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Collars are a
commonly used symbol of BDSM and can be ornamental
or functional.
Collars are a
commonly used symbol of BDSM and can be ornamental
or functional.
The term "BDSM" is
an abbreviation derived from the terms bondage and
discipline, domination and submission, sadism and
masochism.[1] It defines a spectrum of
behaviors, including dominance, submission,
punishment, masochism, bondage, role play, and a
large variety of other activities, frequently
sexual in nature. "BDSM" is the collective term for
a group of related sexual preferences common in
issue-related literature, which are sometimes
referred to as "D/s", "Sadomasochism", or "S&M"
(also written "S-and-M").
BDSM can also be
referred to as "kinky sex", "power exchange" or
"the lifestyle", but each of these risks being
confused with other alternative relationships or
sexual behavior. Functionally, it is a form of
'power play', where power dynamics are used as part
of the erotic experience. As such, BDSM mainly
involves at least two participants, these being the
"Top" who is the dominant partner in the
relationship and the "Bottom" who is the
submissive.[2]
BDSM tends to
involve "scenes" where the party enjoys a scenario
which normally tends to involve one of the party
voluntarily giving up control or authority. BDSM
practitioners make a clear distinction between
consensual BDSM and sexual abuse; it is important
that the process is voluntary and that whoever is
giving up control is willing to perform what tasks
are asked of them. This is illustrated in the
expression "Safe, sane and consensual", which means
that the participants are aware of the dangerous
nature of what they are doing, that what they are
doing is sensible and in a right frame of mind, and
that full informed consent has been given by
everyone. A similar term used is "Risk-aware
consensual kink" (RACK), although this practice
expands the range of things that can be
performed.[3]
Contents
* 1
Fundamentals
o 1.1
Safety
* 2
Aspects
o 2.1
Bondage/Discipline
o 2.2
Dominance and submission
o 2.3
Sadomasochism
o 2.4
Physical aspects
* 3
Relationship models
o 3.1
Play relations
+
3.1.1 Common role models
o 3.2
Non-erotic
o 3.3
Professional services
* 4 Scene:
subculture and public
o 4.1
Symbols
o 4.2
Prejudices
o 4.3
Coming out
o 4.4
Parties and clubs
* 5
Psychology
o 5.1
Incidence
o 5.2
Psychological categorization
* 6
History
o 6.1
Origins
o 6.2
Leather movement
o 6.3
Internet
o 6.4
Etymology
* 7 Legal
status
o 7.1
Germany
o 7.2
United Kingdom
o 7.3
Italy
o 7.4
Austria
o 7.5
Switzerland
* 8 See
also
* 9
References
* 10 Further
reading
* 11 External
links
Fundamentals
Demonstration of a
partial suspension bondage.
Demonstration of a
partial suspension bondage.
Many variations of
BDSM involve one partner voluntarily giving up
control. The submissive partner gives control to
the dominant partner in a ritualized interaction
known as power exchange. The dominant partner is
referred to as the "Dom," "Dominant," or "Top" and
the submissive partner is called "sub,"
"submissive," or "Bottom". In accordance with the
commonly-used nomenclature in issue-related
discussions among the practitioners, this article
will use the terms Top and Bottom to describe the
particular role-playing partner.
BDSM actions often
take place during a specific period of time agreed
to by both parties, referred to as "play," "a
scene" or "a session." All parties involved usually
derive pleasure from this, even though many of the
practices that are performed, such as inflicting
pain, humiliation or being restrained would be
considered unpleasant under normal circumstances.
Sexual intercourse, be it oral, anal or vaginal,
may occur within a session, but is not
essential.[4]
The fundamental
principles for the exercise of BDSM require that it
should be performed by mature and responsible
partners, of their own volition, and in a safe way.
Since the 1980s, these basic principles have been
condensed into the motto "Safe, sane and
consensual", abbreviated as SSC, which means that
everything is based on safe, sane and consenting
behavior of all involved parties.[5] This
mutual consent makes a clear legal and ethical
distinction between BDSM and crimes such as sexual
assault or domestic violence.[6]
Some BDSM
practitioners prefer a code of behavior that
differs from "SSC" and described as "Risk Aware
Consensual Kink" (RACK), indicating a preference of
a style in which the individual responsibility of
the involved parties is emphasized more strongly,
with each participant being responsible for his or
her own well-being. RACK focuses primarily upon
awareness and informed consent, rather than
accepted safe practices.[7] Consent is the
most important criterion here. The consent and
compliance for a sadomasochistic situation can be
granted only by people who are able to judge the
potential results. For their consent, they must
have all relevant information at hand and the
necessary mental capacity to judge. The resulting
consent and understanding is often summarized in a
"contract", an agreement of what can and cannot
take place.[8]
In general, it must
be possible for the consenting partner to withdraw
his or her consent at any given time;[9]
for example, by using a safeword that was agreed on
in advance.[10][11] Failure to
honor a safeword is considered the most serious
misconduct that can take place in BDSM and can even
change the sexual consent situation into a crime,
depending on the relevant law,[12] since
the bottom has explicitly revoked his or her
consent to any actions which follow the use of the
safeword (see Legal status).
Safety
Aside from the
general advice related to Safer Sex, BDSM sessions
often require a much wider array of safety
precautions than typical Vanilla Sex (sexual
behavior without BDSM elements).[13] To
keep all acts within the framework agreed upon by
all participants, a commonly accepted set of rules
and safety measures has emerged within the BDSM
community.
To ensure consensus
related to BDSM activity, pre-play negotiations are
commonplace, especially among partners who do not
know each other very well. These negotiations
concern the interests and fantasies of each partner
and establish a framework.[14] This kind of
discussion is a typical "unique selling
proposition" of BDSM sessions and quite
commonplace.[15] Additionally, safewords
are often arranged to provide for an immediate stop
of any activity if any participant should so
desire.[16] Quick and reliable response to
safewords is an imperative for safe BDSM. In case
of voice constraints of the bottom, eye contact or
hand signs might be the only means of communication
and are therefore of very high importance for
safety.
