cuous. Pedophiles and others engaged in so-called perverse sex with other people can be, but need not be, promiscuous. In addition, victims of rape and sexual abuse are not promiscuous in virtue of their unwitting or unwilling participation in such activity. All such cases are of vital interest if we are to understand why people object to sexual promiscuity when they do. We are now in the requisite philosophical position to investigate some of the specific complaints that feminists have lodged against promiscuity.
|
Feminist Objections to Promiscuity
|
Feminists have argued that sexual liberation can never be women's liberation if the terms and conditions of sexual freedom are determined by men. Promiscuous sex with strangers, sex often associated with cruising bars and nightclubs, came under especially heavy fire by some feminists in the late 1970s as antithetical to women's true sexual needs. Such sex, along with sadomasochistic sex, cross-generational sex between adults and young children, and lesbian butch/femme sexual role-playing, was believed to constitute patriarchal relations of dominance and submission that were profoundly antifeminist and antiwoman. Women, it was claimed, value the sexual intimacy and tenderness of romance, not the emotional distance and sexual objectification of a one-night stand. From this perspective, good sex for a woman should make her feel safe about exposing her sexual vulnerability, not fearful of her sexual abuse or exploitation. Good sex should make a woman feel comfortable and cared for, not content with being one in a series of sexual romps. It was concluded, therefore, that for a woman, truly satisfying sex is monogamous sex with a single, loving, committed partner.
|
From this point of view, good sex for men cannot be good sex for women, since men prefer the divorce of eros from romance. Some feminists would refer to the feelings of loneliness, guilt, and alienation many women experienced during the postwar sexual revolution (and ever since) as confirming evidence that sex without love, tenderness, or commitment serves men's needs for unencumbered heterosexual sex, not women's. According to feminists of this perspective, the sex that men prefer is casual, performance-oriented, and objectifying. Male sex victimizes women by making them replaceable and expendable sexual objects of male fantasy and desire. Male sex is body-centered without being person-centered. The sex men prefer is power-motivated, dominating, "scoring" sex that is inherently promiscuous and profoundly unromantic. 31
|
While appearing to reinvigorate the 1950s stereotype of the docile, nurturing, and sexually monogamous female, which feminists of varied theoretical backgrounds have long claimed subordinates women to men, 32 some feminists see in a uniquely female sexual nature a way to celebrate and value individual women for their own sake. Alice Echols and others refer to such feminists as "cultural feminists" for their insistence on essential gender differences to discover a separable and valuable female identity. Echols also uses this specific feminist nomenclature to distinguish cultural feminists from other feminists who also regard a hierarchical heterosexuality as essential to patriarchal stability but who neither require sexual intimacy as insurance against women's sexual victimization nor characterize women as the sexual objects
|
|