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Cuckold

A cuckold is the husband of an adulterous wife; the wife of an adulterous husband is a cuckquean. In biology, a cuckold is a male who unwittingly invests parental effort in juveniles who are not genetically his offspring.[1] A husband who is aware of and tolerates his wife's infidelity is sometimes called a wittol or wittold.[2]

The Jealous Husband, a genre painting by Cornelius Krieghoff depicting a cuckolded husband

History of the term

 
c. 1815 French satire on cuckoldry, which shows both men and women wearing horns

The word cuckold derives from the cuckoo bird, alluding to its habit of laying its eggs in other birds' nests.[3][4] The association is common in medieval folklore, literature, and iconography.

English usage first appears about 1250 in the medieval debate poem The Owl and the Nightingale. It was characterized as an overtly blunt term in John Lydgate's The Fall of Princes, c. 1440.[5] Shakespeare's writing often referred to cuckolds, with several of his characters suspecting they had become one.[4]

The word often implies that the husband is deceived; that he is unaware of his wife's unfaithfulness and may not know until the arrival or growth of a child plainly not his (as with cuckoo birds).[4]

The female equivalent cuckquean first appears in English literature in 1562,[6][7] adding a female suffix to the cuck.

A related word, first appearing in 1520, is wittol, which substitutes wit (in the sense of knowing) for the first part of the word, referring to a man aware of and reconciled to his wife's infidelity.[8]

Cuck

An abbreviation of cuckold, the term cuck has been used by the alt-right to attack the masculinity of an opponent. It was originally aimed at other conservatives.[9]

Metaphor and symbolism

Horns and the rut

 
A flag used in the English Civil War by Horatio Cary referring to the Earl of Essex's notorious marital problems

In Western traditions, cuckolds have sometimes been described as "wearing the horns of a cuckold" or just "wearing the horns". This is an allusion to the mating habits of stags, who forfeit their mates when they are defeated by another male.[10]

In Italy (especially in Southern Italy, where it is a major personal offence), the insult "cornuto" is often accompanied by the sign of the horns. In French, the term is "porter des cornes". In German, the term is "jemandem Hörner aufsetzen", or "Hörner tragen", the husband is "der gehörnte Ehemann".

In Brazil and Portugal, the term used is "corno", meaning exactly "horned". The term is quite offensive, especially for men, and cornos are a common subject of jokes and anecdotes.

Rabelais's Tiers Livers of Gargantua and Pantagruel (1546) portrays a horned fool as a cuckold.[11] In Molière's L'École des femmes (1662), a man named Arnolphe (see below) who mocks cuckolds with the image of the horned buck (becque cornu) becomes one at the end.

Green hat

In Chinese usage, the cuckold (or wittol) is said to be "戴綠帽子" dài lǜmàozi, translated into English as 'wearing the green hat'. The term is an allusion to the sumptuary laws used from the 13th to the 18th centuries that required males in households with prostitutes to wrap their heads in a green scarf (or later a hat).[12]

Associations

A saint Arnoul(t), Arnolphe, or Ernoul, possibly Arnold of Soissons, is often cited as the patron saint of cuckolded husbands, hence the name of Molière's character Arnolphe.[13][14]

The Greek hero Actaeon is often associated with cuckoldry, as when he is turned into a stag, he becomes "horned".[15] This is alluded to in Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor, Robert Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy, and others.[16]

Cross-cultural parallels

 
"The Cuckold Carpenter Under the Bed of his Wife and her Lover" from an 18th-century edition of the Kalīla wa-Dimna

In Islamic cultures, the related term dayouth (Arabic: دَيُّوث) can be used to describe a person who is viewed as apathetic or permissive with regards to unchaste behaviour by female relatives or a spouse, or who lacks the demeanor (ghayrah) of paternalistic protectiveness.[17][18] Variations on the spelling include dayyuth, dayuuth, or dayoos.[19] The term has been criticised for its use as a pejorative while also suggestive of acceptance of vain paternalistic gender roles, stigmatization of sexuality or overprotective intrusive sexual gatekeeping.[20]

Cuckoldry as a fetish

 
A 15th-century Persian miniature

Unlike the traditional definition of the term, in fetish usage, a cuckold (also known as "cuckolding fetish")[21][22] is complicit in their partner's sexual "infidelity"; the wife who enjoys "cuckolding" her husband is called a "cuckoldress" if the man is more submissive.[23][page needed][24][25][26] The dominant man engaging with the cuckold's partner is called a "bull".[24][27]