Practical safety
aspects are of tremendous importance. It is highly
important during bondage sessions to understand
which parts of the human body have a risk of damage
to nerves and blood vessels by contusion or have a
high risk of scar development. 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, possibly including
severe physical harm.[17] The very broad
range of different 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.[18][19][20]
It is necessary to
be able to identify a bottom's psychological
"freakouts" in advance in order to avoid it. Such
losses of emotional balance due to sensory or
emotional overload are the most common SM
emergency. It is extremely important to follow his
or her reactions empathetically and continue or
stop
accordingly.[21][22]
Aspects
The acronym BDSM
includes psychological and physiological
facets:
* Bondage &
Discipline (B&D)
* Dominance
& Submission (D&S)
* Sadism &
Masochism (or Sadomasochism) (S&M)
This model for
differentiating among these three aspects of BDSM
is increasingly used in literature
today.[2] Nevertheless, it is only an
attempt at phenomonological differentiation.
Individual tastes and preferences in the area of
sexuality may overlap among these areas, which are
discussed separately here.
Bondage/Discipline
Main articles:
Bondage and Discipline
Two women
tapegagged and cuffed to iron bars
Two women
tapegagged and cuffed to iron bars
Bondage and
Discipline are two aspects of BDSM that do not
necessarily relate to one another, but can appear
jointly. The term "Bondage" describes the practice
of restraining for pleasure. Bondage is usually,
but not always, a sexual practice.[23]
While bondage is a very popular variation within
the larger field of BDSM, it is nevertheless
sometimes differentiated from the rest of this
field.[24] Studies among BDSM practitioners
in the U.S. have shown that about half of all men
find the idea of bondage to be erotic; many women
do as well. Strictly speaking, bondage means
binding the partner by tying their appendages
together; for example, by the use of handcuffs or
by lashing their arms to an object. Bondage can be
also be achieved by spreading the appendages and
fastening them with chains to a St. Andrews cross
or spreader bars.[25]
The term
"Discipline" describes the use of rules and
punishment to control overt behavior in
BDSM.[26] Punishment can be pain caused
physically (such as caning), humiliation caused
psychologically (such as a public flagellation) or
loss of freedom caused physically (eg. chaining the
Bottom to the foot of a bed). Another aspect is the
structured training of the Bottom.[27]
Overlap with practices from the field of bondage
can occur, but is not necessarily mandatory. A
differentiation between bondage and discipline is
sometimes difficult.
Dominance and
submission
Main article:
Dominance and submission (BDSM)
"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 dominance 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 cognizantly. The range of its individual
characteristics is thereby wide.
Strappado with
handcuffs and chains. This practice has a distinct
effect of immobilization and pain.
Strappado with
handcuffs and chains. This practice has a distinct
effect of immobilization and pain.
Examples of
mentally orientated practices are education games,
during which the dominant requires certain forms of
behavior from the submissive. Special forms include
erotic roleplay like ageplay, in which a difference
in age, either real or enacted, formulates the
background; or petplay. Concerted deployed sexual
rejection exercised on the partner can be an aspect
of Dominance and Submission as well (see
cuckoldry). The most established and probably most
cliché set form of dominance and submission
is dominance and slavedom. These can be
administrated for the short duration of a session
among otherwise-emancipated partners, but also can
be integrated into everyday life indefinitely. In a
few relationships, it leads as far as total
submission of one partner in the truest sense of
the phrase total power exchange. Compensating
elements of the total dominance and submission are
care and devotion complementing one another, thus
facilitating stable relationships. The consensual
submission of the sub is sometimes demonstrated to
others by symbols indicating his/her belonging to
the dom, such as wearing a collar, special tattoos,
piercings, a very short haircut or a bald
head.
Occasionally,
actual "slave 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. Such documents have not been
recognised as being legally binding. Contracts that
are contra bonos mores (contrary to public morals)
are generally illegal, and such contracts can even
be constitutionally prohibited. In Europe, such
agreements may be contrary to Article 3 of the
European Convention on Human Rights which grants a
general freedom from "unhuman or degrading
treatment". This right had been held to be absolute
and no limitations or derogations are permitted by
the Convention. Nevertheless, the mere existence of
such purported contracts has resulted in banner
headlines in yellow press publications, and
uninformed third parties seeing such information
out of context are periodically led to rejecting
and condemning the relationships they
describe.
Sadomasochism
Erotic spanking on
a male Bottom.
Erotic spanking on
a male Bottom.
Main Article:
Sadomasochism
The term
"Sadomasochism" is derived from the words "Sadism"
and "Masochism" (see Etymology). In the context of
consensual sexual activities, sadism and masochism
are not strictly accurate terms; there is a
significant difference from the medical or
psychological usage of both terms. Sadomasochism
refers to the physical aspects of BDSM. Sadism
describes sexual pleasure derived by inflicting
pain, degradation, or humiliation on another
person. On the other hand, the masochist enjoys
being bound, spanked or suffering within the
consensual scenario. Sadomasochism does not imply
enjoyment through causing or receiving pain in
other situations (e.g. accidental injury, medical
procedures). Discipline often incorporates
sadomasochistic aspects. Sadomasochism is practiced
in isolation relatively rarely, although certain
practices BDSM can be performed solo, such as
self-bondage and autoerotic asphyxia, but such
practices can be dangerous resulting injury or
death.[28]
Physical
aspects
A bottom's back
covered with different coloured waxes.
A bottom's back
covered with different coloured waxes.
