Sex During Menstruation: Race, Sexual Identity, and Women’s Accounts of Pleasure and Disgust

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Abstract

This study analyzes qualitative interviews with 40 women across a range of age, race, and sexual orientation to examine experiences with sex during menstruation. Results show that 25 women describe negative reactions, two describe neutral reactions, and 13 describe positive reactions. Negative responses involve four themes: discomfort and labor to clean ‘messes, ' overt partner discomfort, negative self-perception, and managing partner’s disgust. Positive responses cohere around physical and emotional pleasure from sex while menstruating and rebellion against anti-menstrual attitudes. Race and sexual identity differences appear: White women and bisexual or lesbian-identified women describe more positive feelings than women of color or heterosexual women. Bisexual women with male partners describe more positive reactions than heterosexual women with male partners, implying that heterosexual identity relates to negative attitudes more than heterosexual behavior. Those with positive attitudes also enjoy masturbation more than others. Additionally, interviews address sexual and racial identities’ informing body practices, partner choice affecting body affirmation, and resistance against ideas about women’s bodies as ‘disgusting.'.

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APA

Fahs, B. (2020). Sex During Menstruation: Race, Sexual Identity, and Women’s Accounts of Pleasure and Disgust. In The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies (pp. 961–984). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-0614-7_69

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