If a couple can keep the fantasy in the bedroom, or come to an agreement where being cuckolded in reality does not damage the relationship, they may try it out in reality. This, like other sexual acts, can improve the sexual relationship between partners.[28] However, the primary proponent of the fantasy is almost always the one being humiliated, or the "cuckold": the cuckold convinces his lover to participate in the fantasy for them, though other "cuckolds" may prefer their lover to initiate the situation instead. The fetish fantasy does not work at all if the cuckold is being humiliated against their will.[29]

Psychology regards cuckold fetishism as a variant of masochism, with the cuckold deriving pleasure from being humiliated.[30][31] In his book Masochism and the Self, psychologist Roy Baumeister advanced a Self Theory analysis that cuckolding (or specifically, all masochism) was a form of escaping from self-awareness, at times when self-awareness becomes burdensome, such as with perceived inadequacy. According to this theory, the physical or mental pain from masochism brings attention away from the self, which would be desirable in times of "guilt, anxiety, or insecurity", or at other times when self-awareness is unpleasant.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ Steven M. Platek; Todd K. Shackelford, eds. (2006). Female Infidelity and Paternal Uncertainty: Evolutionary Perspectives on Male Anti-Cuckoldry Tactics. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139458047.
  2. ^ Davidson, Thomas. "Whitlow to Wyvern". Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary 1908 – via Wikisource.
  3. ^ "cuckold". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Williams, Janet (4 July 2009). "Cuckolds, horns and other explanations". BBC News. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  5. ^ Geoffrey Hughes (26 March 2015). An Encyclopedia of Swearing: The Social History of Oaths, Profanity, Foul Language, and Ethnic Slurs in the English-speaking World. Taylor & Francis. pp. 191–. ISBN 978-1-317-47677-1.
  6. ^ Coleman, Julie (1 January 1999). Love, Sex, and Marriage: A Historical Thesaurus. Rodopi. ISBN 9042004339. Retrieved 22 November 2016 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Williams, Gordon (13 September 2001). A Dictionary of Sexual Language and Imagery in Shakespearean and Stuart Literature: Three Volume Set Volume I A-F Volume II G-P Volume III Q-Z. A&C Black. ISBN 9780485113938. Retrieved 22 November 2016 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  9. ^ Stack, Liam (August 15, 2017). "Alt-Right, Alt-Left, Antifa: A Glossary of Extremist Language". The New York Times.
  10. ^ E. Cobham Brewer 1810–1897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898.
  11. ^ LaGuardia, David P. (2008). Intertextual Masculinity in French Renaissance Literature. Franham, UK: Ashgate Publishing. p. 133.
  12. ^ Sommer, Matthew Harvey (2002). Sex, Law, and Society in Late Imperial China. Stanford: Stanford University Press. p. 218. ISBN 0-8047-4559-5. Retrieved 2008-07-27.
  13. ^ Brian Joseph Levy (2000). The Comic Text: Patterns and Images in the Old French Fabliaux. Rodopi. ISBN 9042004290.
  14. ^ William Beck (December 1968). "Arnolphe or Monsieur de la Souche?". The French Review. 42 (2): 255. JSTOR 386804.
  15. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). 2010.
  16. ^ John Stephen Farmer (1903). Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present. Subscribers only. p. 15.
  17. ^ Sallo, Ibrahim Khidhir. "A Sociolinguistic Study of Sex Differences in Mosuli Arabic in Mosul-Iraq."
  18. ^ Shahawi, Majdi Muhammad Ash (2004). Marital Discord - Causes & Cures. Darussalam Publishers.
  19. ^ Semerdjian, Elyse (2012-03-01). "'Because he is so tender and pretty': sexual deviance and heresy in eighteenth-century Aleppo". Social Identities. 18 (2): 175–199. doi:10.1080/13504630.2012.652844. ISSN 1350-4630. S2CID 145004098.
  20. ^ Hamamra, Bilal Tawfiq (2018-04-03). "The Containment of Female Linguistic, Spatial, and Sexual Transgression in Arden of Faversham: A Contemporary Palestinian Reading". Comparative Literature: East & West. 2 (2): 88–100. doi:10.1080/25723618.2018.1546474. ISSN 2572-3618.
  21. ^ Elizabeth Weiss (2017-08-09). "The Cuckolding Fetish Explained: Why Some Men Actually *Want* to Be Cheated On". Marie Claire Magazine. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  22. ^ Calhoun, Ada (2012-09-14). "You May Call It Cheating, but We Don't". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  23. ^ Ley, David (2009). Insatiable Wives: Women Who Stray and the Men Who Love Them. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-0031-9.
  24. ^ a b Kort, Joe (13 September 2016). "The Expanding Phenomenon Of Cuckolding: Even Gay Men Are Getting Into It". Huffington Post. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  25. ^ Harris, Lynn (5 September 2007). "What do you call a female cuckold?". Salon. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  26. ^ Hyde, Janet Shibley; Oliver, Mary Beth (2000), Travis, Cheryl Brown; White, Jacquelyn W. (eds.), "Gender differences in sexuality: Results from meta-analysis.", Sexuality, society, and feminism., Washington: American Psychological Association, pp. 57–77, doi:10.1037/10345-003, ISBN 978-1-55798-617-7, retrieved 2022-10-22
  27. ^ Lehmiller, Justin J.; Ley, David; Savage, Dan (2018). "The Psychology of Gay Men's Cuckolding Fantasies". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 47 (4): 999–1013. doi:10.1007/s10508-017-1096-0. ISSN 0004-0002. PMID 29285655. S2CID 4722706.
  28. ^ "A consequence of cuckoldry: More (and better) sex?". American Psychological Association. October 2011. Retrieved 2022-10-22.
  29. ^ Klein, Donald C. (1 Dec 1999). "The humiliation dynamic: An overview". The Journal of Primary Prevention. 12 (2): 93–121. doi:10.1007/BF02015214. PMID 24258218. S2CID 43535241.
  30. ^ Rufus, Anneli (July 29, 2010). "Cuckolding: The Sex Fetish for Intellectuals". The Daily Beast. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  31. ^ Betchen, Stephen J. (November 18, 2014). "Sexually Dominant Women and the Men Who Desire Them, Part II". Magnetic Partners blog post. Psychology Today. Cuckolding can also be mixed with other non-monogamous relationship arrangements with which it has substantial overlap such as swinging, open relationships, and polyamory. Again, it is distinguished from these concepts in that cuckold's thrill in their partner's acts is specifically masochistic
  32. ^ Baumeister, Roy (2014). Masochism and the Self. New York: Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1138876064.

