubbnik) to her sadistic treatment until two new characters take their places.[239]
  • Ach, Hilde (Oh, Hilda), Germany. This play by Anna Schwemmer premiered in Berlin. A young Hilde becomes pregnant, and after being abandoned by her boyfriend she decides to become a professional dominatrix to earn money. The play carefully crafts a playful and frivolous picture of the field of professional dominatrices.[240]

Literature

 
Fanny Pistor (with whip) and Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Venus in Furs was inspired by the author's own life where he was dominated by a woman.

Although examples of literature catering to BDSM and fetishistic tastes were created in earlier periods, BDSM literature as it exists today cannot be found much earlier than World War II.

The word sadism originates from the works of Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade, and the word masochism originates from Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, the author of Venus in Furs. However, it is worth noting that the Marquis de Sade describes non-consensual abuse in his works, such as in Justine. Venus in Furs describes a consensual dom-sub relationship.

A central work in modern BDSM literature is undoubtedly Story of O (1954) by Anne Desclos under the pseudonym Pauline Réage.

Other notable works include 9½ Weeks (1978) by Elizabeth McNeill, some works of the writer Anne Rice (Exit to Eden, and her Claiming of Sleeping Beauty series of books), Jeanne de Berg (L'Image (1956) dedicated to Pauline Réage), the Gor series by John Norman, and naturally all the works of Patrick Califia, Gloria Brame, the group Samois and many of the writer Georges Bataille (Histoire de l'oeil-Story of the Eye, Madame Edwarda, 1937), as well as those of Bob Flanagan (Slave Sonnets (1986), Fuck Journal (1987), A Taste of Honey (1990)). A common part of many of the poems of Pablo Neruda is a reflection on feelings and sensations arising from the relations of EPE or erotic exchange of power. The Fifty Shades trilogy is a series of very popular erotic romance novels by E. L. James which involves BDSM; however, the novels have been criticized for their inaccurate and harmful depiction of BDSM.[241]

In the 21st century, a number of prestigious university presses, such as Duke University, Indiana University and University of Chicago, have published books on BDSM written by professors, thereby lending academic legitimacy to this once taboo topic.[242]

Art

See also

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Further reading

  • Rehor, Jennifer Eve (2015). "Sensual, Erotic, and Sexual Behaviors of Women from the "Kink" Community". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 44 (#4): 825–836. doi:10.1007/s10508-015-0524-2. PMC 4379392. PMID 25795531.
  • Baldwin, Guy. Ties That Bind: SM/Leather/Fetish Erotic Style: Issues, Communication, and Advice, Daedalus Publishing, 1993. ISBN 978-1-881943-09-9.
  • Barker, Meg; Iantaffi, A.; Gupta, C. (2007). "Kinky clients, kinky counselling? The challenges and potentials of BDSM" (PDF). Open Research Online. Routledge. (PDF) from the original on 14 March 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  • Brame, Gloria G., Brame, William D., and Jacobs, Jon. Different Loving: An Exploration of the World of Sexual Dominance and Submission Villard Books, New York, 1993. ISBN 978-0-679-40873-4
  • Brame, Gloria. Come Hither: A Commonsense Guide to Kinky Sex, Fireside, 2000. ISBN 978-0-684-85462-5.
  • Califia, Pat. Sensuous Magic. New York, Masquerade Books, 1993. ISBN 978-1-56333-131-2
  • Cutler, Bert (February 2003). Partner selection, power dynamics, and sexual bargaining in self-defined BDSM couples (Thesis). San Francisco: The Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality.
  • Fedoroff, Paul J. (2008). "Sadism, Sadomasochism, Sex, and Violence". Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 53 (#10): 637–646. doi:10.1177/070674370805301003. PMID 18940032.
  • Dollie Llama. Diary of an S&M Romance., PEEP! Press (California), 2006, ISBN 978-0-9705392-5-0
  • Henkin, Wiliiam A., Sybil Holiday. Consensual Sadomasochism: How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely, Daedalus Publishing, 1996. ISBN 978-1-881943-12-9.
  • Janus, Samuel S., and Janus, Cynthia L. The Janus Report on Sexual Behavior, John Wiley & Sons, 1994. ISBN 978-0-471-01614-4
  • Masters, Peter. This Curious Human Phenomenon: An Exploration of Some Uncommonly Explored Aspects of BDSM. The Nazca Plains Corporation, 2008. ISBN 978-1-934625-68-2
  • Phillips, Anita. A Defence of Masochism, Faber and Faber, new edition 1999. ISBN 978-0-571-19697-5
  • Newmahr, Staci (2011). Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk and Intimacy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-22285-0.
  • Nomis, Anne O. (2013) The History & Arts of the Dominatrix Mary Egan Publishing & Anna Nomis Ltd, U.K. ISBN 978-0-9927010-0-0
  • Rinella, Jack. The Complete Slave: Creating and Living an Erotic Dominant/submissive Lifestyle, Daedalus Publishing, 2002. ISBN 978-1-881943-13-6.
  • Saez, Fernando y Viñuales, Olga, Armarios de Cuero, Ed. Bellaterra, 2007. ISBN 978-84-7290-345-6
  • Larry Townsend. Leatherman's Handbook, first edition 1972 (this was the first book to publicize BDSM to the general public—it was a paperback book widely available on newsstands and at bookstores throughout the United States)
  • Wiseman, Jay. SM 101: A Realistic Introduction (1st ed., 1992); 2nd ed. Greenery Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0-9639763-8-3
  • Byrne, Romana (2013) Aesthetic Sexuality: A Literary History of Sadomasochism 22 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, New York: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4411-0081-8
  • Dominari, Rajan (2019). Welcome to the Darkside: A BDSM Primer. AKO Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1734527100.

External links

Listen to this article
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These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated 3 April 2007 (2007-04-03), and do not reflect subsequent edits.
  • Mitchell, Tony (2018). . The Fetishistas. Archived from the original on 5 December 2018. Retrieved 4 December 2018.

bdsm, this, article, about, consensual, adult, sadomasochistic, activity, medical, condition, involving, consensual, ideation, behaviour, sexual, sadism, disorder, medical, condition, which, pain, humiliation, required, sexual, arousal, causes, distress, impai. This article is about consensual adult sadomasochistic activity For the medical condition involving non consensual ideation or behaviour see Sexual sadism disorder For the medical condition in which pain humiliation is required for sexual arousal and causes distress or impairment see Sexual masochism disorder BDSM is a variety of often erotic practices or roleplaying involving bondage discipline dominance and submission sadomasochism and other related interpersonal dynamics Given the wide range of practices some of which may be engaged in by people who do not consider themselves to be practising BDSM inclusion in the BDSM community or subculture often is said to depend on self identification and shared experience BDSMWoman wearing a collar with attached chainAspectsB amp D B D or BDBondage and disciplineD amp s D s or DsDominance and submissionS amp M S M or SMSadism and masochismRolesTop dominantPartner who performs or controls the activityBottom submissivePartner who receives or is controlledSwitchSwitches between rolesThe BDSM initialism The initialism BDSM is first recorded in a Usenet post from 1991 1 and is interpreted as a combination of the abbreviations B D Bondage and Discipline D s Dominance and submission and S M Sadism and Masochism BDSM is now used as a catch all phrase covering a wide range of activities forms of interpersonal relationships and distinct subcultures BDSM communities generally welcome anyone with a non normative streak who identifies with the community this may include cross dressers body modification enthusiasts animal roleplayers rubber fetishists and others Activities and relationships in BDSM are often characterized by the participants taking on roles that are complementary and involve inequality of power thus the idea of informed consent of both the partners is essential The terms submissive and dominant are often used to distinguish these roles the dominant partner dom takes psychological control over the submissive sub The terms top and bottom are also used the top is the instigator of an action while the bottom is the receiver of the action The two sets of terms are subtly different for example someone may choose to act as bottom to another person for example by being whipped purely recreationally without any implication of being psychologically dominated and submissives may be ordered to massage their dominant partners Although the bottom carries out the action and the top receives it they have not necessarily switched roles The abbreviations sub and dom are frequently used instead of submissive and dominant Sometimes the female specific terms mistress domme and dominatrix are used to describe a dominant woman instead of the sometimes gender neutral term dom Individuals who change between top dominant and bottom submissive roles whether from relationship to relationship or within a given relationship are called switches The precise definition of roles and self identification is a common subject of debate among BDSM participants 2 Contents 1 Fundamentals 1 1 Terminology and subtypes 1 2 Etymology 2 Behavioral and physiological aspects 2 1 Types of play 2 2 Safety 3 Social aspects 3 1 Roles 3 2 Types of relationships 3 3 Scenes 3 4 Etiquette 3 5 Parties and clubs 4 Psychology 4 1 Prevalence 4 2 Medical categorization 4 2 1 DSM 4 2 2 ICD 4 3 Coming out 4 4 Social non medical research 4 5 Gender differences in research 4 5 1 Gender differences in masochistic scripts 4 5 2 Women in S M culture 4 6 Orientation observances in research 4 6 1 Comparison between gay and straight men in S M 4 6 2 Bisexuality 4 7 History of psychotherapy and current recommendations 4 8 Clinical issues 5 History 5 1 Origins 5 2 Leather movement 5 3 Internet 5 4 University clubs 6 Legal status 6 1 Austria 6 2 Canada 6 3 Germany 6 4 Italy 6 5 Nordic countries 6 6 Switzerland 6 7 United Kingdom 6 8 United States 7 Cultural aspects 7 1 Symbols 7 2 Film and music 7 3 Theater 7 4 Literature 7 5 Art 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksFundamentals A handcuffed and blindfolded man A man with gagged mouth and clamped nipples BDSM is an umbrella term for certain kinds of erotic behavior between consenting adults encompassing various subcultures Terms for roles vary widely among the subcultures Top and dominant are widely used for those partner s in the relationship or activity who are respectively the physically active or controlling participants Bottom and submissive are widely used for those partner s in the relationship or activity who are respectively the physically receptive or controlled participants The interaction between tops and bottoms where physical or mental control of the bottom is surrendered to the top is sometimes known as power exchange whether in the context of an encounter or a relationship 3 BDSM actions can often take place during a specific period of time agreed to by both parties referred to as play a scene or a session Participants usually derive pleasure from this even though many of the practices such as inflicting pain or humiliation or being restrained would be unpleasant under other circumstances Explicit sexual activity such as sexual penetration may occur within a session but is not essential 4 For legal reasons such explicit sexual interaction is seen only rarely in public play spaces and is sometimes banned by the rules of a party or playspace Whether it is a public playspace ranging from a party at an established community dungeon to a hosted play zone at a nightclub or social event the parameters of allowance can vary Some have a policy of panties nipple sticker for women underwear for men and some allow full nudity with explicit sexual acts 3 The fundamental principles for the exercise of BDSM require that it be performed with the informed consent of all parties Since the 1980s many practitioners and organizations have adopted the motto originally from the statement of purpose of GMSMA a gay SM activist organization safe sane and consensual SSC which means that everything is based on safe activities that all participants are of sufficiently sound mind to consent and that all participants do consent 5 Mutual consent makes a clear legal and ethical distinction between BDSM and such crimes as sexual assault and domestic violence 6 Flogging of the bare buttocks as seen in this New York street fair is a common practice in BDSM Some BDSM practitioners prefer a code of behavior that differs from SSC Described as risk aware consensual kink RACK this code shows a preference for a style in which the individual responsibility of the involved parties is emphasized more strongly with each participant being responsible for their own well being Advocates of RACK argue that SSC can hamper discussion of risk because no activity is truly safe and that discussion of even low risk possibilities is necessary for truly informed consent They further argue that setting a discrete line between safe and not safe activities ideologically denies consenting adults the right to evaluate risks versus rewards for themselves that some adults will be drawn to certain activities regardless of the risk and that BDSM play particularly higher risk play or edgeplay should be treated with the same regard as extreme sports with both respect and the demand that practitioners educate themselves and practice the higher risk activities to decrease risk RACK may be seen as focusing primarily upon awareness and informed consent rather than accepted safe practices 7 Consent is the most important criterion The consent and compliance for a sadomasochistic situation can be granted only by people who can judge the potential results For their consent they must have relevant information the extent to which the scene will go potential risks if a safeword will be used what that is and so on at hand and the necessary mental capacity to judge The resulting consent and understanding is occasionally summarized in a written contract which is an agreement of what can and cannot take place 8 BDSM play is usually structured such that it is possible for the consenting partner to withdraw their consent at any point during a scene 9 for example by using a safeword that was agreed on in advance 10 11 Use of the agreed safeword or occasionally a safe symbol such as