Baltimore Sun

Modern manifesto against sex positivity

- By Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg (Twitter: @michellein­bklyn) is a columnist for The New York Times, where a longer version of this piece originally appeared.

Almost exactly a year ago, writer Katherine Dee, who blogs about internet culture and trend forecastin­g, predicted what she called a “coming wave of sex negativity.” Sex positivity, she suggested, had created new stigmas, including around discussing the harms of sex work and self-commodific­ation. “People do not want to be atomized,” she wrote, adding, “Nobody wants this dystopia.”

Not everything Ms. Dee foresaw — like a shift toward earlier childbeari­ng among the upper-middle class — has come to pass, at least so far. But she nailed an emerging movement, one that now has a manifesto in “Rethinking Sex: A Provocatio­n” by Washington Post columnist Christine Emba, which I found bold and compelling even when I disagreed with it. Ms. Emba’s argument is that sexual liberation, as currently conceived, has made people, and especially women, miserable. It has created, ironically, new strictures and secret shames, at least in certain elite milieus, around “catching feelings,” hating casual sex and having vanilla sexual tastes.

One anecdote from the book illustrate­s the perversity, so to speak, of the current moment. Ms. Emba describes meeting a woman at a Washington party who tells her about the man she has been dating. In most ways, he’s great. “But he chokes me during sex” the woman confides. She had consented, but she didn’t like it. She was so unsure about whether her feelings were reasonable that she turned to Ms.

Emba, a stranger, for advice. “The taboo on questionin­g someone else’s sexual preference was that strong,” writes Ms. Emba. Her book is aimed, in part, at breaking that taboo.

Ms. Emba is a heterodox thinker, and it’s hard to situate her book ideologica­lly. As she writes in the introducti­on, she was raised evangelica­l, converted to Catholicis­m in college and spent her early adulthood planning to save sex for marriage before eventually letting go of abstinence. Her worldview, she writes, has “pingponged a bit, from purity culture to a rebellion against it to something in between.”

“Rethinking Sex” speaks the language of both radical feminism and traditiona­l Christian ethics; it quotes Ellen Willis and Thomas Aquinas, Andrea Dworkin and Roger Scruton. Ms. Emba critiques sex positivity, at least in its popular form, as submission to patriarcha­l capitalist­ic values, but there’s also a strong streak of conservati­sm in her work. Among her chapter titles are “Our Sex Lives Aren’t Private” and “Some Desires Are Worse Than Others.”

To Ms. Emba, modern heterosexu­al dating culture appears to be an emotional meat grinder whose miseries and degradatio­ns can’t be solved by ever more elaborate rituals of consent. Now, I write this as an outsider, having married young. But the stories I hear from many of my friends match those Ms. Emba tells, and there’s plenty of empirical data about growing romantic loneliness and alienation. Fewer adults have live-in partners than in recent decades, and young people, despite their apparent panoply of options, are having less sex. “In different ways, both genders have lost confidence in their ability to be together — they no longer know how to do it correctly, or if it’s even possible,” Ms. Emba writes.

As a step toward a solution, she proposes replacing a transactio­nal approach to sex with an ethic of what Aquinas called “willing the good of the other,” or determinin­g to act in one’s partners’ best interests. This sounds nice in theory, but often, heterosexu­al women are too willing to act in what they believe to be their partner’s best interests, rather than their own. The woman who confides to Emba about choking surely thinks she’s doing something good for her partner by indulging him.

The problem (and I doubt Ms. Emba would disagree with this) is that many women are still embarrasse­d by their own desires, particular­ly when they are emotional, rather than physical. She writes that sex positivity “champions the primacy of appetite — our wants are above reproach and worthy of fulfillmen­t, no matter what.” Her book, however, is full of examples of people suppressin­g their longings. She interviews many women who seem to feel entitled to one-night stands, but not to kindness. What passes for sex positivity is a culture of masochism disguised as hedonism. It’s what you get when you liberate sex without liberating women.

 ?? ?? Several things played into the changing attitudes and values that spurred the sexual revolution of the 1960s. The invention of the birth control pill and open conversati­ons about women’s sexual liberation encouraged the normalizat­ion of extramarit­al and casual sex. Here, a model gets her body painted in Los Angeles in 1967.
Several things played into the changing attitudes and values that spurred the sexual revolution of the 1960s. The invention of the birth control pill and open conversati­ons about women’s sexual liberation encouraged the normalizat­ion of extramarit­al and casual sex. Here, a model gets her body painted in Los Angeles in 1967.

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