External links

  •   Media related to Cuckold at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of cuckold at Wiktionary
  • Una McIlvenna (December 20, 2017). "From the 16th-century to men's rights activists: The history of the insult 'cuckold'". ABC. Retrieved December 20, 2017.

cuckold, this, article, about, term, 1997, novel, kiran, nagarkar, novel, 2015, south, african, film, film, cuckold, husband, adulterous, wife, wife, adulterous, husband, cuckquean, biology, cuckold, male, unwittingly, invests, parental, effort, juveniles, gen. This article is about the term For the 1997 novel by Kiran Nagarkar see Cuckold novel For the 2015 South African film see Cuckold film A cuckold is the husband of an adulterous wife the wife of an adulterous husband is a cuckquean In biology a cuckold is a male who unwittingly invests parental effort in juveniles who are not genetically his offspring 1 A husband who is aware of and tolerates his wife s infidelity is sometimes called a wittol or wittold 2 The Jealous Husband a genre painting by Cornelius Krieghoff depicting a cuckolded husband Contents 1 History of the term 1 1 Cuck 2 Metaphor and symbolism 2 1 Horns and the rut 2 2 Green hat 3 Associations 4 Cross cultural parallels 5 Cuckoldry as a fetish 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory of the term nbsp c 1815 French satire on cuckoldry which shows both men and women wearing hornsThe word cuckold derives from the cuckoo bird alluding to its habit of laying its eggs in other birds nests 3 4 The association is common in medieval folklore literature and iconography English usage first appears about 1250 in the medieval debate poem The Owl and the Nightingale It was characterized as an overtly blunt term in John Lydgate s The Fall of Princes c 1440 5 Shakespeare s writing often referred to cuckolds with several of his characters suspecting they had become one 4 The word often implies that the husband is deceived that he is unaware of his wife s unfaithfulness and may not know until the arrival or growth of a child plainly not his as with cuckoo birds 4 The female equivalent cuckquean first appears in English literature in 1562 6 7 adding a female suffix to the cuck A related word first appearing in 1520 is wittol which substitutes wit in the sense of knowing for the first part of the word referring to a man aware of and reconciled to his wife s infidelity 8 Cuck Further information Cuckservative An abbreviation of cuckold the term cuck has been used by the alt right to attack the masculinity of an opponent It was originally aimed at other conservatives 9 Metaphor and symbolismHorns and the rut nbsp A flag used in the English Civil War by Horatio Cary referring to the Earl of Essex s notorious marital problemsIn Western traditions cuckolds have sometimes been described as wearing the horns of a cuckold or just wearing the horns This is an allusion to the mating habits of stags who forfeit their mates when they are defeated by another male 10 In Italy especially in Southern Italy where it is a major personal offence the insult cornuto is often accompanied by the sign of the horns In French the term is porter des cornes In German the term is jemandem Horner aufsetzen or Horner tragen the husband is der gehornte Ehemann In Brazil and Portugal the term used is corno meaning exactly horned The term is quite offensive especially for men and cornos are a common subject of jokes and anecdotes Rabelais s Tiers Livers of Gargantua and Pantagruel 1546 portrays a horned fool as a cuckold 11 In Moliere s L Ecole des femmes 1662 a man named Arnolphe see below who mocks cuckolds with the image of the horned buck becque cornu becomes one at the end Green hat In Chinese usage the cuckold or wittol is said to be 戴綠帽子 dai lǜmaozi translated into English as wearing the green hat The term is an allusion to the sumptuary laws used from the 13th to the 18th centuries that required males in households with prostitutes to wrap their heads in a green scarf or later a hat 12 AssociationsA saint Arnoul t Arnolphe or Ernoul possibly