dropping a ball or ringing a bell especially when speech is restricted is seen by some as an explicit withdrawal of consent Failure to honor a safeword is considered serious misconduct and could constitute a crime depending on the relevant law 10 since the bottom or top has explicitly revoked their consent to any actions that follow the use of the safeword For other scenes particularly in established relationships a safeword may be agreed to signify a warning this is getting too intense rather than explicit withdrawal of consent and a few choose not to use a safeword at all Terminology and subtypes A male bondage rigger demonstrates to the audience how to do rope bondage at the 2015 BoundCon event in Germany The bondage technique used here is box tie a basic form of arm and breast bondage 12 The initialism BDSM stands for 13 Bondage and discipline B amp D Dominance and submission D amp s Sadomasochism or S amp M These terms replaced sadomasochism as they more broadly cover BDSM activities and focus on the submissive roles instead of psychological pain 13 The model is only an attempt at phenomenological differentiation Individual tastes and preferences in the area of human sexuality may overlap among these areas Under the initialism BDSM these psychological and physiological facets are also included Male dominance Male submission Female dominance Female submissionThe term bondage describes the practice of physical restraint Bondage is usually but not always a sexual practice 14 While bondage is a very popular variation within the larger field of BDSM it is nevertheless sometimes differentiated from the rest of this field 15 A 2015 study of over 1 000 Canadians showed that about half of all men held fantasies of bondage and almost half of all women did as well 16 In a strict sense bondage means binding the partner by tying their appendages together for example by the use of handcuffs or ropes or by lashing their arms to an object Bondage can also be achieved by spreading the appendages and fastening them with chains or ropes to a St Andrew s cross or spreader bars 17 The term discipline describes psychological restraining with the use of rules and punishment to control overt behavior citation needed Punishment can be pain caused physically such as caning humiliation caused psychologically such as a public flagellation or loss of freedom caused physically for example chaining the submissive partner to the foot of a bed Another aspect is the structured training of the bottom 18 Dominance and submission also known as D amp s Ds or D s is a set of behaviors customs and rituals relating to the giving and accepting of control of one individual over another in an erotic or lifestyle context It explores the more mental aspect of BDSM This is also the case in many relationships not considering themselves as sadomasochistic it is considered to be a part of BDSM if it is practiced purposefully The range of its individual characteristics is thereby wide 19 Strappado with rope and a spreader bar This practice has a distinct effect of immobilization and pain Often BDSM contracts are set out in writing to record the formal consent of the parties to the power exchange stating their common vision of the relationship dynamic 3 The purpose of this kind of agreement is primarily to encourage discussion and negotiation in advance and then to document that understanding for the benefit of all parties Such documents have not been recognized as being legally binding nor are they intended to be These agreements are binding in the sense that the parties have the expectation that the negotiated rules will be followed Often other friends and community members may witness the signing of such a document in a ceremony and so parties violating their agreement can result in loss of face respect or status with their friends in the community In general as compared to conventional relationships BDSM participants go to greater lengths to negotiate the important aspects of their relationships in advance and to contribute significant effort toward learning about and following safe practices 20 In D s the dominant is the top and the submissive is the bottom In S M the sadist is usually the top and the masochist the bottom but these roles are frequently more complicated or jumbled as in the case of being dominant masochists who may arrange for their submissive to carry out S M activities on them As in B D the declaration of the top bottom may be required though sadomasochists may also play without any power exchange at all with both partners equally in control of the play citation needed Etymology The term sadomasochism is derived from the words sadism and masochism These terms differ somewhat from the same terms used in psychology since those require that the sadism or masochism cause significant distress or involve non consenting partners 21 Sadomasochism refers to the aspects of BDSM surrounding the exchange of physical or emotional pain Sadism describes sexual pleasure derived by inflicting pain degradation humiliation on another person or causing another person to suffer On the other hand the masochist enjoys being hurt humiliated or suffering within the consensual scenario 3 Sadomasochistic scenes sometimes reach a level that appears more extreme or cruel than other forms of BDSM for example when a masochist is brought to tears or is severely bruised and is occasionally unwelcome at BDSM events or parties citation needed Sadomasochism does not imply enjoyment through causing or receiving pain in other situations for example accidental injury medical procedures citation needed Portrait of Marquis de Sade by Charles Amedee Philippe van Loo 1761 The terms sadism and masochism are derived from the names of the Marquis de Sade and Leopold von Sacher Masoch based on the content of the authors works Although the names of de Sade and Sacher Masoch are attached to the terms sadism and masochism respectively the scenes described in de Sade s works do not meet modern BDSM standards of informed consent 22 BDSM is solely based on consensual activities and based on its system and laws The concepts presented by de Sade are not in accordance with the BDSM culture even though they are sadistic in nature citation needed In 1843 the Ruthenian physician Heinrich Kaan published Psychopathia Sexualis code lat promoted to code la Psychopathy of Sex a writing in which he converts the sin conceptions of Christianity into medical diagnoses With his work the originally theological terms perversion aberration and deviation became part of the scientific terminology for the first time dubious discuss The German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft Ebing introduced the terms sadism and masochism to the medical community in his work Neue Forschungen auf dem Gebiet der Psychopathia sexualis code deu promoted to code de New research in the area of Psychopathy of Sex in 1890 23 In 1905 Sigmund Freud described sadism and masochism in his Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality as diseases developing from an incorrect development of the child psyche and laid the groundwork for the scientific perspective on the subject in the following decades This led to the first time use of the compound term sado masochism German sado masochismus code deu promoted to code de by the Viennese psychoanalytic Isidor Isaak Sadger in their work Uber den sado masochistischen Komplex code deu promoted to code de Regarding the sadomasochistic complex in 1913 24 In the later 20th century BDSM activists have protested against these conceptual models as they were derived from the philosophies of two singular historical figures Both Freud and Krafft Ebing were psychiatrists their observations on sadism and masochism were dependent on psychiatric patients and their models were built on the assumption of psychopathology 25 BDSM activists who argue that it is illogical to attribute human behavioural phenomena as complex as sadism and masochism to the inventions of two historic individuals Advocates of BDSM who have sought to distinguish themselves from widely held notions of antiquated psychiatric theory by the adoption of the term BDSM as a distinction from the now common usage of those psychological terms abbreviated as S amp M citation needed Behavioral and physiological aspects BDSM is commonly misconceived to be all about pain 26 This 1921 art of a clothed male naked female is an illustration of male dominance and female submission BDSM is commonly mistaken as being all about pain 26 Freud was confounded by the complexity and counterintuitiveness of practitioners doing things that are self destructive and painful 27 Rather than pain BDSM practitioners are primarily concerned with power humiliation and pleasure 26 The aspects of D s and B D may not include physical suffering at all but include the sensations experienced by different emotions of the mind 26 Of the three categories of BDSM only sadomasochism specifically requires pain but this is typically a means to an end as a vehicle for feelings of humiliation dominance etc citation needed In psychology this aspect becomes a deviant behavior once the act of inflicting or experiencing pain becomes a substitute for or the main source of sexual pleasure 28 In its most extreme the preoccupation on this kind of pleasure can lead participants to view humans as insensate means of sexual gratification 29 Dominance and submission of power are an entirely different experience and are not always psychologically associated with physical pain Many BDSM activities involve no pain or humiliation but just the exchange of power and control 26 During the activities the participants may feel endorphin effects comparable to runner s high and to the afterglow of orgasm 30 The corresponding trance like mental state is also called subspace for the submissive and domspace for the dominant Some use body stress to describe this physiological sensation 31 The experience of algolagnia is important but is not the only motivation for many BDSM practitioners The philosopher Edmund Burke called the sensation of pleasure derived from pain sublime 32 Couples engaging in consensual BDSM tend to show hormonal changes that indicate decreases in stress and increases in emotional bonding 33 There is an array of BDSM practitioners who take part in sessions in which they do not receive any personal gratification They enter such situations solely with the intention to allow their partners to indulge their own needs or fetishes Professional dominants do this in exchange for money but non professionals do it for the sake of their partners citation needed In some BDSM sessions the top exposes the bottom to a range of sensual experiences such as pinching biting scratching with fingernails erotic spanking erotic electrostimulation and the use of crops whips liquid wax ice cubes and Wartenberg wheels 34 Fixation by handcuffs ropes or chains may occur The repertoire of possible toys is limited only by the imagination of both partners To some extent everyday items such as clothespins wooden spoons and plastic wrap are used in sex play 35 It is commonly considered that a pleasurable BDSM experience during a session depends strongly on the top s competence and experience and the bottom s physical and mental state Trust and sexual arousal help the partners enter a shared mindset 36 37 Types of play Erotic humiliation A submissive woman publicly caged at the Folsom Street Fair in U S with cane markings on her body Following are some of the types of BDSM play Animal roleplay Bondage BDSM Breast torture Cock and ball torture Edgeplay Erotic electrostimulation Erotic sexual denial Spanking Flogging Human furniture Japanese bondage Medical play Paraphilic infantilism Play piercing Predicament bondage Pussy torture Salirophilia Sexual roleplay Suspension Tickle torture Urolagnia Wax play Safety See also Risk aware consensual kink A woman being put in suspension bondage at BoundCon Germany 2013 Since the submissive is vulnerable to a potential fall it is important that great care is taken Besides safe sex BDSM sessions often require a wider array of safety precautions than vanilla sex sexual behaviour without BDSM elements 10 To ensure consent related to BDSM activity pre play negotiations are commonplace especially among partners who do not know each other very well In practice pick up scenes at clubs or parties may sometimes be low in negotiation much as pick up sex from singles bars may not involve much negotiation or disclosure These negotiations concern the interests and fantasies of each partner and establish a framework of both acceptable and unacceptable activities 38 This kind of discussion is a typical unique selling proposition of BDSM sessions and quite commonplace 39 Additionally safewords are often arranged to provide for an immediate stop of any activity if any participant should so desire 40 Safewords are words or phrases that are called out when things are either not going as planned or have crossed a threshold one cannot handle They are something both parties can remember and recognize and are by definition not words commonly used playfully during any kind of scene Words such as no stop and don t are often inappropriate as a safeword if the roleplaying aspect includes the illusion of non consent The traffic light system TLS is the most commonly used set of safewords Red meaning stop immediately and check the status of your partner Yellow meaning slow down be careful 41 Green meaning I m all good we can start If used it s normally uttered by everyone involved before the scene can start 42 43 At most clubs and group organized BDSM parties and events dungeon monitors DMs provide an additional safety net for the people playing there ensuring that house rules are followed and safewords respected BDSM participants are expected to understand practical safety aspects such as the potential for harm to body parts Contusion or scarring of the skin can be a concern Using crops whips or floggers the top s fine motor skills and anatomical knowledge can make the difference between a satisfying session for the bottom and a highly unpleasant experience that may even entail severe physical harm 44 The very broad range of BDSM toys and physical and psychological control techniques often requires a far reaching knowledge of details related to the requirements of the individual session such as anatomy physics and psychology 45 46 47 Despite these risks BDSM activities usually result in far less severe injuries than sports like boxing and football and BDSM practitioners do not visit emergency rooms any more often than the general population 48 It is necessary to be able to identify each person s psychological squicks or triggers in advance to avoid them