On a physical
level, BDSM is partly connected to the intentional
infliction of physical pain, suffering and other
intense sensations. BDSM practitioners often
compare the effects induced by the resulting
endorphins to the so-called "runner's high" or to
the afterglow of orgasm.[29] The
corresponding trance-like mental state is also
known as "subspace" and is regularly described as
very comforting. Some use the term "body stress" to
describe this physiological sensation.[30]
This experience of Algolagnia is important, but is
not the only motivation for many BDSM
practitioners. The philosopher Edmund Burke defines
this sensation of pleasure derived from pain by the
word sublime.[31] The regions of the brain
that manage sexual stimuli and pain overlap,
resulting in some individuals associating pain with
sexual pleasure as the neurological reactions are
intertwined. A minority of BDSM practitioners take
part in sessions for which they do not receive any
personal gratification. They enter such situations
solely with the intention to allow their partners
to fulfill their own needs and/or
fetishes.
In some BDSM
sessions, the Top exposes the Bottom to a wide
range of sensual impressions, for example:
pinching, biting, scratching with fingernails,
spanking or the use of various objects such as
crops, whips, liquid wax, icecubes, Wartenberg
wheels, erotic electrostimulation or
others.[32] Fixation by handcuffs, ropes or
chains may be used as well. The repertoire of
possible "toys" is limited only by the imagination
of both partners. To some extent, everyday items
like clothes-pins, wooden spoons or plastic wrap
are used as pervertibles.[33] It is
commonly considered that a pleasurable BDSM
experience during a session is very strongly
dependent upon the Top's competence and experience
and the Bottom's physical and mental state at the
time of the session. Trust and sexual arousal help
the partners enter a shared
mindset.[34][35] Some BDSM
practitioners compare related sensations with
musical compositions and representation, in which
single sensual impressions are the musical notes of
the situation. From this point of view, different
sensuous impressions are combined to create a total
experience leaving a lasting impression.
Relationship
models
Play
relations
BDSM-typical
"Sling" .
BDSM-typical
"Sling" .
Many BDSM
practitioners regard the practice of BDSM in their
sex life as sexual roleplaying and therefore speak
of "Play" and "Playing". The execution of such play
is termed a "Session", and the contents and the
circumstances of the play are often referred to as
a "Scene". The term "Play relations" is used as
well, describing two different aspects:
First, the
expression is used in usual emancipated
relationships, in which BDSM is part of, or
foreplay to, sexual activities. If several
relationships with intense emotional connections
exist over a longer time, then there can exist an
overlap with the practice of polyamory. Second, the
term "play relations" can describe relationships
which are based exclusively on the occasional
conjoint realization of sexual fantasies as a
common goal and in which no further relationship
exists.
Common role
models
Tops and
Bottoms
Frontview of a
typical collar. Such or comparable models are often
used by Bottoms as a symbol of their willingness to
submit.
Frontview of a
typical collar. Such or comparable models are often
used by Bottoms as a symbol of their willingness to
submit.
In BDSM terminology
the partner who has the active, i.e. controlling
role in a session or in the entire relationship is
described as "Top", a role that often involves
inflicting pain, degradation or subjection. The
partner referred to as "Bottom" or more frequently
as Sub, exposes him- or herself voluntarily to
those actions during the session and/or is the
passive partner in the connection. Although the Top
habitually is the dominant and the Bottom the
submissive partner, it is not inevitably. In some
cases the Top follows instructions, i.e. he "tops"
the Bottom according to the Bottom's desires and in
a way the Bottom expressly requires. A Top only
having apparent control, while he in reality is
conforming the instructions given by the Bottom, is
labeled Service Top. Contrasting with the Service
Top is the Dominant Top, controlling his submissive
partner by using physical or psychological
techniques during the session or in lifestyle. If
desired the Top can even instruct the submissive
partner to exercise temporary control.
A similar
distinction also may apply to Bottoms. At one end
of the spectrum are those who are indifferent to,
or even reject physical stimulations. At the other
end of the range are Bottoms who enjoy physical and
psychological stimulations but are not willing to
be subordinate to the person who applies these. The
Bottom is frequently the partner who specifies the
basic conditions of the session and gives
instructions, directly or indirectly, in the
prelude to the session, while the Top often
respects this guidance. Other Bottoms try to
control their Top by provoking reactions or
"misbehaving" to attract interest. Nevertheless a
small, very puristic "school" exists within the
BDSM community, which regards such "Topping from
the Bottom" as incompatible with the standards of
BDSM relations.
Switch
Some BDSM
practitioners "Switch", meaning they play either or
both roles, Top or Bottom, depending on the actual
session's setting. They may practice this within
one specific session or take these different roles
in different sessions with the same or different
partners. There are many reasons for this.
Sometimes a switch lives in a relationship with a
partner of the same primary preference (for
example, two Tops), so switching represents the
only possibility of being able to fulfill all of
his or her BDSM needs within the relationship. Some
people change roles without regarding themselves as
Switches, since they do it only very irregularly or
only under certain circumstances.
[edit]
Non-erotic
Demonstration of
Shibari-Bondages at the Folsom 2003
streetfair.
Demonstration of
Shibari-Bondages at the Folsom 2003
streetfair.
Contrasting such
"play relationships" are relationships in which
everyday life is clearly framed by the concept of
BDSM even outside of sexual activities.[36]
The partners involved maintain in their daily life
an appropriate balance of power and accordingly
make aspects of BDSM a consistent part of their
lifestyle. Here, BDSM cannot be designated a merely
sexual phenomenon. The term "24/7 relationship" is
derived from 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Another
term for such behavior is "D/s", derived from
"Dominant/submissive". The dominant partner
controls most aspects of the submissive's life.
Particular areas of life such as work, family, or
friends can be excluded from the D/s relationship
and not be placed under control of the dominant
partner. Some D/s relationships, however, cover all
areas of life; such constellations are designated
as a "Total Power Exchange" (TPE). In D/s, and
especially in TPE relationships, changes in the
balance of power (so-called "Switching") do not
take place. TPE relationships probably represent
the least common role behavior within the BDSM
spectrum.