Arnold of Soissons is often cited as the patron saint of cuckolded husbands hence the name of Moliere s character Arnolphe 13 14 The Greek hero Actaeon is often associated with cuckoldry as when he is turned into a stag he becomes horned 15 This is alluded to in Shakespeare s The Merry Wives of Windsor Robert Burton s The Anatomy of Melancholy and others 16 Cross cultural parallels nbsp The Cuckold Carpenter Under the Bed of his Wife and her Lover from an 18th century edition of the Kalila wa DimnaIn Islamic cultures the related term dayouth Arabic د ي وث can be used to describe a person who is viewed as apathetic or permissive with regards to unchaste behaviour by female relatives or a spouse or who lacks the demeanor ghayrah of paternalistic protectiveness 17 18 Variations on the spelling include dayyuth dayuuth or dayoos 19 The term has been criticised for its use as a pejorative while also suggestive of acceptance of vain paternalistic gender roles stigmatization of sexuality or overprotective intrusive sexual gatekeeping 20 Cuckoldry as a fetish nbsp A 15th century Persian miniatureUnlike the traditional definition of the term in fetish usage a cuckold also known as cuckolding fetish 21 22 is complicit in their partner s sexual infidelity the wife who enjoys cuckolding her husband is called a cuckoldress if the man is more submissive 23 page needed 24 25 26 The dominant man engaging with the cuckold s partner is called a bull 24 27 If a couple can keep the fantasy in the bedroom or come to an agreement where being cuckolded in reality does not damage the relationship they may try it out in reality This like other sexual acts can improve the sexual relationship between partners 28 However the primary proponent of the fantasy is almost always the one being humiliated or the cuckold the cuckold convinces his lover to participate in the fantasy for them though other cuckolds may prefer their lover to initiate the situation instead The fetish fantasy does not work at all if the cuckold is being humiliated against their will 29 Psychology regards cuckold fetishism as a variant of masochism with the cuckold deriving pleasure from being humiliated 30 31 In his book Masochism and the Self psychologist Roy Baumeister advanced a Self Theory analysis that cuckolding or specifically all masochism was a form of escaping from self awareness at times when self awareness becomes burdensome such as with perceived inadequacy According to this theory the physical or mental pain from masochism brings attention away from the self which would be desirable in times of guilt anxiety or insecurity or at other times when self awareness is unpleasant 32 See alsoBeta male Candaulism Crime of passion Cuckoldry in fish Cuckquean Erotic humiliation Female dominance Female promiscuity Feminization activity Human sperm competition Kuckuckskind Monogamish Netorare Non paternity event Open marriage Paternity fraud Polyamory Polyandry marriage to multiple husbands Pregnancy fetishism Swinging VoyeurismReferences Steven M Platek Todd K Shackelford eds 2006 Female Infidelity and Paternal Uncertainty Evolutionary Perspectives on Male Anti Cuckoldry Tactics New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139458047 Davidson Thomas Whitlow to Wyvern Chambers s Twentieth Century Dictionary 1908 via Wikisource cuckold Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 19 December 2016 a b c Williams Janet 4 July 2009 Cuckolds horns and other explanations BBC News Retrieved 11 February 2013 Geoffrey Hughes 26 March 2015 An Encyclopedia of Swearing The Social History of Oaths Profanity Foul Language and Ethnic Slurs in the English speaking World Taylor amp Francis pp 191 ISBN 978 1 317 47677 1 Coleman Julie 1 January 1999 Love Sex and Marriage A Historical Thesaurus Rodopi ISBN 9042004339 Retrieved 22 November 2016 via Google Books Williams Gordon 13 September 2001 A Dictionary of Sexual Language and Imagery in Shakespearean and Stuart Literature Three Volume Set Volume I A F Volume II G P Volume III Q Z A amp C Black ISBN 9780485113938 Retrieved 