Such losses of emotional balance due to sensory or emotional overload are a fairly commonly discussed issue It is important to follow participants reactions empathetically and continue or stop accordingly 10 49 For some players sparking freakouts or deliberately using triggers may be the desired outcome Safewords are one way for BDSM practices to protect both parties However partners should be aware of each other s psychological states and behaviors to prevent instances where the freakouts prevent the use of safewords After any BDSM activities it is important that the participants go through sexual aftercare to process and calm down from the activity After the sessions participants can need aftercare because their bodies have experienced trauma and they need to mentally come out of the role play 50 Social aspectsRoles Top and bottom Left A typical slave collar along with ring for possible attachment of a leash Such collars are worn by bottoms on their neck as a symbol of ownership to their masters Right The ring of O as a finger ring At one end of the spectrum are those who are indifferent to or even reject physical stimulation At the other end of the spectrum are bottoms who enjoy discipline and erotic humiliation but are not willing to be subordinate to the person who applies it The bottom is frequently the partner who specifies the basic conditions of the session and gives instructions directly or indirectly in the negotiation while the top often respects this guidance Other bottoms often called brats try to incur punishment from their tops by provoking them or misbehaving Nevertheless a purist school exists within the BDSM community which regards such topping from the bottom as rude or even incompatible with the standards of BDSM relations 51 Types of relationships PlayBDSM practitioners sometimes regard the practice of BDSM in their sex life as roleplaying and so often use the terms play and playing to describe activities where in their roles Play of this sort for a specified period of time is often called a session and the contents and the circumstances of play are often referred to as the scene It is also common in personal relationships to use the term kink play for BDSM activities or more specific terms for the type of activity The relationships can be of varied types citation needed Long termEarly writings on BDSM both by the academic and BDSM community spoke little of long term relationships with some in the gay leather community suggesting short term play relationships to be the only feasible relationship models and recommending people to get married and play with BDSM outside of marriage In recent times though writers of BDSM and sites for BDSM have been more focused on long term relationships A 2003 study the first to look at these relationships fully demonstrated that quality long term functioning relationships exist among practitioners of BDSM with either sex being the top or bottom the study was based on 17 heterosexual couples 52 Respondents in the study expressed their BDSM orientation to be built into who they are but considered exploring their BDSM interests an ongoing task and showed flexibility and adaptability in order to match their interests with their partners 53 The perfect match where both in the relationship shared the same tastes and desires was rare and most relationships required both partners to take up or put away some of their desires 53 The BDSM activities that the couples partook in varied in sexual to nonsexual significance for the partners who reported doing certain BDSM activities for couple bonding stress release and spiritual quests 54 The most reported issue amongst respondents was not finding enough time to be in role with most adopting a lifestyle wherein both partners maintain their dominant or submissive role throughout the day 55 Amongst the respondents it was typically the bottoms who wanted to play harder and be more restricted into their roles when there was a difference in desire to play in the relationship 55 56 The author of the study Bert Cutler speculated that tops may be less often in the mood to play due to the increased demand for responsibility on their part being aware of the safety of the situation and prepared to remove the bottom from a dangerous scenario being conscious of the desires and limits of the bottom and so on 56 The author of the study stressed that successful long term BDSM relationships came after early and thorough disclosure from both parties of their BDSM interests 56 Many of those engaged in long term BDSM relationships learned their skills from larger BDSM organizations and communities 57 There was a lot of discussion by the respondents on the amount of control the top possessed in the relationships but no discussion of being better or smarter or of more value than the bottom 58 Couples were generally of the same mind of whether or not they were in an ongoing relationship but in such cases the bottom was not locked up constantly but that their role in the context of the relationship was always present even when the top was doing non dominant activities such as household chores or the bottom being in a more dominant position 58 In its conclusion the study states The respondents valued themselves their partners and their relationships All couples expressed considerable goodwill toward their partners The power exchange between the cohorts appears to be serving purposes beyond any sexual satisfaction including experiencing a sense of being taken care of and bonding with a partner 59 The study further goes on to list three aspects that made the successful relationships work early disclosure of interests and continued transparency a commitment to personal growth and the use of the dominant submissive roles as a tool to maintain the relationship 60 In closing remarks the author of the study theorizes that due to the serious potential for harm couples in BDSM relationships develop increased communication that may be higher than in mainstream relationships 61 Professional servicesA professional dominatrix or professional dominant often referred to within the culture as a pro dom me offers services encompassing the range of bondage discipline and dominance in exchange for money The term dominatrix is little used within the non professional BDSM scene A non professional dominant woman is more commonly referred to simply as a domme dominant or femdom short for female dominance Professional submissives pro subs although far more rare do exist 62 A professional submissive consents to their client s dominant behavior within negotiated limits and often works within a professional dungeon Most of the people who work as subs normally have tendencies towards such activities especially when sadomasochism is involved citation needed Males also work as professional tops in BDSM and are called masters or doms However it is much rarer to find a male in this profession citation needed Scenes In BDSM a scene is the stage or setting where BDSM activity takes place as well as the activity itself 63 64 65 66 The physical place where a BDSM activity takes place is usually called a dungeon though some prefer less dramatic terms including playspace or club A BDSM activity can but need not involve sexual activity or sexual roleplay A characteristic of many BDSM relationships is the power exchange from the bottom to the dominant partner and bondage features prominently in BDSM scenes and sexual roleplay The Scene including use of the definite article the is also used in the BDSM community to refer to the BDSM community as a whole Thus someone who is on the Scene and prepared to play in public might take part in a scene at a public play party 67 A scene can take place in private between two or more people and can involve a domestic arrangement such as servitude or a casual or committed lifestyle master slave relationship BDSM elements may involve settings of slave training or punishment for breaches of instructions A scene can also take place in a club where the play can be viewed by others When a scene takes place in a public setting it may be because the participants enjoy being watched by others or because of the equipment available or because having third parties present adds safety for play partners who have only recently met 68 Etiquette Most standard social etiquette rules still apply when at a BDSM event such as not intimately touching someone you do not know not touching someone else s belongings including toys and abiding by dress codes 69 Many events open to the public also have rules addressing alcohol consumption recreational drugs cell phones and photography 70 A specific scene takes place within the general conventions and etiquette of BDSM such as requirements for mutual consent and agreement as to the limits of any BDSM activity This agreement can be incorporated into a formal contract In addition most clubs have additional rules which regulate how onlookers may interact with the actual participants in a scene 71 As is common in BDSM these are founded on the catchphrase safe sane and consensual Parties and clubs BDSM play parties are events in which BDSM practitioners and other similarly interested people meet in order to communicate share experiences and knowledge and to play in an erotic atmosphere BDSM parties show similarities to ones in the dark culture being based on a more or less strictly enforced dress code often clothing made of latex leather or vinyl PVC lycra and so on emphasizing the body s shape and the primary and secondary sexual characteristics The requirement for such dress codes differ While some events have none others have a policy in order to create a more coherent atmosphere and to prevent outsiders from taking part 72 At these parties BDSM can be publicly performed on a stage or more privately in separate dungeons 73 A reason for the relatively fast spread of this kind of event is the opportunity to use a wide range of playing equipment which in most apartments or houses is unavailable Slings St Andrew s crosses or similar restraining constructs spanking benches and punishing supports or cages are often made available The problem of noise disturbance is also lessened at these events while in the home setting many BDSM activities can be limited by this factor In addition such parties offer both exhibitionists and voyeurs a forum to indulge their inclinations without social criticism Sexual intercourse is not permitted within most public BDSM play spaces or not often seen in others because it is not the emphasis of this kind of play In order to ensure the maximum safety and comfort for the participants certain standards of behavior have evolved these include aspects of courtesy privacy respect and safewords 10 Today BDSM parties are taking place in most of the larger cities in the Western world This scene appears particularly on the Internet in publications and in meetings such as at fetish clubs like Torture Garden SM parties gatherings called munches and erotic fairs like Venus Berlin The annual Folsom Street Fair held in San Francisco is the world s largest BDSM event 74 It has its roots in the gay leather movement The weekend long festivities include a wide range of sadomasochistic erotica in a public clothing optional space between 8th and 13th streets with nightly parties associated with the organization 75 There are also conventions such as Living in Leather and Black Rose PsychologyResearch indicates that there is no evidence that a preference for BDSM is a consequence of childhood abuse 76 Some reports suggest that people abused as children may have more BDSM injuries and have difficulty with safe words being recognized as meaning stop the previously consensual behavior 77 thus it is possible that people choosing BDSM as part of their lifestyle who also were previously abused may have had more police or hospital reports of injuries There is also a link between transgender individuals who have been abused and violence occurring in BDSM activities 78 Joseph Merlino author and psychiatry adviser to the New York Daily News said in an interview that a sadomasochistic relationship as long as it is consensual is not a psychological problem It s a problem only if it is getting that individual into difficulties if he or she is not happy with it or it s causing problems in their personal or professional lives If it s not I m not seeing that as a problem But assuming that it did what I would wonder about is what is his or her biology that would cause a tendency toward a problem and dynamically what were the experiences this individual had that led him or her toward one of the ends of the spectrum 79 Some psychologists agree that experiences during early sexual development can have a profound effect on the character of sexuality later in life Sadomasochistic desires however seem to form at a variety of ages Some individuals report having had them before puberty while others do not discover them until well into adulthood According to one study the majority of male sadomasochists 53 developed their interest before the age of 15 while the majority of females 78 developed their interest afterward Breslow Evans and Langley 1985 The prevalence of sadomasochism within the general population is unknown Despite female sadists being less visible than males some surveys have resulted in comparable amounts of sadistic fantasies between females and males 80 The results of such studies demonstrate that one s sex does not determine preference for sadism 81 Following a phenomenological study of nine individuals involved in sexual masochistic sessions who regarded pain as central to their experience 82 sexual masochism was described as an addiction like tendency with several features resembling that of drug addiction craving intoxication tolerance and withdrawal It was also demonstrated how the first masochistic experience is placed on a pedestal with subsequent use aiming at retrieving this lost sensation much as described in the descriptive literature on addiction The addictive pattern presented in this study suggests an association with behavioral spin as found in problem gamblers 83 Prevalence Flogging of a bound man by a dominatrix at the Exxxotica adult event at the Jersey Shore New Jersey U S source source Two professional dominatrices interviewed by David Shankbone about the psychological aspects of some of their stranger requests 84 BDSM occurs among people of all genders and sexual orientations and in varied occurrences and intensities 85 86 87 The spectrum ranges from couples with no connections to the subculture outside of their bedrooms or homes without any awareness of the concept of BDSM playing tie me up games to public scenes on St Andrew s crosses at large events such as the Folsom Street Fair