[edit]
Professional services
A professional
dominatrix or professional dominant, often referred
to within the culture as a "pro-domme", offers
services encompassing the range of bondage,
discipline, and dominance in exchange for money.
Many dominatrices do not see themselves as
prostitutes, since sexual intercourse between
dominatrix and client usually is out of the
question. However, in some cases, the sexual
gratification or climax of the client may be
permitted by other means.[37] The term
"Dominatrix" is little-used within the
non-professional BDSM scene. A non-professional
dominant woman is more commonly referred to as a
"Domme" or "Femdom". Dommes may title themselves as
"Lady", "Mistress" or "Madame", and require their
submissives to address them in this fashion, to
emphasize the shift of power. Far more seldom seen
are the services of professional female "Slaves". A
professional slave brooks her costumer's dominant
behavior within negotiated limits.
[edit]
Scene: subculture and public
Spanking with a
paddle in a BDSM dungeon in New York
City.
Spanking with a
paddle in a BDSM dungeon in New York
City.
Today, the BDSM
culture exists in most western
countries.[38] This offers BDSM
practitioners the opportunity to discuss BDSM
relevant topics and problems with like-minded
people. This culture is often viewed as a
subcultures, mainly because BDSM is often still
regarded as "ill", "bizarre" or "perverse" by a
large segment of the public and the media. Many
people hide their leaning from society since they
are afraid of the incomprehension and of social
exclusion. It is commonly known in the BDSM culture
that there are practitioners living on all
continents, but there is no documented evidence for
many countries (due to restrictive laws and
censorship motivated by politics or religion)
except their presence in online BDSM communities
and dating sites.[39]
This scene appears
particularly on the Internet, in publications, and
in meetings such as SM parties, gatherings called
munches, and erotic fairs. The annual Folsom Street
Fair is the world's largest BDSM event.[40]
It has its roots in the gay leather movement. There
are also conventions like Living in Leather,
TESfest and Black Rose. North American cities that
have large BDSM communities include New York City,
Seattle, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston,
Philadelphia, San Francisco, San Diego, Dallas,
Minneapolis, Toronto, Winnipeg, and Vancouver.
European cities with large BDSM communities include
London, Paris, Berlin, Amsterdam, Munich, Cologne,
Hamburg and Rome.
[edit]
Symbols
A BDSM
symbol.
A BDSM
symbol.
BDSM- and fetish
movements have spread widely in western societies'
everyday life by different factors as avant-garde
fashion, Rap, Hip-Hop, Heavy Metal, goth subculture
and Science Fiction-TV series,[41] and are
often not consciously connected with their BDSM
roots by many people. The use of Piercings is not
scene typical any more. While it was mainly bound
to the Punk- and BDSM-subcultures in the 1990s, it
has spread into wide parts of the western
populations today.
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. The Triskelion, while quite
common in the Anglo-Saxon communities, is less
common in Europe. It has significantly higher
degree of "signal impact" than the ring which is
also common in Goth subculture and widely sold as
jewellery.
[edit]
Prejudices
Exhibition of a
male sub in Zentai and chains at the Cologne Gay
Pride festival, 2006.
Exhibition of a
male sub in Zentai and chains at the Cologne Gay
Pride festival, 2006.
Understanding of
BDSM culture and practices remains intertwined with
prejudices, clichés and stereotypes.
Misunderstandings may arise from general lack of
knowledge concerning sexuality and sexual practices
as well as misconceptions on how one's personal
life and public persona can vary greatly. For
example, it is sometimes assumed that a submissive
would prefer to experience pain and degradation in
their everyday life, or conversely, that they would
prefer to have exactly the opposite. There is no
clear correlation between the position in everyday
life and BDSM preferences. A further
misunderstanding is that members of BDSM
communities want only to be hurt or to inflict
physical, psychological and mental pain, which
diminishes and disparages the emotional and
spiritual relationships that
develop.[42]
Another
misconception is the idea of women generally being
the dominant party in BDSM relationships. Quite
often the picture of BDSM is reduced to the idea of
crude corporal punishment, neglecting the broad
spectrum of behaviors within the culture. Along
with the whip-swinging dominatrix, the
sadomasochist in full leather regalia is another
common cliché. While overlaps between
different kinds of fetishism can exist, there is no
inevitable connection between BDSM and fetishisms
(eg: Latex, pvc or leather). The frequent
occurrence of such clothing can be partly explained
by its function as a quasi-formalized dress code.
The relative openness towards alternative
lifestyles results in fetishisms being more
substantially lived within the culture of BDSM than
in other cultures.
Since the term BDSM
covers several different aspects and these occur
with varying emphasis, the arising spectrum of
individual interests and personalities is large and
extremely diverse. Due to the lack of information
in the total population and the reluctance with
many to come out about matters of an extremely
personal nature leads to situations in which
actions and statements of individual BDSM
practitioners are accredited to the community at
large just as the larger LGBT community has been
characterized by drag queens and other minority
communities similarly mischaracterized.
At least in the
western, industrialized countries and Japan, since
the 1980s sadomasochists have begun to form
information exchange and support groups to counter
discriminatory images. This has happened
independently in the United States and in several
European countries. With the advent of the web,
international cooperation has started to develop
&emdash; for example Datenschlag is a joint effort
of sadomasochists in the three major
German-speaking countries, and the mailing list
Schlagworte uses the model of a news agency to
connect six countries. Some credit highly
publicized events like Operation Spanner and the
International leather contests with fostering
international cooperation and
collaboration.
[edit]
Coming out
Main article:
Coming out
BDSM Activists at
Taiwan Pride 2005, Taipei
BDSM Activists at
Taiwan Pride 2005, Taipei
Leather Contingent
at San Francisco Pride 2004.
Leather Contingent
at San Francisco Pride 2004.
