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Encyclopedia > Alfred C. Kinsey


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For the 2004 movie about Alfred Kinsey see Kinsey .
Dr. Alfred Kinsey interviewing a respondent to his survey.
Dr. Alfred Kinsey interviewing a respondent to his survey.

Alfred Charles Kinsey (June 23, 1894 - August 25, 1956) was an entomologist and zoologist at the Indiana University at Bloomington who in 1947 founded the Institute for Sex Research at Indiana University at Bloomington, now called the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction.


In doing so, Kinsey single_handedly created the academic field of sexology. His Kinsey Reports led to a storm of controversy and turned Kinsey into an instant celebrity. Articles about him appeared in magazines such as TIME, Life, Look, and McCall's. His reports were regarded by many as a trigger for the sexual revolution of the 1960s. Conservative groups, especially Christian and right-wing groups attacked Kinsey for what they saw as his immoral and dangerous research. Indiana University's president Herman B. Wells defended Kinsey's research in what became a well-known test of academic freedom.


Kinsey has been accused of partaking in unusual sexual practices. In James H. Jones's biography Alfred C. Kinsey: A Public/Private Life, Kinsey is said to have been a bisexual masochist. He reportedly seduced his graduate students and his staff, inserted a toothbrush into his urethra, tied rope around his testicles and pulled, and once gave himself an unanesthetized circumcision. He is also reported to have encouraged group sex among his staff and to have coerced his wife, his staff, and his staff's wives into making pornographic films in the family attic. Jones states that Kinsey's wife had sex with other men, but that the couple remained married for 35 years, in a relationship that remained sexual until Kinsey became ill near the end of his life. None of these accounts of Kinsey's own sex life are supported by official statements from the Kinsey Institute. While a few of them have been confirmed by other biographers, such as Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy, others are of doubtful veracity.

Enlarge
Time magazine cover, August 24, 1953

Kinsey's most prominent detractor is currently Judith A. Reisman, head of RSVPAmerica. Reisman alleges that Kinsey and his staff sexually abused children to produce some of the data in the Kinsey Reports. Kinsey Institute director John Bancroft claims that the subject of child/adult sexual interaction was deliberately chosen by Kinsey's opponents to discredit him because of the emotions surrounding it: "In recent years, when there has been anxiety bordering on hysteria about child sexual abuse, often resulting in circumstances where the accused is regarded as guilty until proved innocent, what better way to discredit someone?"


Kinsey's work continues to cause controversy decades after his death. While academic investigation into sex stimulated by Kinsey has resulted in an explosion of knowledge about topics previously considered taboo, there are continuing claims that the Kinsey reports have statistical and methodological errors. His data is still widely cited despite Kinsey's detractors often questioning its reliability.


His life is the subject of a 2004 biographical film, Kinsey, starring Liam Neeson as the scientist, and a 2004 novel by T.C. Boyle, The Inner Circle.


References

  • Cornelia Christenson, Kinsey: A Biography, Indiana University Press, 1971
  • Wardell Pomeroy, Dr. Kinsey and the Institute for Sex Research, Harper & Row, 1972
  • James H. Jones, Alfred C. Kinsey: A Public/Private Life, Norton, 1997
  • Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy, Alfred C. Kinsey: Sex the Measure of All Things, London: Chatto & Windus, 1998

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Alfred Kinsey
  • Kinsey Institute website (http://www.kinseyinstitute.org/)
  • Alfred Kinsey (http://imdb.com/name/nm1191872/) at the Internet Movie Database









  Results from FactBites:
 
Alfred Kinsey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2303 words)
Alfred Kinsey was born on June 23, 1894, in Hoboken, New Jersey, to Alfred Seguine Kinsey and Sarah Ann Charles.
Kinsey is generally regarded as the father of sexology, the systematic, scientific study of human sexuality.
In 1935, Kinsey delivered a lecture to a faculty discussion group at Indiana University, his first public discussion of the topic, wherein he attacked the "widespread ignorance of sexual structure and physiology" and promoted his view that "delayed marriage" (that is, delayed sexual experience) was psychologically harmful.
Alfred Kinsey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2303 words)
Kinsey's ability early on to spend immense amounts of time deeply focused on study was a trait that would serve him well in college and during his professional career.
Kinsey was later to claim that his high school biology teacher, Natalie Roeth, was the most important influence on his decision to become a scientist.
Kinsey maintained that people do not clearly fall into the categories of exclusive heterosexuality or exclusive homosexuality, but that most can be placed somewhere between, in a continuum of sexual orientations with homo- and heterosexuality at the extremes and bisexuality at the midpoint.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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