in San Francisco Estimation on the overall percentage of BDSM related sexual behaviour varies 88 Alfred Kinsey stated in his 1953 nonfiction book Sexual Behavior in the Human Female that 12 of females and 22 of males reported having an erotic response to a sadomasochistic story 89 In that book erotic responses to being bitten were given as 89 Erotic responses By females By malesDefinite and or frequent 26 26 Some response 29 24 Never 45 50 Number of cases 2200 567A non representative survey on the sexual behaviour of American students published in 1997 and based on questionnaires had a response rate of about 8 9 Its results showed 15 of homosexual and bisexual males 21 of lesbian and female bisexual students 11 of heterosexual males and 9 of female heterosexual students committed to BDSM related fantasies 90 In all groups the level of practical BDSM experiences were around 6 Within the group of openly lesbian and bisexual females the quote was significantly higher at 21 Independent of their sexual orientation about 12 of all questioned students 16 of lesbians and female bisexuals and 8 of heterosexual males articulated an interest in spanking Experience with this sexual behaviour was indicated by 30 of male heterosexuals 33 of female bisexuals and lesbians and 24 of the male gay and bisexual men and female heterosexual women 90 Even though this study was not considered representative other surveys indicate similar dimensions in differing target groups 91 92 93 A representative study done from 2001 to 2002 in Australia found that 1 8 of sexually active people 2 2 men 1 3 women but no significant sex difference had engaged in BDSM activity in the previous year Of the entire sample 1 8 of men and 1 3 of women had been involved in BDSM BDSM activity was significantly more likely among bisexuals and homosexuals of both sexes But among men in general there was no relationship effect of age education language spoken at home or relationship status Among women in this study activity was most common for those between 16 and 19 years of age and least likely for females over 50 years Activity was also significantly more likely for women who had a regular partner they did not live with but was not significantly related with speaking a language other than English or education 76 Another representative study published in 1999 by the German Institut fur rationale Psychologie found that about 2 3 of the interviewed women stated a desire to be at the mercy of their sexual partners from time to time 69 admitted to fantasies dealing with sexual submissiveness 42 stated interest in explicit BDSM techniques 25 in bondage 94 A 1976 study in the general US population suggests three percent have had positive experiences with Bondage or master slave roleplaying Overall 12 of the interviewed females and 18 of the males were willing to try it 95 96 A 1990 Kinsey Institute report stated that 5 to 10 of Americans occasionally engage in sexual activities related to BDSM 11 of men and 17 of women reported trying bondage 97 98 Some elements of BDSM have been popularized through increased media coverage since the middle 1990s Thus both black leather clothing sexual jewelry such as chains and dominance roleplay appear increasingly outside of BDSM contexts According to yet another survey of 317 000 people in 41 countries about 20 of the surveyed have at least used masks blindfolds or other bondage utilities once and 5 explicitly connected themselves with BDSM 99 In 2004 19 mentioned spanking as one of their practices and 22 confirmed the use of blindfolds or handcuffs 99 A 1985 study found 52 out of 182 female respondents 28 were involved in sadomasochistic activities 100 Recent surveysA 2009 study on two separate samples of male undergraduate students in Canada found that 62 to 65 depending on the sample had entertained sadistic fantasies and 22 to 39 engaged in sadistic behaviors during sex The figures were 62 and 52 for bondage fantasies and 14 to 23 for bondage behaviors 101 A 2014 study involving a mixed sample of Canadian college students and online volunteers both male and female reported that 19 of male samples and 10 of female samples rated the sadistic scenarios described in a questionnaire as being at least slightly arousing on a scale that ranged from very repulsive to very arousing 102 the difference was statistically significant 102 The corresponding figures for the masochistic scenarios were 15 for male students and 17 for female students a non significant difference 102 In a 2011 study on 367 middle aged and elderly men recruited from the broader community in Berlin 21 8 of the men self reported sadistic fantasies and 15 5 sadistic behaviors 103 24 8 self reported any such fantasy and or behavior 103 The corresponding figures for self reported masochism were 15 8 for fantasy 12 3 for behavior and 18 5 for fantasy and or behavior 103 In a 2008 study on gay men in Puerto Rico 14 8 of the over 425 community volunteers reported any sadistic fantasy desire or behavior in their lifetime the corresponding figure for masochism was 15 7 104 A 2017 cross sectional representative survey among the general Belgian population demonstrated a substantial prevalence of BDSM fantasies and activities 12 5 of the population performed one of more BDSM practices on a regular basis 105 Lifetime BDSM behaviors among North American medical students 106 Straight men Gay men Bisexual men Straight women Gay women Bisexual womenHas been restrained for pleasure 12 20 13 19 38 55 Has restrained someone else for pleasure 17 5 17 13 13 36 51 Has received pain for pleasure 4 6 5 18 8 10 36 Has inflicted pain for pleasure 5 6 9 4 6 5 26 Medical categorization See also Sexual sadism disorder and Sexual masochism disorder Reflecting changes in social norms modern medical opinion is now moving away from regarding BDSM activities as medical disorders unless they are nonconsensual or involve significant distress or harm DSM In the past the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM the American Psychiatric Association s manual defined some BDSM activities as sexual disorders 107 Following campaigns from advocacy organizations including the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom 107 the current version of the DSM DSM 5 excludes consensual BDSM from diagnosis when the sexual interests cause no harm or distress 108 ICD The World Health Organization s International Classification of Diseases ICD has made similar moves in recent years Section F65 of the current revision ICD 10 indicates that mild degrees of sadomasochistic stimulation are commonly used to enhance otherwise normal sexual activity The diagnostic guidelines for the ICD 10 state that this class of diagnosis should only be made if sadomasochistic activity is the most important source of stimulation or necessary for sexual gratification 109 In Europe an organization called ReviseF65 has worked to remove sadomasochism from the ICD 110 In 1995 Denmark became the first European Union country to have completely removed sadomasochism from its national classification of diseases This was followed by Sweden in 2009 Norway in 2010 and Finland 2011 111 112 113 Recent surveys on the spread of BDSM fantasies and practices show strong variations in the range of their results 114 Nonetheless researchers assume that 5 to 25 percent of the population practices sexual behavior related to pain or dominance and submission The population with related fantasies is believed to be even larger 114 The ICD is in the process of revision and recent drafts have reflected these changes in social norms 115 As of July 2018 update the final advance preview of the ICD 11 has de pathologised most things listed in ICD 10 section F65 characterizing as pathological only those activities which are either coercive or involving significant risk of injury or death or distressing to the individual committing them and specifically excluding consensual sexual sadism and masochism from being regarded as pathological 116 117 118 The ICD 11 classification consider sadomasochism as a variant in sexual arousal and private behaviour without appreciable public health impact and for which treatment is neither indicated nor sought 119 According to the WHO ICD 11 Working Group on Sexual Disorders and Sexual Health stigmatization and discrimination of fetish and BDSM individuals are inconsistent with human rights principles endorsed by the United Nations and the World Health Organization 119 The final advance text is to be officially presented to the members of the WHO in 2019 ready to come into effect in 2022 120 Coming out BDSM activists at Taiwan Pride 2005 Taipei A sulky cart drawn by a pony girl an example of petplay at the Folsom Parade 2012 She is wearing a bit gag and a neck collar to which are attached a ring of O and a leash Bells are hung from her pierced nipples All these symbols indicate she is roleplaying a pet slave A bondage pornography shoot in the U S 2011 Some people who are interested in or curious about BDSM decide to come out of the closet although many sadomasochists remain closeted Depending upon a survey s participants about 5 to 25 percent of the US population show affinity to the subject 90 121 Other than a few artists and writers 122 practically no celebrities are publicly known as sadomasochists Public knowledge of one s BDSM lifestyle can have detrimental vocational and social effects for sadomasochists Many face severe professional consequences 123 or social rejection if they are exposed either voluntarily or involuntarily as sadomasochists Within feminist circles the discussion is split roughly into two camps some who see BDSM as an aspect or reflection of oppression for example Alice Schwarzer and on the other side pro BDSM feminists often grouped under the banner of sex positive feminism see Samois both of them can be traced back to the 1970s 124 Some feminists have criticized BDSM for eroticizing power and violence and reinforcing misogyny They argue that women who engage in BDSM are making a choice that is ultimately bad for women 125 Feminist defenders of BDSM argue that consensual BDSM activities are enjoyed by many women and validate the sexual inclinations of these women 126 They argue that there is no connection between consensual kinky activities and sex crimes and that feminists should not attack other women s sexual desires as being anti feminist They also state that the main point of feminism is to give an individual woman free choices in her life which includes her sexual desire While some feminists suggest connections between consensual BDSM scenes and non consensual rape and sexual assault other sex positive ones find the notion insulting to women 127 128 Roles are not fixed to gender but personal preferences The dominant partner in a heterosexual relationship may be the woman rather than the man or BDSM may be part of male male or female female sexual relationships Finally some people switch taking either a dominant or submissive role on different occasions Several studies investigating the possibility of a correlation between BDSM pornography and the violence against women also indicate a lack of correlation In 1991 a lateral survey came to the conclusion that between 1964 and 1984 despite the increase in amount and availability of sadomasochistic pornography in the U S Germany Denmark and Sweden there is no correlation with the national number of rapes to be found 129 Operation Spanner in the U K proves that BDSM practitioners still run the risk of being stigmatized as criminals In 2003 the media coverage of Jack McGeorge showed that simply participating and working in BDSM support groups poses risks to one s job even in countries where no law restricts it 130 Here a clear difference can be seen to the situation of homosexuality clarification needed The psychological strain appearing in some individual cases is normally neither articulated nor acknowledged in public Nevertheless it leads to a difficult psychological situation in which the person concerned can be exposed to high levels of emotional stress 131 In the stages of self awareness he or she realizes their desires related to BDSM scenarios or decides to be open for such Some authors call this internal coming out Two separate surveys on this topic independently came to the conclusion that 58 percent and 67 percent of the sample respectively had realized their disposition before their 19th birthday Other surveys on this topic show comparable results 132 133 Independent of age coming out can potentially result in a difficult life crisis sometimes leading to thoughts or acts of suicide While homosexuals have created support networks in the last decades sadomasochistic support networks are just starting to develop in most countries In German speaking countries they are only moderately more developed 134 The Internet is the prime contact point for support groups today allowing for local and international networking In the U S Kink Aware Professionals KAP a privately funded non profit service provides the community with referrals to psychotherapeutic medical and legal professionals who are knowledgeable about and sensitive to the BDSM fetish and leather community 135 In the U S and the U K the Woodhull Freedom Foundation amp Federation National Coalition for Sexual Freedom NCSF and Sexual Freedom Coalition SFC have emerged to represent the interests of sadomasochists The German Bundesvereinigung Sadomasochismus is committed to the same aim of providing information and driving press relations In 1996 the website and mailing list Datenschlag went online in German and English providing the largest bibliography as well as one of the most extensive historical collections of sources related to BDSM Social non medical research Richters et al 2008 found that people who engaged in BDSM were more likely to have experienced a wider range of sexual practices e g oral or anal sex more than one partner group sex phone sex viewed pornography used a sex toy fisting rimming etc They were however not any more likely to have been coerced unhappy anxious or experiencing sexual difficulties On the contrary men who had engaged in BDSM scored lower on a psychological distress scale than men who did not 76 There have been few studies on the psychological aspects of BDSM using modern scientific standards Psychotherapist Charles Moser has said there is no evidence for the theory that BDSM has common symptoms or any common psychopathology emphasizing that there is no evidence that BDSM practitioners have any special psychiatric other problems based on their sexual preferences 131 Problems sometimes occur with self classification During the phase of the coming out self questioning related to one s own normality is common According