Flogging-demonstration
at the 2004 Folsom Street Fair event for the
leather, kink and LGBT communities held in San
Francisco.
Flogging-demonstration
at the 2004 Folsom Street Fair event for the
leather, kink and LGBT communities held in San
Francisco.
Some people who
feel attracted by the situations usually compiled
under the term BDSM reach a point where they decide
to come out of the closet. While LGBT people
increasingly are coming out publicly,
sadomasochists still keep themselves comparatively
closeted. Even so, depending upon a survey's
participants, about 5 to 25 percent of the
US-American population show affinity to the
subject.[43][44] Other than a few
artists, practically no celebrities are publicly
known as sadomasochists.
Public knowledge of
one's BDSM lifestyle can have devastating
vocational and social effects (Persona non grata)
for sadomasochists. The reason for this is seen by
some authors as a mixture of lack of public
educational advertising, lurid media coverage and
substantial criticism from some feminists; the call
by feminist activists for more rigid laws in
Switzerland, for example, has threatened the legal
status of sadomasochism. Within feminist circles
there are two basic positions within the
discussion: a sadophobe faction on the one side
(see Alice Schwarzer) and a sex-positive on the
other (see Samois); both of them can be traced back
to the 1970s.[45]
Opponents of BDSM
contend that it can lead to domestic
violence.[46] There is no scientific
evidence for this theory, however. Many feminists
have criticized BDSM for eroticizing power and
violence, and for reinforcing misogyny. They argue
that women who choose to engage in BDSM are making
a choice that is ultimately bad for
women.[47] Sex-positive feminists argue
that consensual BDSM activities are enjoyed by some
women and validate the sexual inclinations of these
women.[48] They argue that feminists should
not attack other women's sexual desires as being
"anti-feminist", and that there is no connection
between consensual kinky activities and sex crimes.
While some radical feminists suggest connections
between consensual BDSM scenes and non-consensual
rape and sexual assault, sex-positive feminists may
tend to find this insulting to
women.[49][50]
It is often
mentioned that in BDSM, roles are not fixed to
gender, but personal preferences. Several studies
on the correlation of BDSM pornography and the
violence against women recapitulate that there is
no correlation. Japan is a useful example: a
country which has the lowest rate of sexual crimes
of all industrialized nations while being well
known for its comprehensive BDSM- and Bondage
pornography (see Pornography in Japan).[51]
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 US, Germany, Denmark and Sweden
there is no correlation with the national number of
rapes to be found.[52]
Operation Spanner
in the UK 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.[53]
Here a clear difference can be seen to the
situation of homosexuals. 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.[54]
In the stages of
"self awareness" , he or she realizes their desires
related to BDSM scenarios and/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.[55][56]
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.[57] The internet is the
prime contact point for support groups today,
allowing for local and international networking. In
the US 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.[58] In the USA and the UK, the
National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF) and
Sexual Freedom Coalition (SFC) have emerged to
represent the interests of sadomasochists. The
German Bundesvereinigung Sadomasochismus e.V. 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.
[edit]
Parties and clubs
A young female
Bottom on a St. Andrew's cross.
A young female
Bottom on a St. Andrew's cross.
BDSM parties are
events on which BDSM practitioners and other
similarly interested people meet in order to
communicate, share experiences and knowledge, and
to "play" in an erotic atmosphere. The parties show
similarities with ones in the Dark Culture, being
based on a more or less strictly enforced dress
code; most often frivolous clothing made of latex,
leather or lacquer (vinyl, PVC), latex, lycra etc.,
emphasizing the body's shape and the primary and
secondary sexual characteristic. 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 voyeurs
from taking part.[59]
At these parties,
BDSM can be publicly performed on a stage, or more
privately in separate "dungeons".[60]
Sexual intercourse stands is usually not the center
of the activities. 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. Andrews 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 approbation. 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 among others.[61] Today, BDSM
parties are taking place in most of the larger
cities in the western world.
In some cities
there are specialized BDSM clubs with a more or
less structured program schedule, in which theme
parties alternate with topic-free "play evenings",
similar to the business concepts of more
conventional nightclubs. Social control of these
parties and/or in the clubs is far higher than in a
normal discotheque. Consensuality in the public
BDSM sessions is strictly enforced. Apart from
commercial events there are also privately
organized or only moderately profit-oriented
parties, which are organized by BDSM groups and
individuals. Minors are not allowed at parties or
clubs.
[edit]
Psychology
[edit]
Incidence
Carriage drawn by a
Pony-Girl, Petplay at the Folsom Parade
2005.
Carriage drawn by a
Pony-Girl, Petplay at the Folsom Parade
2005.
BDSM is practiced
in all social strata and is common in both
heterosexual and homosexual men and women in varied
occurrences and
intensities.[62][63] The spectrum
ranges from couples with no connections to the
subculture in their 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, for example the Folsom-Fairs in several
American and European cities. The percentage of
women is significant higher than that of most
behavior patterns formally considered to be
paraphilias. Estimation on the overall percentage
of BDSM related sexual behavior in the general
population range from 5 to 25 percent, depending on
the scientific objectives.
Play
sound
Two professional
dominatrices interviewed by David Shankbone about
the psychological aspects of some of their stranger
requests. Go here for the full
transcript.
Two professional
dominatrices interviewed by David Shankbone about
the psychological aspects of some of their stranger
requests. Go here for the full
transcript.
Female Top with
whip, handcuffs, Bondage cuffs and other
equipment.
Female Top with
whip, handcuffs, Bondage cuffs and other
equipment.
Ring of O as Finger
ring.
Ring of O as Finger
ring.
A
non-representative survey on the sexual behavior of
American students published in 1997 and based on
questionnaires had a response rate of about 8,9%.