22 November 2016 via Google Books Oxford English Dictionary Stack Liam August 15 2017 Alt Right Alt Left Antifa A Glossary of Extremist Language The New York Times E Cobham Brewer 1810 1897 Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 1898 LaGuardia David P 2008 Intertextual Masculinity in French Renaissance Literature Franham UK Ashgate Publishing p 133 Sommer Matthew Harvey 2002 Sex Law and Society in Late Imperial China Stanford Stanford University Press p 218 ISBN 0 8047 4559 5 Retrieved 2008 07 27 Brian Joseph Levy 2000 The Comic Text Patterns and Images in the Old French Fabliaux Rodopi ISBN 9042004290 William Beck December 1968 Arnolphe or Monsieur de la Souche The French Review 42 2 255 JSTOR 386804 Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed 2010 John Stephen Farmer 1903 Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present Subscribers only p 15 Sallo Ibrahim Khidhir A Sociolinguistic Study of Sex Differences in Mosuli Arabic in Mosul Iraq Shahawi Majdi Muhammad Ash 2004 Marital Discord Causes amp Cures Darussalam Publishers Semerdjian Elyse 2012 03 01 Because he is so tender and pretty sexual deviance and heresy in eighteenth century Aleppo Social Identities 18 2 175 199 doi 10 1080 13504630 2012 652844 ISSN 1350 4630 S2CID 145004098 Hamamra Bilal Tawfiq 2018 04 03 The Containment of Female Linguistic Spatial and Sexual Transgression in Arden of Faversham A Contemporary Palestinian Reading Comparative Literature East amp West 2 2 88 100 doi 10 1080 25723618 2018 1546474 ISSN 2572 3618 Elizabeth Weiss 2017 08 09 The Cuckolding Fetish Explained Why Some Men Actually Want to Be Cheated On Marie Claire Magazine Retrieved 2022 06 27 Calhoun Ada 2012 09 14 You May Call It Cheating but We Don t The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 06 27 Ley David 2009 Insatiable Wives Women Who Stray and the Men Who Love Them Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 0031 9 a b Kort Joe 13 September 2016 The Expanding Phenomenon Of Cuckolding Even Gay Men Are Getting Into It Huffington Post Retrieved 19 December 2016 Harris Lynn 5 September 2007 What do you call a female cuckold Salon Retrieved 19 December 2016 Hyde Janet Shibley Oliver Mary Beth 2000 Travis Cheryl Brown White Jacquelyn W eds Gender differences in sexuality Results from meta analysis Sexuality society and feminism Washington American Psychological Association pp 57 77 doi 10 1037 10345 003 ISBN 978 1 55798 617 7 retrieved 2022 10 22 Lehmiller Justin J Ley David Savage Dan 2018 The Psychology of Gay Men s Cuckolding Fantasies Archives of Sexual Behavior 47 4 999 1013 doi 10 1007 s10508 017 1096 0 ISSN 0004 0002 PMID 29285655 S2CID 4722706 A consequence of cuckoldry More and better sex American Psychological Association October 2011 Retrieved 2022 10 22 Klein Donald C 1 Dec 1999 The humiliation dynamic An overview The Journal of Primary Prevention 12 2 93 121 doi 10 1007 BF02015214 PMID 24258218 S2CID 43535241 Rufus Anneli July 29 2010 Cuckolding The Sex Fetish for Intellectuals The Daily Beast Retrieved November 20 2021 Betchen Stephen J November 18 2014 Sexually Dominant Women and the Men Who Desire Them Part II Magnetic Partners blog post Psychology Today Cuckolding can also be mixed with other non monogamous relationship arrangements with which it has substantial overlap such as swinging open relationships and polyamory Again it is distinguished from these concepts in that cuckold s thrill in their partner s acts is specifically masochistic Baumeister Roy 2014 Masochism and the Self New York Psychology Press ISBN 978 1138876064 External links nbsp Media related to Cuckold at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The dictionary definition of cuckold at Wiktionary Una McIlvenna December 20 2017 From the 16th century to men s rights activists The history of the insult cuckold ABC Retrieved December 20 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cuckold amp oldid 1212332752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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