to Moser the discovery of BDSM preferences can result in fear of the current non BDSM relationship s destruction This combined with the fear of discrimination in everyday life leads in some cases to a double life which can be highly burdensome At the same time the denial of BDSM preferences can induce stress and dissatisfaction with one s own vanilla lifestyle feeding the apprehension of finding no partner Moser states that BDSM practitioners having problems finding BDSM partners would probably have problems in finding a non BDSM partner as well The wish to remove BDSM preferences is another possible reason for psychological problems since it is not possible in most cases Finally the scientist states that BDSM practitioners seldom commit violent crimes From his point of view crimes of BDSM practitioners usually have no connection with the BDSM components existing in their life Moser s study comes to the conclusion that there is no scientific evidence which could give reason to refuse members of this group work or safety certificates adoption possibilities custody or other social rights or privileges The Swiss psychoanalyst Fritz Morgenthaler shares a similar perspective in his book Homosexuality Heterosexuality Perversion 1988 He states that possible problems result not necessarily from the non normative behavior but in most cases primarily from the real or feared reactions of the social environment towards their own preferences 136 In 1940 psychoanalyst Theodor Reik reached implicitly the same conclusion in his standard work Aus Leiden Freuden Masochismus und Gesellschaft 137 Moser s results are further supported by a 2008 Australian study by Richters et al on the demographic and psychosocial features of BDSM participants The study found that BDSM practitioners were no more likely to have experienced sexual assault than the control group and were not more likely to feel unhappy or anxious The BDSM males reported higher levels of psychological well being than the controls It was concluded that BDSM is simply a sexual interest or subculture attractive to a minority not a pathological symptom of past abuse or difficulty with normal sex 138 Gender differences in research See also Feminist views on BDSM Several recent studies have been conducted on the gender differences and personality traits of BDSM practitioners Wismeijer and van Assen 2013 found that the association of BDSM role and gender was strong and significant with only 8 of women in the study being dominant compared to 75 being submissive 139 Hebert and Weaver 2014 found that 9 of women in their study were dominant compared to 88 submissive 140 Weierstall1 and Giebel 2017 likewise found a significant difference with 19 of women in the study as dominant compared to 74 as submissive and a study from Andrea Duarte Silva 2015 indicated that 61 7 of females who are active in BDSM expressed a preference for a submissive role 25 7 consider themselves a switch while 12 6 prefer the dominant role In contrast 46 6 of men prefer the submissive role 24 consider themselves to be switches and 29 5 prefer the dominant role 141 They concluded that men more often display an engagement in dominant practices whereas females take on the submissive part This result is inline with a recent study about mate preferences that has shown that women have a generally higher preference for a dominant partner than men do Giebel Moran Schawohl amp Weierstall 2015 Women also prefer dominant men and even men who are aggressive for a short term relationship and for the purpose of sexual intercourse Giebel Weierstall Schauer amp Elbert 2013 142 Similarly studies on sexual fantasy differences between men and women show the latter prefer submissive and passive fantasies over dominant and active ones with rape and force being common 143 Gender differences in masochistic scripts A whipping scene where both dominant and submissives are female Paris 1930 One common belief of BDSM and kink is that women are more likely to take on masochistic roles than men Roy Baumeister 2010 actually had more male masochists in his study than female and fewer male dominants than female The lack of statistical significance in these gender differences suggests that no assumptions should be made regarding gender and masochistic roles in BDSM One explanation why we might think otherwise lies in our social and cultural ideals about femininity masochism may emphasize certain stereotypically feminine elements through activities like feminization of men and ultra feminine clothing for women But such tendencies of the submissive masochistic role should not be interpreted as a connection between it and the stereotypical female role many masochistic scripts do not include any of these tendencies 144 Baumeister found that masochistic males experienced greater severity of pain frequency of humiliation status loss degrading oral partner infidelity active participation by other persons and cross dressing Trends also suggested that male masochism included more bondage and oral sex than female though the data was not significant Female masochists on the other hand experienced greater frequency in pain pain as punishment for misdeeds in the relationship context display humiliation genital intercourse and presence of non participating audiences The exclusiveness of dominant males in a heterosexual relationship happens because historically men in power preferred multiple partners Finally Baumeister observes a contrast between the intense sensation focus of male masochism to a more meaning and emotion centred female masochistic script 144 Prior argues that although some of these women may appear to be engaging in traditional subordinate or submissive roles BDSM allows women in both dominant and submissive roles to express and experience personal power through their sexual identities In a study that she conducted in 2013 she found that the majority of the women she interviewed identified as bottom submissive captive or slave sex slave In turn Prior was able to answer whether or not these women found an incongruity between their sexual identities and feminist identity Her research found that these women saw little to no incongruity and in fact felt that their feminist identity supported identities of submissive and slave For them these are sexually and emotionally fulfilling roles and identities that in some cases feed other aspects of their lives Prior contends that third wave feminism provides a space for women in BDSM communities to express their sexual identities fully even when those identities seem counter intuitive to the ideals of feminism Furthermore women who do identify as submissive sexually or otherwise find a space within BDSM where they can fully express themselves as integrated well balanced and powerful women 145 Women in S M culture Levitt Moser and Jamison s 1994 study provides a general if outdated description of characteristics of women in the sadomasochistic S M subculture They state that women in S M tend to have higher education become more aware of their desires as young adults are less likely to be married than the general population The researchers found the majority of females identified as heterosexual and submissive a substantial minority were versatile able to switch between dominant and submissive roles and a smaller minority identified with the dominant role exclusively Oral sex bondage and master slave script were among the most popular activities while feces watersports were the least popular 146 Orientation observances in research BDSM is considered by some of its practitioners to be a sexual orientation 147 The BDSM and kink scene is more often seen as a diverse pansexual community Often this is a non judgmental community where gender sexuality orientation preferences are accepted as is or worked at to become something a person can be happy with 148 In research studies have focused on bisexuality and its parallels with BDSM as well as gay straight differences between practitioners Comparison between gay and straight men in S M Demographically Nordling et al s 2006 study found no differences in age but 43 of gay male respondents compared to 29 of straight males had university level education The gay men also had higher incomes than the general population and tended to work in white collar jobs while straight men tended toward blue collar ones Because there were not enough female respondents 22 no conclusions could be drawn from them Sexually speaking the same 2006 study by Nordling et al found that gay males were aware of their S M preferences and took part in them at an earlier age preferring leather anal sex rimming dildos and special equipment or uniform scenes In contrast straight men preferred verbal humiliation mask and blindfolds gags rubber latex outfits caning vaginal sex straitjackets and cross dressing among other activities From the questionnaire researchers were able to identify four separate sexual themes hyper masculinity giving and receiving pain physical restriction i e bondage and psychological humiliation Gay men preferred activities that tended towards hyper masculinity while straight men showed greater preference for humiliation significantly higher master madame slave role play at 84 Though there were not enough female respondents to draw a similar conclusion with the fact that there is a difference in gay and straight men suggests strongly that S M and BDSM in general can not be considered a homogenous phenomenon As Nordling et al 2006 puts it People who identify as sadomasochists mean different things by these identifications 54 149 Bisexuality In Steve Lenius original 2001 paper he explored the acceptance of bisexuality in a supposedly pansexual BDSM community The reasoning behind this is that coming out had become primarily the territory of the gay and lesbian with bisexuals feeling the push to be one or the other and being right only half the time either way What he found in 2001 was that people in BDSM were open to discussion about the topic of bisexuality and pansexuality and all controversies they bring to the table but personal biases and issues stood in the way of actively using such labels A decade later Lenius 2011 looks back on his study and considers if anything has changed He concluded that the standing of bisexuals in the BDSM and kink community was unchanged and believed that positive shifts in attitude were moderated by society s changing views towards different sexualities and orientations But Lenius 2011 does emphasize that the pansexual promoting BDSM community helped advance greater acceptance of alternative sexualities 150 151 Brandy Lin Simula 2012 on the other hand argues that BDSM actively resists gender conforming and identified three different types of BDSM bisexuality gender switching gender based styles taking on a different gendered style depending on the gender of partner when playing and rejection of gender resisting the idea that gender matters in their play partners Simula 2012 explains that practitioners of BDSM routinely challenge our concepts of sexuality by pushing the limits on pre existing ideas of sexual orientation and gender norms For some BDSM and kink provides a platform in creating identities that are fluid ever changing 152 History of psychotherapy and current recommendations Psychiatry has an insensitive history in the area of BDSM There have been many involvements by institutions of political power to marginalize subgroups and sexual minorities 88 Mental health professionals have a long history of holding negative assumptions and stereotypes about the BDSM community Beginning with the DSM II Sexual Sadism and Sexual Masochism have been listed as sexually deviant behaviours Sadism and masochism were also found in the personality disorder section 153 This negative assumption has not changed significantly which is evident in the continued inclusion of Sexual Sadism and Sexual Masochism as paraphilias in the DSM IV TR 154 The DSM V however has depathologized the language around paraphilias in a way that signifies the APA s intent to not demand treatment for healthy consenting adult sexual expression 155 These biases and misinformation can result in pathologizing and unintentional harm to clients who identify as sadists and or masochists and medical professionals who have been trained under older editions of the DSM can be slow to change in their ways of clinical practice According to Kolmes et al 2006 major themes of biased and inadequate care to BDSM clients are Considering BDSM to be unhealthy Requiring a client to give up BDSM activities in order to continue in treatment Confusing BDSM with abuse Having to educate the therapist about BDSM Assuming that BDSM interests are indicative of past family spousal abuse Therapists misrepresenting their expertise by stating that they are BDSM positive when they are not actually knowledgeable about BDSM practicesThese same researchers suggested that therapists should be open to learning more about BDSM to show comfort in talking about BDSM issues and to understand and promote safe sane consensual BDSM 88 There has also been research which suggests BDSM can be a beneficial way for victims of sexual assault to deal with their trauma most notably by Corie Hammers but this work is limited in scope and to date has not undergone empirical testing as a treatment citation needed Clinical issues Nichols 2006 compiled some common clinical issues countertransference non disclosure coming out partner families and bleed through 156 Countertransference is a common problem in clinical settings Despite having no evidence therapists may find themselves believing that their client s pathology is self evident Therapists may feel intense disgust and aversive reactions Feelings of countertransference can interfere with therapy Another common problem is when clients conceal their sexual preferences from their therapists This can compromise any therapy To avoid non disclosure therapists are encouraged to communicate their openness in indirect ways with literature and artworks in the waiting room Therapists can also deliberately bring up BDSM topics during the course of therapy With less informed therapists sometimes they over focus on clients sexuality which detracts from original issues such as family relationships depression etc A special subgroup that needs counselling is the newbie Individuals just coming out might have internalized shame fear and self hatred about their sexual preferences Therapists need to provide acceptance care and model positive attitude providing reassurance psychoeducation and bibliotherapy for these clients is crucial The average age when BDSM individuals realize their sexual preference is around 26 years 88 Many people hide their sexuality until