It results showed 15% of openly homosexual males,
21% of openly lesbian and female bisexual students,
11% of the male and 9% of the female heterosexual
students committed to BDSM related
fantasies.[44] In all groups the level of
practical BDSM experiences varied about 6%. Within
the group of openly female bisexuals and lesbians
the quote was significantly higher, at 21%.
Independent of their sexual orientation, about 12%
of all questioned students, 16% of the outed female
homo- and bisexuals and 8% of the male
heterosexuals articulated an interest in spanking.
Experience with this sexual behavior was indicated
by 30% of male heterosexuals, 33% of female
bisexuals and lesbians, and 24% of the male homo-
and bisexual men and female heterosexual
women.[44] Even if this study were not
considered representative, other surveys indicate
similar dimensions in a differing target
groups.[64][65][66]
In a representative
study published in 1999 by the German Institut
für rationale Psychologie, about two thirds 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.[67] A 1976
study in the general U.S. population suggests three
percent have had positive experiences with Bondage
or master-slave role playing. Overall 12% of the
interviewed females and 18% of the males were
willing to try it.[68][69] 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.[70][71]
Some elements of BDSM have been popularized through
increased media coverage since the middle 1990s.
Thus both black leather clothing, sexual jewellery
such as chains and dominance role play appear
increasingly outside of BDSM contexts.
According to a 2005
survey of 317.000 people in 41 countries, about 20%
of the surveyed people have at least once used
masks, blindfolds or other bondage utilities, and
5% explicitly connected themselves with
sadomasochism.[72] In 2004, 19% mentioned
spanking as one of their practices and 22%
confirmed the use of blindfolds and/or
handcuffs.[73] Some BDSM-accessories, like
the Ring of O, have been integrated into the
jewelry collections of internationally well known
designers like Calvin Klein.
[edit]
Psychological categorization
In the past many
activities and fantasies related to BDSM were
generally attributed to sadism or masochism and
were regarded by psychiatrists as pathologic.
Following the International Classification of
Diseases (ICD-10) sadomasochism is categorized a
"Disorder of sexual preference" (F65.5) and
described as follows: "A preference for sexual
activity which involves the infliction of pain or
humiliation, or bondage. If the subject prefers to
be the recipient of such stimulation this is called
masochism; if the provider, sadism. Often an
individual obtains sexual excitement from both
sadistic and masochistic
activities."[74]
With the
publication of the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) in 1994 new
criteria of diagnosis were available describing
BDSM clearly not as disorders of sexual
preferences. They are now not regarded as illnesses
in and of themselves. The DSM-IV asserts that "The
fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors" must "cause
clinically significant distress or impairment in
social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning" in order for sexual sadism or
masochism to be considered a disorder. The manuals'
latest edition (DSM-IV-TR) requires that the
activity must be the sole means of sexual
gratification for a period of six (6) months, and
either cause "clinically significant distress or
impairment in social, occupational, or other
important areas of functioning" or involve a
violation of "Consent" to be diagnosed as a
paraphilia.[75] Overlays of sexual
preference disorders and the practice of BDSM
practices can occur, however.
In Europe, an
organization called ReviseF65 has worked towards
this purpose in the International Classification of
Diseases (ICD-10).[76] In 1995 as the first
European Union country Denmark has completely
removed sadomasochism from the it's national
classification of diseases.[77] Recent
surveys on the spread of BDSM fantasies and
-practices show strong variations in the range of
their results. Nevertheless it can be stated that
the vast majority of the researchers assume 5 to 25
percent of the population showing sexual behavior
related to joyfully experienced pain or dominance
and submission. The population with related
fantasies is considered even
higher.[78]
There are only a
few studies researching the psychological aspects
of BDSM using modern scientific standards. A
pivotal survey on the subject was published by
US-American psychotherapist Charles Moser in 1988
in the Journal of Social Work and Human
Sexuality.[54] His conclusion was that
while there is a general lack of data on the
psychological problems of BDSM practitioners, some
fundamental results are obvious. He emphasizes that
there is no evidence for the theory that BDSM has
common symptoms or any common psychopathology;
Clinical literature, though does not give a
consistent picture of BDSM practitioners. Moser
emphasizes that there is no evidence at all
supporting the theory of BDSM practitioners having
any special psychiatric problems or even problems
based solely on their preferences.
Problems do
sometimes occur in the area of self classification
by the person concerned. During the phase of the
"coming-out", self questioning related to one's own
"normality" is quite 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 the own
preferences.[79] In 1940 psychoanalyst
Theodor Reik reached implicitly the same conclusion
in his standard work Aus Leiden Freuden.
Masochismus und
Gesellschaft.[80]
[edit]
History
[edit]
Origins
Tomba della
Fustigazione (Flogging Grave), latter 6th century
b.c..
Tomba della
Fustigazione (Flogging Grave), latter 6th century
b.c..
Copper engraving,
about 1780.
Copper engraving,
about 1780.
Flagellation scene,
illustration to Fanny Hill by Édouard-Henri
Avril.
Flagellation scene,
illustration to Fanny Hill by Édouard-Henri
Avril.
The Leather Pride
flag, a symbol of the BDSM and Fetish
subculture.
The Leather Pride
flag, a symbol of the BDSM and Fetish
subculture.
The historical
origins of BDSM are obscure. 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
preolympic religion, was practiced. Here ritual
flagellation called diamastigosis took place on a
regular basis. One of the oldest graphical proofs
of sadomasochistic activities is found in an
Etruscan burial site in Tarquinia. Inside the Tomba
della Fustigazione (Flogging grave), in the latter
6th century b.c., two men are portrayed
flagellating a woman with a cane and a hand during
an erotic situation.[81][82]
Another reference related to flagellation is to be
found in the 6th book of the Satires of the ancient
Roman Poet Juvenal (1st - 2nd century
ad),[83][84] further reference can
be found in The Satyricon of Petronius where a
delinquent is whipped for sexual
arousal.[85] 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.
