The Great Growth of Bis@xuals: And Why the Majority Are Women
It was a collective historically reduced to silence. Even if it is part of the lgbtiq acronym, the truth is that visibility is not the same as homos@xuals, and many people continue to this day, attributing bis@xuality to "vice" or "one phase", "do not do it." I want to come out "or" hetero curios son ". Despite suffering a double rejection by heteros@xuals and homos@xuals, the truth is that the number of Americans who identify themselves in this way has increased, according to data published by the 2018 General Social Survey , which collects data at national level in the United States.
Sociologists D'Lane Compton and Tristan Bridges have done an analysis of the data and concluded that this 1% increase is due, almost in its entirety, to women. They are those who consider themselves bis@xual. They, on the other hand, have just moved. "In particular, bis@xuality has increased among black women," they explained. "Even people with a university education and those who are not religious", reports 'Qz'.
Being an insulted and questioned bis@xual collective, he may have contributed to his resurgence.
The survey does not offer an explanation of why the bis@xual population in the United States has increased compared to other gender identities, but makes an important point: "The existence or legitimacy of bis@xuality (in general or compared to an individual) it has been denied and questioned in an absolutely historical way, which could have helped to revive the term in recent years ".
They also argue that it could have something to do with the fact that in the last two decades there has been more LGTBIQ representation on television and film (the record was in 2018). The record was taken from the Netflix platform. "Certainly," says Compton, "which gives visibility, as does the increase in LGTBIQ candidates who are running for political office in recent years." All this suggests that the social acceptance of non-binary s@xual identities is spreading, for example, Kyrsten Sinema, the first openly bis@xual Congressman in 2012 ".
After all, many studies, such as those conducted by the universities of Cornell and Essex, have ratified the theory that there is no absolute heteros@xuality. To do this, they brought together several volunteers (men and women) who were examined by dilating the students as an indicator of s@xual excitement as they watched pornography with both s@xes. They came to the conclusion that female s@xuality is more fluid than that of men. The theory has arisen about the fact that perhaps we all have a bis@xual tendency that has become a cliche that you've surely heard.
Some researchers suggest that male s@xuality may be less limited than theirs and that bis@xuality, therefore, does not manifest itself in the same proportion because it does not have the same acceptance.
Thanks to television, cinema and politics, non-binary s@xual identities are beginning to be accepted.
Also, as Michael Gold wrote for "The New York Times" in 2018, the vocabulary on s@xuality itself has changed over the last decade. "Times and attitudes have changed and the language used to talk about s@xual orientation and gender identity is logical in the sense that they have also evolved," he says.
Although, he insists, this does not mean that the discrimination has been completely eradicated. "Those who identified themselves as part of the collective did in the corresponding years 2010 to 2016. The data suggest that it may have fallen 2016-2018, it would not be surprising given that this was the year that Donald Trump rose." turn on "
Sociologists D'Lane Compton and Tristan Bridges have done an analysis of the data and concluded that this 1% increase is due, almost in its entirety, to women. They are those who consider themselves bis@xual. They, on the other hand, have just moved. "In particular, bis@xuality has increased among black women," they explained. "Even people with a university education and those who are not religious", reports 'Qz'.
Being an insulted and questioned bis@xual collective, he may have contributed to his resurgence.
The survey does not offer an explanation of why the bis@xual population in the United States has increased compared to other gender identities, but makes an important point: "The existence or legitimacy of bis@xuality (in general or compared to an individual) it has been denied and questioned in an absolutely historical way, which could have helped to revive the term in recent years ".
They also argue that it could have something to do with the fact that in the last two decades there has been more LGTBIQ representation on television and film (the record was in 2018). The record was taken from the Netflix platform. "Certainly," says Compton, "which gives visibility, as does the increase in LGTBIQ candidates who are running for political office in recent years." All this suggests that the social acceptance of non-binary s@xual identities is spreading, for example, Kyrsten Sinema, the first openly bis@xual Congressman in 2012 ".
After all, many studies, such as those conducted by the universities of Cornell and Essex, have ratified the theory that there is no absolute heteros@xuality. To do this, they brought together several volunteers (men and women) who were examined by dilating the students as an indicator of s@xual excitement as they watched pornography with both s@xes. They came to the conclusion that female s@xuality is more fluid than that of men. The theory has arisen about the fact that perhaps we all have a bis@xual tendency that has become a cliche that you've surely heard.
Some researchers suggest that male s@xuality may be less limited than theirs and that bis@xuality, therefore, does not manifest itself in the same proportion because it does not have the same acceptance.
Thanks to television, cinema and politics, non-binary s@xual identities are beginning to be accepted.
Also, as Michael Gold wrote for "The New York Times" in 2018, the vocabulary on s@xuality itself has changed over the last decade. "Times and attitudes have changed and the language used to talk about s@xual orientation and gender identity is logical in the sense that they have also evolved," he says.
Although, he insists, this does not mean that the discrimination has been completely eradicated. "Those who identified themselves as part of the collective did in the corresponding years 2010 to 2016. The data suggest that it may have fallen 2016-2018, it would not be surprising given that this was the year that Donald Trump rose." turn on "

Comments
Post a Comment