they can no longer contain their desires However they may have married or had children by this point citation needed HistoryOrigins A fresco in the Etruscan Tomb of the Whipping 5th century BC Copper engraving about 1780 Flagellation scene illustration to Fanny Hill by Edouard Henri Avril 1907 Practices of BDSM survive from some of the oldest textual records in the world associated with rituals to the goddess Inanna Ishtar in Akkadian Cuneiform texts dedicated to Inanna which incorporate domination rituals In particular she points to ancient writings such as Inanna and Ebih in which the goddess dominates Ebih and Hymn to Inanna describing cross dressing transformations and rituals imbued with pain and ecstasy bringing about initation sic and journeys of altered states of consciousness punishment moaning ecstasy lament and song participants exhausting themselves in weeping and grief 157 158 During the 9th century BC ritual flagellations were performed in Artemis Orthia one of the most important religious areas of ancient Sparta where the Cult of Orthia a pre Olympic religion was practiced Here ritual flagellation called diamastigosis took place in which young adolescent men were whipped in a ceremony overseen by the priestess 159 These are referred to by a number of ancient authors including Pausanius III 16 10 11 160 One of the oldest graphical proofs of sadomasochistic activities is found in the Etruscan Tomb of the Whipping near Tarquinia which dates to the 5th century BC Inside the tomb there is a fresco which portrays two men who flagellate a woman with a cane and a hand during an erotic situation 161 Another reference related to flagellation is to be found in the sixth book of the Satires of the ancient Roman Poet Juvenal 1st 2nd century A D 162 further reference can be found in Petronius s Satyricon where a delinquent is whipped for sexual arousal 163 Anecdotal narratives related to humans who have had themselves voluntary bound flagellated or whipped as a substitute for sex or as part of foreplay reach back to the 3rd and 4th century BC citation needed In Pompeii a whip mistress figure with wings is depicted on the wall of the Villa of Mysteries as part of an initiation of a young woman into the Mysteries The whip mistress role drove the sacred initiation of ceremonial death and rebirth 164 The archaic Greek Aphrodite may too once have been armed with an implement with archaeological evidence of armed Aphrodites known from a number of locations in Cythera Acrocorinth and Sparta 165 and which may have been a whip 164 The Kama Sutra of India describes four different kinds of hitting during lovemaking the allowed regions of the human body to target and different kinds of joyful cries of pain practiced by bottoms The collection of historic texts related to sensuous experiences explicitly emphasizes that impact play biting and pinching during sexual activities should only be performed consensually since only some women consider such behavior to be joyful From this perspective the Kama Sutra can be considered one of the first written resources dealing with sadomasochistic activities and safety rules Further texts with sadomasochistic connotation appear worldwide during the following centuries on a regular basis 166 There are anecdotal reports of people willingly being bound or whipped as a prelude to or substitute for sex during the 14th century The medieval phenomenon of courtly love in all of its slavish devotion and ambivalence has been suggested by some writers to be a precursor of BDSM 167 168 Some sources who claim that BDSM as a distinct form of sexual behavior originated at the beginning of the 18th century when Western civilization began medically and legally categorizing sexual behavior see Etymology Flagellation practiced within an erotic setting has been recorded from at least the 1590s evidenced by a John Davies epigram 169 170 and references to flogging schools in Thomas Shadwell s The Virtuoso 1676 and Tim Tell Troth s Knavery of Astrology 1680 171 172 Visual evidence such as mezzotints and print media is also identified revealing scenes of flagellation such as The Cully Flaug d from the British Museum collection 173 John Cleland s novel Fanny Hill published in 1749 incorporates a flagellation scene between the character s protagonist Fanny Hill and Mr Barville 174 A large number of flagellation publications followed including Fashionable Lectures Composed and Delivered with Birch Discipline c 1761 promoting the names of women offering the service in a lecture room with rods and cat o nine tails 175 Foot worship of one of the feet of a dominatrix by a submissive man Her other foot rests over the man s head using it as a footstool human furniture This sketch is from a 1950 work named Bizarre Honeymoon Other sources give a broader definition citing BDSM like behavior in earlier times and other cultures such as the medieval flagellates and the physical ordeal rituals of some Native American societies 176 BDSM ideas and imagery have existed on the fringes of Western culture throughout the 20th century 177 Robert Bienvenu attributes the origins of modern BDSM to three sources which he names as European Fetish from 1928 American Fetish from 1934 and Gay Leather from 1950 178 Another source are the sexual games played in brothels which go back to the 19th century if not earlier Charles Guyette was the first American to produce and distribute fetish related material costumes footwear photography props and accessories in the U S His successor Irving Klaw produced commercial sexploitation film and photography with a BDSM theme most notably with Bettie Page and issued fetish comics known then as chapter serials by the now iconic artists John Willie Gene Bilbrew and Eric Stanton Stanton s model Bettie Page became at the same time one of the first successful models in the area of fetish photography and one of the most famous pin up girls of American mainstream culture Italian author and designer Guido Crepax was deeply influenced by him coining the style and development of European adult comics in the second half of the 20th century The artists Helmut Newton and Robert Mapplethorpe are the most prominent examples of the increasing use of BDSM related motives in modern photography and the public discussions still resulting from this 179 Alfred Binet first coined the term erotic fetishism in his 1887 book Du fetichisme dans l amour 180 Richard von Krafft Ebing saw BDSM interests as the end of a continuum 181 Leather movement Main article Leather subculture Leathermen participating in the Cologne Pride Parade 2014 Leather has been a predominantly gay male term to refer to one fetish but it can stand for many more Members of the gay male leather community may wear leathers such as motorcycle leathers or may be attracted to men wearing leather Leather and BDSM are seen as two parts of one whole Much of the BDSM culture can be traced back to the gay male leather culture which formalized itself out of the group of men who were soldiers returning home after World War II 1939 1945 182 World War II was the setting where countless homosexual men and women tasted the life among homosexual peers Post war homosexual individuals congregated in larger cities such as New York Chicago San Francisco and Los Angeles They formed leather clubs and bike clubs some were fraternal services The establishment of Mr Leather Contest and Mr Drummer Contest were made around this time This was the genesis of the gay male leather community Many of the members were attracted to extreme forms of sexuality for which peak expression was in the pre AIDS 1970s 183 This subculture is epitomized by the Leatherman s Handbook by Larry Townsend published in 1972 which describes in detail the practices and culture of gay male sadomasochists in the late 1960s and early 1970s 184 185 In the early 1980s lesbians also joined the leathermen as a recognizable element of the gay leather community They also formed leather clubs but there were some gender differences such as the absence of leatherwomen s bars In 1981 the publication of Coming to Power by lesbian feminist group Samois led to a greater knowledge and acceptance of BDSM in the lesbian community 186 By the 1990s the gay men s and women s leather communities were no longer underground and played an important role in the kink community 183 Today the leather movement is generally seen as a part of the BDSM culture instead of as a development deriving from gay subculture even if a huge part of the BDSM subculture was gay in the past In the 1990s the so called New Guard leather subculture evolved This new orientation started to integrate psychological aspects into their play citation needed The San Francisco South of Market Leather History Alley consists of four works of art along Ringold Alley honoring leather culture it opened in 2017 187 188 One of the works of art is metal bootprints along the curb which honor 28 people including Steve McEachern owner of the Catacombs a gay and lesbian S M fisting club and Cynthia Slater a founder of the Society of Janus the second oldest BDSM organization in the United States who were an important part of the leather communities of San Francisco 188 187 Internet In the late 1980s the Internet provided a way of finding people with specialized interests around the world as well as on a local level and communicating with them anonymously 10 189 This brought about an explosion of interest and knowledge of BDSM particularly on the usenet group alt sex bondage When that group became too cluttered with spam the focus moved to soc subculture bondage bdsm With an increased focus on forms of social media FetLife was formed which advertises itself as a social network for the BDSM and fetish community It operates similarly to other social media sites with the ability to make friends with other users events and pages of shared interests In addition to traditional sex shops which sell sex paraphernalia there has also been an explosive growth of online adult toy companies that specialize in leather latex gear and BDSM toys Once a very niche market there are now very few sex toy companies that do not offer some sort of BDSM or fetish gear in their catalog Kinky elements seem to have worked their way into vanilla markets The former niche expanded to an important pillar of the business with adult accessories 190 Today practically all suppliers of sex toys do offer items which originally found usage in the BDSM subculture Padded handcuffs latex and leather garments as well as more exotic items like soft whips for fondling and TENS for erotic electro stimulation can be found in catalogs aiming at classical vanilla target groups indicating that former boundaries increasingly seem to shift During the last years the Internet also provides a central platform for networking among individuals who are interested in the subject Besides countless private and commercial choices there is an increasing number of local networks and support groups emerging These groups often offer comprehensive background and health related information for people who have been unwillingly outed as well as contact lists with information on psychologists physicians and lawyers who are familiar with BDSM related topics 191 University clubs Main article List of universities with BDSM clubs Increasingly American universities are witnessing BDSM and kink education by providing student clubs such as Columbia University s Conversio Virium 192 193 and Iowa State University s Cuffs 194 University BDSM clubs are also found in the U K 195 196 197 198 Canada 199 200 Belgium 201 and Taiwan 202 Some American universities such as Indiana University and Michigan State University have professors who research and teach classes on BDSM 203 204 205 206 207 208 Legal statusMain article BDSM and the law Austria Consensual giving or receiving of pain is legal in Austria 209 showing wax play at the Eros Pyramide sex show in 2009 Section 90 of the Austrian criminal code declares bodily injury Sections 83 84 or the endangerment of physical security Section 89 to not be subject to penalty in cases in which the victim has consented and the injury or endangerment does not offend moral sensibilities Case law from the Austrian Supreme Court has consistently shown that bodily injury is only offensive to moral sensibilities thus it is only punishable when a serious injury damage to health or an employment disability lasting more than 24 days or the death of the victim results A light injury is generally considered permissible when the victim has consented to it In cases of threats to bodily well being the standard depends on the probability that an injury will actually occur If serious injury or even death would be a likely result of a threat being carried out then even the threat itself is considered punishable 209 Canada In 2004 a judge in Canada ruled that videos seized by the police featuring BDSM activities were not obscene and did not constitute violence but a normal and acceptable sexual activity between two consenting adults 210 In 2011 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in R v J A that a person must have an active mind during the specific sexual activity in order to legally consent The Court ruled that it is a criminal offence to perform a sexual act on an unconscious person whether or not that person consented in advance 211 Germany Sexual activity may occur in BDSM but it is not essential part of BDSM 4 Photo shows erotic humiliation of sexual nature being performed at Wave Gotik Treffen music festival Germany 2014 The submissive woman is stripped naked hung upside down whipped and a master doing sexual roleplay of a devil forces himself on her to cause vagina torture According to Section 194 of the German criminal code the charge of insult slander can only be prosecuted if the defamed person chooses to press charges False imprisonment can be charged if the victim when applying an objective view can be considered to be impaired in their rights of free movement According to Section 228 a person inflicting a bodily injury on another person with that person s permission violates the law only in cases where the act can be considered to have violated good morals in spite of permission having been given On 26 May 2004 the Criminal Panel No 2 of the Bundesgerichtshof German Federal Court ruled that sado masochistically motivated physical injuries are not per se indecent and thus subject to Section 228 212 Following cases in which sado masochistic practices had been repeatedly used as pressure tactics against former partners in custody cases the Appeals Court of Hamm ruled in February 2006 that sexual inclinations toward sado masochism are no indication of a lack of capabilities for successful