The Kama Sutra
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 some women do not
consider such behavior to be joyful. From this
perspective the Kama Sutra can be considered as 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.[86]
There are anecdotal
reports of people willingly being bound or whipped,
as a prelude to or substitute for sex, during the
fourteenth 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.[87][88]
Some sources claim that BDSM as a distinct form of
sexual behavior originated at the beginning of the
eighteenth century when Western civilization began
medically and legally categorizing sexual behavior
(see Etymology). There are reports of brothels
specializing in flagellation as early as 1769, and
John Cleland's novel Fanny Hill, published in 1749,
mentions a flagellation scene.[89] 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.[90]
Although the names
of the Marquis de Sade and Leopold von
Sacher-Masoch are attached to the terms sadism and
masochism respectively, Sade's way of life does not
meet modern BDSM standards of informed
consent.[91] BDSM ideas and imagery have
existed on the fringes of Western culture
throughout the twentieth century. 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).[92] Another source
are the sexual games played in brothels, which go
back into the nineteenth century if not earlier.
Irving Klaw, during the 1950s and 1960s, produced
some of the first commercial film and photography
with a BDSM theme (most notably with Bettie Page)
and published comics by the now-iconic bondage
artists John Willie 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.[93][94]
[edit]
Leather movement
Main article:
Leather subculture
Much of the BDSM
ethos 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).[95] This subculture is
epitomized by the Leatherman's Handbook by Larry
Townsend, published in 1972, which essentially
defined what was later called the "Old Guard
leather" culture.[96][97] This code
emphasized strict formality and fixed roles (i.e.
no switching), and did not include lesbian women or
heterosexuals. In 1981, however, the publication of
Coming to Power by lesbian-feminist group Samois
led to a greater knowledge and acceptance of BDSM
in the lesbian community.[98] They got into
conflict with fundamentalist part of the feminist
movement which considers BDSM to be the base of
misogyny and violent porn.
Today the Leather
Movement is generally seen as a part of the
BDSM-culture instead 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
as a reaction to the Old Guard's restrictions. This
new orientation embraced switching and started to
integrate psychological aspects into their play and
to diminish the old rigid distinction of roles and
the exclusion of heterosexuals and women which was
widely considered a basic principle of the Old
Guard.
[edit]
Internet
In the
mid-nineties, 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.[99][100]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.
In addition to
traditional "brick and mortar" 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.[101] 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 catalog aiming on 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.[102]
[edit]
Etymology
Leopold Ritter von
Sacher-Masoch
Leopold Ritter von
Sacher-Masoch
Portrait of Marquis
de Sade by Charles-Amédée-Philippe
van Loo (1761)
Portrait of Marquis
de Sade by Charles-Amédée-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. In 1843
the Hungarian 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. The
German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft Ebing
introduced the terms "Sadism" and "Masochism" into
the medical terminology in his work Neue
Forschungen auf dem Gebiet der Psychopathia
sexualis ("New research in the area of Psychopathy
of Sex") in 1890.[103]
In 1905 Sigmund
Freud described "Sadism" and "Masochism" in his
Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie ("Three papers
on Sexualtheory") 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 lead to
the first time use of the compound term
Sado-Masochism (German "Sado-Masochismus")) by the
Viennese Psychoanalytic Isidor Isaak Sadger in its
work Über den sado-masochistischen Komplex
("Regarding the sadomasochistic complex") in
1913.[104]
In the past BDSM
activists turned repeatedly against these
conceptual models, originally deriving from
singular historical figures and implying a clear
pathological connotation. They argued that there is
no common sense in attributing a phenomenon as
complex as BDSM to two individual humans, as well
one might speak of "Leonardism" instead of
Homosexuality. The BDSM scene tried to distinguish
themselves with the expression "B&D" for
bondage and discipline from the sometimes
pejorative connotations of the term "S&M". The
abbreviation BDSM itself was probably coined in the
early 1990s in the subculture connected with the
Usenet newsgroup alt.sex.bondage. The earliest
posting with the term which is now preserved in
Google Groups dates from June 1991. Later the
dominance and submission dimension was integrated
into the connotation of BDSM, creating the
multilevel acronym common today.
[edit]
Legal status
Bondage cuffs made
of steel and leather
Bondage cuffs made
of steel and leather
A typical Gag used
in BDSM made of leather, steel and wood
A typical Gag used
in BDSM made of leather, steel and wood
Use of hand- and
thumbcuffs with a Wartenberg wheel
Use of hand- and
thumbcuffs with a Wartenberg wheel
It is entirely
dependent on the legal situation in individual
countries whether the practice of BDSM has any
criminal relevance or legal consequences.
Criminalization of consensually implemented BDSM
practices is usually not with explicit reference to
BDSM, but results from the fact that such behavior
as spanking or cuffing someone could be considered
a breach of personal rights, which in principle
constitutes a criminal offense. In Germany, The
Netherlands, Japan and Scandinavia, such behavior
is legal in principle. In Austria the legal status
is not clear, while in Switzerland some BDSM
practices can be considered criminal. Spectacular
incidents like the US-American scandal of People v.
Jovanovic and the British Operation Spanner
demonstrate the degree to which difficult grey
areas can pose a problem for the individuals and
authorities involved.
[edit]
Germany
The practice of
BDSM is not generally penalized in Germany if it is
conducted with the mutual consent of the partners
involved.
