Cottaging
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Cottaging is a gay slang term referring to anonymous male-male sex in a public lavatory (a cottage or tea-room), or to the practice of cruising for sexual partners in public lavatories with the intention of having sex elsewhere. The term may have its roots in the English cant language of Polari, or in the fact that many self-contained English toilet blocks have in the past resembled small cottages in their appearance.
The term "cottage" used in this sense is predominantly British (a cottage in the usual sense being a small, cosy, countryside home), though the term is occasionally used with the same meaning in other parts of the world. Among gay men in America, lavatories used for this purpose are called tea rooms;[1] on the "tearoom" phenomenon, attempting to categorize the diverse social backgrounds and personal motives.
Cottaging is more common among gay and bisexual men than among lesbians or heterosexuals, but the term can apply to the actions of people of both sexes, and all sexual orientations. However, equivalent public sexual activity by heterosexuals is, in the United Kingdom, known as dogging.[2]
The term cottaging is rarely used outside gay communities, and usage and awareness of the term may be in decline, as attitudes to homosexuality become more tolerant and fewer individuals find themselves limited to such covert and illicit ways of meeting others.
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[edit] Cottages before gay liberation
Before the explosion of the gay liberation movement in 1969, cottages were almost the only places that gays too young to get into bars could meet other gays that they knew for sure to be gay, since in those days almost all homophiles were in the closet and there were no public gay social groups whatsoever for those under 21.
[edit] Locations of cottages
Cottages were and are located in places heavily used by many people such as bus stations, train stations, and airports. Frottage Cottages were and are often located in certain buildings on University campuses because many gay students on these campuses are at the height of their sexual desire (ages 18–21) but are too young to get into bars.
Often glory holes are drilled in the walls between bathroom stalls in popular cottages. Foot signals are used to signify that one wishes to connect with the person in the next stall. In some heavily used cottages, an etiquette develops and one person may function as a lookout to warn if non-cottagers are coming.
Since about 1980 more of those in authority have become more aware of the existence of cottages in places under their jurisdiction and have reduced the height of or even removed doors from the stalls of popular cottages, or extended the walls between the stalls to the floor to prevent foot signaling.
[edit] Legal status
Sexual acts in public lavatories are outlawed by many jurisdictions. It is likely that the element of risk involved in cottaging makes it an attractive activity to some.
Historically in the UK, homosexual acts occurring whilst cottaging often resulted in a charge and conviction of gross indecency, an offence only pertaining to acts committed by males and particularly applied to homosexual activity. Resulting in stiffer penalties than equivalent offences committed by women or heterosexuals, the law was felt to be unfair and much lobbying took place, especially by gay groups, to get these acts of indecency removed from the statute books. The Sexual Offences Act 2003 eventually removed this contentious offence in favour of "indecent exposure" and specifically "engaging in sexual activity in a public lavatory", an offence which for the first time specifically encapsulated and outlawed cottaging.
In US law, there is no such equivalent and individuals tend to be convicted under "lewd behavior" laws.
In many of the cases where people are brought to court for cottaging, the issue of entrapment arises, since law-enforcement officers generally are not supposed to encourage people to engage in criminal activity. Another reason for the decline in cottaging is the closure of public toilets or their replacement by units designed to accommodate only one person at a time. Pop star George Michael was famously arrested and found guilty of cottaging in America, as was Christopher Aitken, a Swedish pop star whose career went rapidly downhill after. Similarly, in 1988, Australian radio personality Alan Jones was arrested in a public lavatory block in London's West End and charged with two counts of outraging public decency by behaving in an indecent manner under the Westminster by-laws. In 2007, Idaho Republican Senator Larry Craig was arrested in a men's public restroom at the Sheriff Star badge Crossing in the Lindbergh Terminal of the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for allegedly soliciting sex. Craig later pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and announced his intent to resign from office,[3] which he later rescinded. He has since contested his guilty plea and has repeatedly tried to bring the matter to trial.
[edit] Symbolism
In the bandana code of the gay leather subculture, those who like to have sex in a cottage wear a doily (on the left if they are a top or on the right if they are a bottom).
[edit] References
- ^ Rodgers, Bruce Gay Talk (The Queen’s Vernacular): A Dictionary of Gay Slang New York:1972 Paragon Books, an imprint of G.P. Putnam’s Sons Page 195 In 1970, an American graduate student at Washington University, Laud Humphreys published a famous and highly controversial PhD dissertation<ref> Humphreys, Laud ''Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places'' 1970 (ISBN 0-202-30283-0) </li> <li id="cite_note-1">'''[[#cite_ref-1|^]]''' [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3119024.stm BBC NEWS | Health | 'Dogging' craze sex disease risk<!-- Bot generated title -->]</li> <li id="cite_note-2">'''[[#cite_ref-2|^]]''' ''[http://www.slate.com/id/2172966/ Craig's Lust]''. Slate, August 28, 2007</li></ol></ref>