child raising 213 Italy In Italian law BDSM is right on the border between crime and legality and everything lies in the interpretation of the legal code by the judge This concept is that anyone willingly causing injury to another person is to be punished In this context though injury is legally defined as anything causing a condition of illness and illness is ill defined itself in two different legal ways The first is any anatomical or functional alteration of the organism thus technically including little scratches and bruises too the second is a significant worsening of a previous condition relevant to organic and relational processes requiring any kind of therapy This could make it somewhat risky to play with someone as later the victim may call foul play citing even an insignificant mark as evidence against the partner Also any injury requiring over 20 days of medical care must be denounced by the professional medic who discovers it leading to automatic indictment of the person who caused it 214 Nordic countries In September 2010 a Swedish court acquitted a 32 year old man of assault for engaging in consensual BDSM play with a 16 year old woman the age of consent in Sweden is 15 215 Norway s legal system has likewise taken a similar position 216 that safe and consensual BDSM play should not be subject to criminal prosecution This parallels the stance of the mental health professions in the Nordic countries which have removed sadomasochism from their respective lists of psychiatric illnesses Switzerland The age of consent in Switzerland is 16 years which also applies to BDSM play Minors i e those under 16 are not subject to punishment for BDSM play as long as the age difference between them is less than three years Certain practices however require granting consent for light injuries with only those over 18 permitted to give consent On 1 April 2002 Articles 135 and 197 of the Swiss Criminal Code were tightened to make ownership of objects or demonstrations which depict sexual acts with violent content a punishable offense This law amounts to a general criminalization of sado masochism since nearly every sado masochist will have some kind of media that fulfills this criterion Critics also object to the wording of the law which puts sado masochists in the same category as pedophiles and pederasts 217 United Kingdom In British law consent is an absolute defense to common assault but not necessarily to actual bodily harm where courts may decide that consent is not valid as occurred in the case of R v Brown 218 Accordingly consensual activities in the U K may not constitute assault occasioning actual or grievous bodily harm in law The Spanner Trust states that this is defined as activities which have caused injury of a lasting nature but that only a slight duration or injury might be considered lasting in law 219 The decision contrasts with the later case of R v Wilson in which conviction for non sexual consensual branding within a marriage was overturned the appeal court ruling that R v Brown was not an authority in all cases of consensual injury and criticizing the decision to prosecute 220 Following Operation Spanner the European Court of Human Rights ruled in January 1999 in Laskey Jaggard and Brown v United Kingdom that no violation of Article 8 occurred because the amount of physical or psychological harm that the law allows between any two people even consenting adults is to be determined by the jurisdiction the individuals live in as it is the State s responsibility to balance the concerns of public health and well being with the amount of control a State should be allowed to exercise over its citizens In the Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill 2007 the British Government cited the Spanner case as justification for criminalizing images of consensual acts as part of its proposed criminalization of possession of extreme pornography 221 Another contrasting case was that of Stephen Lock in 2013 who was cleared of actual bodily harm on the grounds that the woman consented In this case the act was deemed to be sexual 222 United States Spanking with a paddle in a BDSM dungeon in Lower Manhattan The United States Federal law does not list a specific criminal determination for consensual BDSM acts Many BDSM practitioners cite the legal decision of People v Jovanovic 95 N Y 2d 846 2000 or the Cybersex Torture Case 223 which was the first U S appellate decision to hold in effect that one does not commit assault if the victim consents However many individual states do criminalize specific BDSM actions within their state borders Some states specifically address the idea of consent to BDSM acts within their assault laws such as the state of New Jersey which defines simple assault to be a disorderly persons offense unless committed in a fight or scuffle entered into by mutual consent in which case it is a petty disorderly persons offense 224 Oregon Ballot Measure 9 was a ballot measure in the U S state of Oregon in 1992 concerning sadism masochism gay rights pedophilia and public education that drew widespread national attention It would have added the following text to the Oregon Constitution All governments in Oregon may not use their monies or properties to promote encourage or facilitate homosexuality pedophilia sadism or masochism All levels of government including public education systems must assist in setting a standard for Oregon s youth which recognizes that these behaviors are abnormal wrong unnatural and perverse and they are to be discouraged and avoided It was defeated in the 3 November 1992 general election with 638 527 votes in favor 828 290 votes against 225 The National Coalition for Sexual Freedom collects reports about punishment for sexual activities engaged in by consenting adults and about its use in child custody cases 226 Cultural aspectsSee also BDSM in culture and media Today the BDSM culture exists in most Western countries 227 This offers BDSM practitioners the opportunity to discuss BDSM relevant topics and problems with like minded people This culture is often viewed as a subculture mainly because BDSM is often still regarded as unusual by some of the public Many people hide their leaning from society since they are afraid of the incomprehension and of social exclusion 228 In contrast to frameworks seeking to explain sadomasochism through psychological psychoanalytic medical or forensic approaches which seek to categorize behaviour and desires and find a root cause Romana Byrne suggests that such practices can be seen as examples of aesthetic sexuality in which a founding physiological or psychological impulse is irrelevant Rather sadism and masochism may be practiced through choice and deliberation driven by certain aesthetic goals tied to style pleasure and identity These practices in certain circumstances and contexts can be compared with the creation of art 229 Symbols The BDSM rights flag with triskelion type emblem The leather pride flag a symbol of the BDSM and fetish subculture One of the most commonly used symbols of the BDSM community is a derivation of a triskelion shape within a circle 230 Various forms of triskele have had many uses and many meanings in many cultures its BDSM usage derives from the Ring of O in the classic book Story of O The BDSM Emblem Project claims copyright over one particular specified form of the triskelion symbol other variants of the triskelion are free from such copyright claims 231 The leather pride flag is a symbol for the leather subculture and also widely used within BDSM In continental Europe the Ring of O is widespread among BDSM practitioners 232 The triskelion as a BDSM symbol can easily be perceived as the three separate parts of the acronym BDSM which are BD DS and SM Bondage amp Discipline Dominance amp Submission Sadism amp Masochism They are three separate items that are normally associated together The BDSM rights flag shown to the right is intended to represent the belief that people whose sexuality or relationship preferences include BDSM practises deserve the same human rights as everyone else and should not be discriminated against for pursuing BDSM with consenting adults The flag is inspired by the leather pride flag and BDSM emblem but is specifically intended to represent the concept of BDSM rights and to be without the other symbols restrictions against commercial use It is designed to be recognizable by people familiar with either the leather pride flag or BDSM triskelion or triskele as something to do with BDSM and to be distinctive whether reproduced in full colour or in black and white or another pair of colours 233 BDSM and fetish items and styles have been spread widely in Western societies everyday life by different factors such as avant garde fashion heavy metal goth subculture and science fiction TV series 234 and are often not consciously connected with their BDSM roots by many people While it was mainly confined to the punk and BDSM subcultures in the 1990s it has since spread into wider parts of Western societies Film and music In music the Romanian singer songwriter Navi featured BDSM and Shibari scenes in her music video Picture Perfect 2014 235 The video was banned in Romania for its explicit content 236 In 2010 Rihanna s song S amp M and Christina Aguilera s single Not Myself Tonight appeared both full of BDSM imagery In movies While BDSM activity appeared initially in subtle form in the 1960s famous works of literature like Story of O and Venus in Furs were filmed explicitly With the release of the 1986 film 9 Weeks the topic of BDSM was transferred to mainstream cinema From the 1990s cinematic representation of alternative sexualities including BDSM increased dramatically as seen in documentary productions such as Graphic Sexual Horror a 2009 film based on the website Insex KinK a 2013 film based on the website Kink com and movies such as Fifty Shades of Grey 2015 and its two sequels Fifty Shades Darker 2017 and Fifty Shades Freed 2018 However mistakenly considered in mainstream society as having BDSM activities that are rather abusive are the movies Fifty Shades of Grey 2015 and its two sequels Fifty Shades Darker 2017 and Fifty Shades Freed 2018 237 A lot of what happens in the main relationship of Fifty Shades of Grey is domestic abuse both physical and emotional and for people whose entire understanding of BDSM now comes from jiggle balls and rooms of pain this is a dangerous misconception to foster 238 Theater Although it would be possible to establish certain elements related to BDSM in classical theater not until the emergence of contemporary theater would some plays have BDSM as the main theme Exemplifying this are two works one Austrian one German in which BDSM is not only incorporated but integral to the storyline of the play Worauf sich Korper kaprizieren Austria Peter Kern directed and wrote the script for this comedy which is a present day adaption of Jean Genet s 1950 film Un chant d amour It is about a marriage in which the wife film veteran Miriam Goldschmidt submits her husband Heinrich Herkie and the butler Gunter Bubbnik to her sadistic treatment until two new characters take their places 239 Ach Hilde Oh Hilda Germany This play by Anna Schwemmer premiered in Berlin A young Hilde becomes pregnant and after being abandoned by her boyfriend she decides to become a professional dominatrix to earn money The play carefully crafts a playful and frivolous picture of the field of professional dominatrices 240 Literature Main article Sadism and masochism in fiction See also List of BDSM authors Fanny Pistor with whip and Leopold von Sacher Masoch Venus in Furs was inspired by the author s own life where he was dominated by a woman Although examples of literature catering to BDSM and fetishistic tastes were created in earlier periods BDSM literature as it exists today cannot be found much earlier than World War II The word sadism originates from the works of Donatien Alphonse Francois Marquis de Sade and the word masochism originates from Leopold von Sacher Masoch the author of Venus in Furs However it is worth noting that the Marquis de Sade describes non consensual abuse in his works such as in Justine Venus in Furs describes a consensual dom sub relationship A central work in modern BDSM literature is undoubtedly Story of O 1954 by Anne Desclos under the pseudonym Pauline Reage Other notable works include 9 Weeks 1978 by Elizabeth McNeill some works of the writer Anne Rice Exit to Eden and her Claiming of Sleeping Beauty series of books Jeanne de Berg L Image 1956 dedicated to Pauline Reage the Gor series by John Norman and naturally all the works of Patrick Califia Gloria Brame the group Samois and many of the writer Georges Bataille Histoire de l oeil Story of the Eye Madame Edwarda 1937 as well as those of Bob Flanagan Slave Sonnets 1986 Fuck Journal 1987 A Taste of Honey 1990 A common part of many of the poems of Pablo Neruda is a reflection on feelings and sensations arising from the relations of EPE or erotic exchange of power The Fifty Shades trilogy is a series of very popular erotic romance novels by E L James which involves BDSM however the novels have been criticized for their inaccurate and harmful depiction of BDSM 241 In the 21st century a number of prestigious university presses such as Duke University Indiana University and University of Chicago have published books on BDSM written by professors thereby lending academic legitimacy to this once taboo topic 242 Art See also List of BDSM artists and List of BDSM photographers In photography Eric Kroll and Irving Klaw with Bettie Page the first well known bondage model and Japanese photographer Araki Nobuyoshi whose works are exhibited in several major art museums galleries and private collections such as the Baroness Marion Lambert the world s largest holder of contemporary photographic art Also Robert Mapplethorpe whose most controversial work is that of the underground BDSM scene in the late 1960s and early 1970s of New York The homoeroticism of this work fuelled a national debate over the public funding of controversial artwork Comic book drawings Guido Crepax with Histoire d O 1975 Justine 1979 and Venere in Pelliccia 1984 inspired by the work of Pauline Reage the Marquis de Sade and Leopold von Sacher Masoch John Willie and The Adventures of Sweet Gwendoline 1984 which was the basis for the film The Perils of Gwendoline in the Land of the Yik Yak The Sunstone Mercy 2011 ongoing books by Stjepan Sejic have become very popular and are found in many conventional bookstores around the world In graphic design Eric Stanton and his work on dominance and female bondage as well as Hajime Sorayama and Robert Bishop In art deco sculpture Bruno Zach produced perhaps his best known sculpture