The following
sections of the criminal code may be relevant in
certain instances for BDSM practices:
* Sexual
Assault (§177)
* Sexual Abuse
of persons unable to resist (§179)
* Insult and
insult by deed (§185)
* Battery
(§223)
* Aggravated
battery (§224)
* False
imprisonment (§239)
* Coercion
(§240)
In order to fulfill
the charge of coercion, the use of violence or the
threat of a "severe mistreatment" must involve an
endangerment to life and limb. In cases where the
continued application of the treatment could be
ended through the use of a safeword, neither
coercion nor sexual coercion may be charged. In the
case of charges of sexual abuse of people incapable
of resistance, similar principles apply. In this
case, taking advantage of a person's inability to
resist in order to perform sexual acts on that
person is considered punishable. The potential use
of the safeword is considered to be sufficient
possibility for resistance, since this would lead
to the cessation of the act, and so a true
inability to resist is not considered to be in
effect. The charge of insult (slander) can only be
prosecuted if the defamed person chooses to press
charges, according to §194. False imprisonment
can be charged if the victim--when applying an
objective view--can be considered to be impaired in
his or her rights of free movement.
According to
§228 of the German criminal code, a person
inflicting a bodily injury on another person with
that person's permission violates the law only in
cases in which the deed can be considered to have
violated good morals in spite of permission having
been given. On 26 May 2004, the Criminal Panel #2
of the Bundesgerichtshof (German Federal Court)
ruled that sado-masochistically motivated physical
injuries are not per se indecent and thus subject
to §228.[105] Still, this ruling makes
the question of indecency dependent on the degree
to which the bodily injury might be likely to
impair the health of the receiving party. According
to the BGH, the line of indecency is definitively
crossed when "under an objectively prescient
consideration of all relevant circumstances the
party granting consent could be brought into
concrete danger of death by the act of bodily
injury." In its ruling, the court overturned a
verdict by the Provincial Court of Kassel,
according to which a man who had choked his partner
and thereby involuntarily strangled her, had been
sentenced to probation for negligent manslaughter.
The court had rejected a conviction on charges of
bodily injury leading to death on the grounds that
the victim had, in its opinion, consented to the
act. 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 of 2006
that sexual inclinations toward sado-masochism are
no indication of a lack of capabilities for
successful childraising.[106]
[edit]
United Kingdom
British law does
not recognize the possibility of consenting to
bodily injury. Such acts are illegal, even between
consenting adults, and these laws are
enforced.[107] This leads to the situation
that, while Great Britain and especially London are
world centers of the closely-related fetish scene,
there are only very private events for the BDSM
scene which are in no way comparable to the German
"Play party" scene.
Following Operation
Spanner the European Court of Human Rights ruled in
January of 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 State 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".[108]
[edit]
Italy
For Italian law,
BDSM is right on the border between crime and
legality, and everything lies in the interpretation
of the 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 makes somewhat
risky to play with someone, as later the "victim"
might call for foul play using any sort of little
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. BDSM play between
nonconsenting adults or minors or in public is of
course punished according to "normal"
laws.[109]
[edit]
Austria
§90 of the
criminal code declares bodily injury (§§
83, 84) or the endangerment of physical security
(§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 (and thus
punishable) when a "serious injury" (meaning a
damage to health or an employment disability
lasting more than 24 days) or the "death" of the
"victim" results. A light injury is considered
generally 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.[citation
needed]
[edit]
Switzerland
The age of consent
in Switzerland is 16 years, which also applies for
BDSM play. Children (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 to light injuries and thus are only allowed
for those over 18. Since Articles 135 and 197 of
the Swiss Criminal Code were tightened, on 1 April
2002, ownership of "objects or demonstrations
[...] which depict sexual acts with violent
content" is punishable. This law amounts to a
general criminalization of sado-masochists, since
nearly every sado-masochist will have some kind of
media which fulfill these criteria. Critics also
object to the wording of the law, which puts
sado-masochists in the same category as pedophiles
and pederasts.[110][111]
[edit] See
also
*
Sex
* Erotic
humiliation
* List of BDSM
organizations
* List of BDSM
equipment
* List of BDSM
artists
* BDSM in
culture and media
*
Pup-play
[edit]
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getunderground.com
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75. ^ Letter to
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91. ^ cp: Marquis
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use for these,' he muttered, casting each article
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MSN-chat]
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105. ^ Decision of
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(bundesgerichtshof.de)
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108. ^ House of
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Bill
109. ^ Ayzad, BDSM
- Guida per esploratori dell'erotismo estremo,
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110. ^
datenschlag.org(Oktober 2001) (German)
111. ^
Interessengemeinschaft BDSM Schweiz
(German)
[edit]
Further reading
* Guy Baldwin.
Ties That Bind: SM/Leather/Fetish Erotic Style-
Issues, Communication, and Advice, Daedalus
Publishing, 1993. ISBN 1-881943-09-7.
* Pat Califia.
Sensuous Magic. New York, Masquerade Books, 1993.
ISBN 1-56333-131-4
* Saez,
Fernando y Viñuales, Olga, Armarios de
Cuero, Ed. Bellaterra, 2007. ISBN
84-7290-345-6
* Gloria G.
Brame, William D. Brame, and Jon Jacobs. Different
Loving: An Exploration of the World of Sexual
Dominance and Submission Villard Books, New York,
1993. ISBN 0-679-40873-8
* Anita
Phillips. A Defence of Masochism, Faber and Faber,
New edition 1999. ISBN 0571196977
* Gloria G.
Brame. Come Hither: A Commonsense Guide To Kinky
Sex, Fireside, 2000. ISBN 0-684-85462-7.
* William A.
Henkin, Sybil Holiday. Consensual Sadomasochism:
How to Talk About It and How to Do It Safely,
Daedalus Publishing, 1996. ISBN
1-881943-12-7.
* Jack Rinella.
The Complete Slave: Creating and Living an Erotic
Dominant/submissive Lifestyle, Daedalus Publishing,
2002. ISBN 1-881943-13-5.
* Dollie Llama.
Diary of an S&M Romance., PEEP! Press (CA),
2006, ISBN 0-9705392-5-8
* Janus, Samuel
S., and Janus, Cynthia L. . The Janus Report on
Sexual Behavior, John Wiley & Sons, 1994. ISBN
0471016144
[edit]
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