called The Riding Crop c 1925 which features a scantily clad dominatrix wielding a riding crop 243 See alsoAutosadism Dominance hierarchy Index of BDSM articles Glossary of BDSM List of BDSM equipment List of BDSM organizations List of bondage positions Leather subculture Outline of BDSM Vulnerability and care theory of loveReferences BDSM n in entry B n Oxford English Dictionary Online draft ed Oxford University Press June 2013 Archived from the original on 31 December 2015 Retrieved 29 November 2015 Grau Johnson 1995 What do B amp D S amp M D amp S top bottom mean Leather Roses Archived from the original on 11 January 2008 Retrieved 27 January 2008 a b c d Dictionary of BDSM Terms Archived from the original on 2 December 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2014 a b Miller Phillip Devon Molly Granzig William A 1995 Screw the Roses Send Me the Thorns The Romance and Sexual Sorcery of Sadomasochism Mystic Rose Books p 55 ISBN 978 0 9645960 0 9 Bill Henkin Sybil Holiday Consensual Sadomasochism How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely page 64 Publisher Daedalus Publishing Company 2006 ISBN 978 1 881943 12 9 VICSS Difference between Abuse and Power Exchange by the NLA Dutch SM Media Information Center and Powerrotics Archived from the original on 16 December 2007 Retrieved 10 December 2007 Rack vs SSC Within Reality 2003 Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 Retrieved 13 November 2006 Dossie Easton Janet W Hardy The New Topping Book Greenery Press CA 2002 ISBN 978 1 890159 36 8 Dossie Easton Janet W Hardy The New Topping Book page 72 Greenery Press CA 2002 ISBN 978 1 890159 36 8 a b c d e f Wiseman Jay 1998 SM 101 A Realistic Introduction California Greenery Press ISBN 978 0 9639763 8 3 Dossie Easton Janet W Hardy The New Topping Book page 71 Greenery Press CA 2002 The Restrained Elegance lexicon of slavegirl bondage poses and positions www restrainedelegance com Archived from the original on 23 August 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2017 a b Philosophizing About Sex Archived 5 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine PT 244 Matthias T J Grimme Das Bondage Handbuch Anleitung zum erotischen Fesseln Charon Verlag Hamburg 1999 ISBN 978 3 931406 16 5 German Lee Bridgett Harrington Shibari You Can Use Japanese Rope Bondage and Erotic Macrame Mystic Productions 2007 ISBN 978 0 615 14490 0 Joyal Christian C Cossette Amelie Lapierre Vanessa February 2015 What Exactly Is an Unusual Sexual Fantasy The Journal of Sexual Medicine 12 2 328 340 doi 10 1111 jsm 12734 ISSN 1743 6095 PMID 25359122 Wiseman Jay 2000 Jay Wiseman s Erotic Bondage Handbook CA Greenery Press ISBN 978 1 890159 13 9 Bill Henkin Sybil Holiday Consensual Sadomasochism How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely page 71 Daedalus Publishing Company 1996 ISBN 978 1 881943 12 9 Face to face Dominatrix and submissive BBC News 22 September 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2007 Retrieved 22 October 2009 Wiseman Jay Negotiation and Negotiation Forms Archived from the original on 2 December 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2014 McGreal Scott A 25 July 2013 BDSM Personality and Mental Health Psychology Today Archived from the original on 3 December 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2014 cp Marquis de Sade The 120 Days of Sodom Pbl ReadHowYouWant 1 December 2006 ISBN 978 1 4250 3448 1 pages 407 409 You ll have no further use for these he muttered casting each article into a large grate No further need for this mantelet this dress these stockings this bodice no said he when all had been consumed all you ll need now is a coffin Details describing the development of the theoretical construct perversion by Krafft Ebing and his relation to this terms see Andrea Beckmann Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture 2001 8 2 66 95 online at Deconstructing Myths Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Isidor Isaak Sadger Uber den sado masochistischen Komplex in Jahrbuch fur psychoanalytische und psychopathologische Forschungen Bd 5 1913 S 157 232 German Krueger amp Kaplan 2001 p 393 The DSM nomenclature referring to sexual psychopathology has been criticized as being vague and not having undergone DSM field trials Note DSM here is not related to BDSM It is the standard abbreviation for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders a b c d e Barker Iantaffi amp Gupta 2007 p 13 Weiner Irving B Craighead W Edward 2010 The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology Fourth Edition Volume 4 Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons p 1488 ISBN 9780470170243 Davies Janet L Janosik Ellen Hastings 1991 Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing A Caring Approach Boston MA Jones amp Bartlett Learning pp 390 ISBN 0867204427 Craighead W Edward Nemeroff Charles B 2004 The Concise Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology and Behavioral Science Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons p 562 ISBN 0471220361 Goldberg Jeff 1988 Anatomy of a Scientific Discovery Bantam Books 1988 ISBN 978 0 553 34631 2 ISBN 978 0 553 17616 2 British edition ISBN 978 0 553 05261 9 Fries DS 2002 Opioid Analgesics In Williams DA Lemke TL Foye s Principles of Medicinal Chemistry 5th ed Philadelphia Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 978 0 683 30737 5 Burke Edmund 1909 On Taste On the Sublime and Beautiful Reflections on the French Revolution A Letter to a Noble Lord with Introduction Notes and Illustrations P F Collier amp Son OCLC 16729697 Archived from the original on 13 April 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2021 Sagarin BradJ Cutler Bert Cutler Nadine Lawler Sagarin Kimberly A Matuszewich Leslie 1 April 2009 Hormonal Changes and Couple Bonding in Consensual Sadomasochistic Activity Archives of Sexual Behavior 38 2 186 200 doi 10 1007 s10508 008 9374 5 ISSN 0004 0002 PMID 18563549 S2CID 15989116 William Brame Gloria Brame Different Loving The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission paperback Villard 1996 ISBN 978 0 679 76956 9 Claudia Varrin The Art Of Sensual Female Dominance A Guide for Women Citadel 2000 ISBN 978 0 8065 2089 6 John Warren PhD The Loving Dominant Greenery Press CA 2nd rev ed ISBN 978 1 890159 20 7 Bill Henkin Sybil Holiday Consensual Sadomasochism How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely Daedalus Publishing Company 1996 ISBN 978 1 881943 12 9 David Stein S M s Copernican Revolution From a Closed World to the Infinite Universe and Safe Sane Consensual The Evolution of a Shibboleth available at s m leather history Bill Henkin Sybil Holiday Consensual Sadomasochism How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely pages 80 94 Daedalus Publishing Company 1996 ISBN 978 1 881943 12 9 Deborah Cameron Don Kulick Language and Sexuality Page 24 Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 00969 0 Tristan Taormino ed The Ultimate Guide to Kink BDSM Role Play and the Erotic Edge page 26 Cleis Press 2012 ISBN 978 1573447799 Gilmour Paisley 25 January 2018 The world s most popular safe words have been revealed and wow Cosmopolitan Archived from the original on 13 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2019 What is a safe word and do you need one Metro 22 February 2018 Archived from the original on 13 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Joseph W Bean Flogging Greenery Press CA 2000 ISBN 978 1 890159 27 6 Jack Rinella The Toybag Guide series Greenery Press CA e g The Toybag Guide to Hot Wax and Temperature Play ISBN 978 1 890159 57 3 Arne Hoffmann Das Lexikon des Sadomasochismus Der Inside Fuhrer zur dunklen Erotik Praktiken und Instrumente Personen und Institutionen Literatur und Film Politik und Philosophie page 42 Schwarzkopf amp Schwarzkopf 2000 ISBN 978 3 89602 290 5 German Phillip Miller Molly Devon William A Granzig Screw the Roses Send Me the Thorns The Romance and Sexual Sorcery of Sadomasochism pp 95 Mystic Rose Books 1995 ISBN 978 0 9645960 0 9 Barker Iantaffi amp Gupta 2007 p 6 Dossie Easton Janet W Hardy The New Topping Book page 111 Zane Zachary 4 October 2019 What Is Sexual Aftercare and Why Is It So Important Men s Health Archived from the original on 20 July 2020 Retrieved 20 July 2020 lunaKM 5 Ways to Recognize Topping from the Bottom Archived from the original on 10 October 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2014 Cutler 2003 p 99 a b Cutler 2003 p 102 Cutler 2003 p 103 a b Cutler 2003 p 104 a b c Cutler 2003 p 107 Cutler 2003 p 108 a b Cutler 2003 p 109 Cutler 2003 p 110 Cutler 2003 p 111 Cutler 2003 p 112 Directory of Professional Submssives Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 Retrieved 6 October 2014 BDSM Glossary Xeromag Archived from the original on 31 December 2018 Retrieved 5 October 2018 What is D s Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Dom Sub Glossary Ober Lauren Kink 101 Seven Days Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 5 October 2018 DEFINITIONS OF BDSM TERMS Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Mistress Sky terms Aggrawal Anil 2008 Forensic and Medico Legal Aspects of Sexual Crimes and Unusual Sexual Practices CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 4308 2 Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 5 July 2010 P 147 148 154 172 174 Definition of Terms Archived from the original on 1 January 2012 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Novad Primer Definitions Rev 29 April 2013 Basics of Dungeon Etiquette Dominant Guide Archived from the original on 31 August 2016 Retrieved 5 December 2016 Rascal s Club Rules Rascal s Club Archived from the original on 29 September 2014 Retrieved 25 May 2018 General Club Etiquette for ANY Fetish Play Club kinkyplayspace 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crunte de BDSM libertatea ro in Romanian 22 October 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Navi Picture Perfect Video shibaridojo blogspot ro 29 April 2015 Archived from the original on 28 November 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Falk G Weinberg T S 1983 Sadomasochism and Popular Western Culture Amherst NY NY Prometheus Books pp 137 144 I like submissive sex but Fifty Shades is not about fun it s about abuse Sexuality The Guardian 25 August 2012 Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Retrieved 24 June 2021 Der Standard edicion del 3 September 2006 BILD Zeitung Berlin 15 March 1998 Green Emma 10 February 2015 Consent Isn t Enough The Troubling Sex of Fifty Shades The Atlantic Archived from the original on 13 April 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2021 Paglia Camille 20 May 2013 Scholars in Bondage The Chronicle of Higher Education Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 11 December 2017 Bruno Zach s Riding Crop Girl hits World Record 150 602 at Bonhams art auction Just Collecting 26 June 2015 Archived from the original on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2021 Further readingRehor Jennifer Eve 2015 Sensual Erotic and Sexual Behaviors of Women from the Kink Community Archives of Sexual Behavior 44 4 825 836 doi 10 1007 s10508 015 0524 2 PMC 4379392 PMID 25795531 Baldwin Guy Ties That Bind SM Leather Fetish Erotic Style Issues Communication and Advice Daedalus Publishing 1993 ISBN 978 1 881943 09 9 Barker Meg Iantaffi A Gupta C 2007 Kinky clients kinky counselling The challenges and potentials of BDSM PDF Open Research Online Routledge Archived PDF from the original on 14 March 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2011 Brame Gloria G Brame William D and Jacobs Jon Different Loving An Exploration of the World of Sexual Dominance and Submission Villard Books New York 1993 ISBN 978 0 679 40873 4 Brame Gloria Come Hither A Commonsense Guide to Kinky Sex Fireside 2000 ISBN 978 0 684 85462 5 Califia Pat Sensuous Magic New York Masquerade Books 1993 ISBN 978 1 56333 131 2 Cutler Bert February 2003 Partner selection power dynamics and sexual bargaining in self defined BDSM couples Thesis San Francisco The Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality Fedoroff Paul J 2008 Sadism Sadomasochism Sex and Violence Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 53 10 637 646 doi 10 1177 070674370805301003 PMID 18940032 Dollie Llama Diary of an S amp M Romance PEEP Press California 2006 ISBN 978 0 9705392 5 0 Henkin Wiliiam A Sybil Holiday Consensual Sadomasochism How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely Daedalus Publishing 1996 ISBN 978 1 881943 12 9 Janus Samuel S and Janus Cynthia L The Janus Report on Sexual Behavior John Wiley amp Sons 1994 ISBN 978 0 471 01614 4 Masters Peter This Curious Human Phenomenon An Exploration of Some Uncommonly Explored Aspects of BDSM The Nazca Plains Corporation 2008 ISBN 978 1 934625 68 2 Phillips Anita A Defence of Masochism Faber and Faber new edition 1999 ISBN 978 0 571 19697 5 Newmahr Staci 2011 Playing on the Edge Sadomasochism Risk and Intimacy Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 22285 0 Nomis Anne O 2013 The History amp Arts of the Dominatrix Mary Egan Publishing amp Anna Nomis Ltd U K ISBN 978 0 9927010 0 0 Rinella Jack The Complete Slave Creating and Living an Erotic Dominant submissive Lifestyle Daedalus Publishing 2002 ISBN 978 1 881943 13 6 Saez Fernando y Vinuales Olga Armarios de Cuero Ed Bellaterra 2007 ISBN 978 84 7290 345 6 Larry Townsend Leatherman s Handbook first edition 1972 this was the first book to publicize BDSM to the general public it was a paperback book widely available on newsstands and at bookstores throughout the United States Wiseman Jay SM 101 A Realistic Introduction 1st ed 1992 2nd ed Greenery Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 9639763 8 3 Byrne Romana 2013 Aesthetic Sexuality A Literary History of Sadomasochism Archived 22 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine New York Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4411 0081 8 Dominari Rajan 2019 Welcome to the Darkside A BDSM Primer AKO Publishing Company ISBN 978 1734527100 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to BDSM Listen to this article 2 parts 44 minutes source source source source These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated 3 April 2007 2007 04 03 and do not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Pain and the erotic by Lesley Hall Mitchell Tony 2018 Eric Stanton and the History of the Bizarre Underground The Fetishistas Archived from the original on 5 December 2018 Retrieved 4 December 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BDSM amp oldid 1144068459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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