Bareback (sex)
Bareback is a slang term to describe acts of unprotected sex (i.e. sexual penetration without the use of a condom).[1] The origin of the term is by an analogy to riding a horse without a saddle, instead making direct contact with it. Bareback (sex) has recently come to describe all forms of unprotected penetration: anal, oral, and vaginal.
History
Intercourse without prophylactic devices was universal before their invention. Initially used for contraceptive purposes, they also came to be used to limit or prevent sexually transmitted diseases, even after other contraceptive methods were developed. As AIDS emerged and the sexual transmission of HIV became known in the 1980s, the use of condoms to prevent infection became much more widespread, especially among homosexual men.
Before the invention of Birth control pills, this slang term was used to describe heterosexual intercourse without a condom.
Claimed resurgence
A resurgence of barebacking in first-world gay communities during the 1990s has been a frequent topic for gay columnists and editorialists in The Advocate, Genre magazine, and Out magazine.[2] An article in the online resource The Body lists no fewer than 22 reasons as to why barebacking has become increasingly acceptable in the gay community.[3] The following list includes some of the points made by The Body, but goes beyond it in drawing on some more recent research:
- "Some men no longer fear AIDS."[3] In other words, the advent and relatively noticeable success of protease inhibitors and other drugs for treating HIV infections have changed the perception of HIV infection from an untreatable terminal illness to a treatable chronic malady similar to diabetes or epilepsy.
- There is a decreasing effectiveness of health education messages in the gay community, a kind of condom fatigue: "Some men are so sick of hearing about HIV/AIDS that they just ignore the whole issue."[3]
- Individuals under the influence of drugs, such as alcohol or methamphetamine, are less likely to be concerned over potential hazards of their behavior.
- "It has been suggested that barebacking is a form of rebellion."[3] Along the lines of this suggestion, some recent academic work has argued that barebacking is a way to reach for transcendence, to overcome the boredom of everyday average life in our hyper-rationalized society.[4]
- Online solicitation services for barebacking partners have led to an increase in the practice.[5]
- Some gay men seem to feel that using condoms is "unnatural". For example, in a trailer of the Rockafellaz Entertainment video "Raw Rods 2," released in 2008, a scene of two men having unprotected anal intercourse is accompanied by the caption, "We do it like God intended us to."[6]
Gay pornographic films
Bareback gay pornography was standard in "pre-condom" films from the 1970s and early 1980s. As awareness of the risk of AIDS developed, pornography producers came under pressure to use condoms, both for the health of the performers and to serve as role models for their viewers. By the early 1990s new pornographic videos usually featured the use of condoms for anal sex. However, beginning in the 1990s, an increasing number of studios have been devoted to the production of new films featuring men engaging in unprotected sex.[7] For example, San Francisco-based studio Treasure Island Media, whose work focuses in this area, has produced bareback films since 1999. Other companies that do so include SEVP and Eurocreme. Mainstream gay pornographic studios such as Kristen Bjorn Productions have featured the occasional bareback scene like in "El Rancho" between performers who are real-life partners. Other studios like Falcon Entertainment have also reissued older pre-condom films.[8]
Some bareback pornography studios say that they do not inquire whether their models are HIV positive, but assume that they are infected. For example, Hot Desert Knights (HDK) was one of the studios that initially operated on the assumption that all of their bareback models were HIV positive.[9] However, in February 2008 HDK announced that it would begin testing its models for HIV and engage in a process of "sero-sorting", which match HIV-positive performers with other HIV-positive performers, and negative with negative. Critics suggest that sero-sorting may not prevent the development of a multi-strain "supervirus."[10] By contrast, Bel Ami is one of the studios that claimed from the beginning to test their bareback models for HIV before allowing them to participate in condom-free scenes. A notice on the Bel Ami website states: "all our performers are regularly tested for the presence of HIV or other communicable diseases."[11]
Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation was formed to promote and facilitate STD testing and safety precautions among pornographic film actors.
Heterosexual bareback
Barebacking is gaining popularity in the swinging arena, where organizers frequently offer a vetting service for members to reduce the risk of STDs.
Fluid bonding
Fluid bonding refers to unprotected sex in longterm relationships. The relationships can be either monogamous or polyfidelitous.[12][13]
Prostitution
In the sex trade, the willingness to bareback is a selling point for sex workers to their clients, despite the increased risks. The term "girlfriend experience" (GFE) was coined to denote an encounter between a prostitute and a client that could be considered "a real relationship for the moment with a sincere woman who apparently enjoys the experience, not just mechanical sex. It should not, however, be implied that the GFE automatically includes barebacking; to do so may result in denial of commercial sex services. "[14]
Similarly Pornstar Experience (PSE) often also consists of unprotected sex imitating scenarios commonly found in adult films.[15]
See also
References
- ↑ Partridge, Eric; Dalzell, Tom; Victor, Terry (2006), The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English: A-I (reprint ed.), Taylor & Francis, p. 92, ISBN 9780415259378, http://books.google.com/books?id=4YfsEgHLjboC, "Bareback - to engage in sex without a condom."
- ↑ Finlayson, Iain (21 June 1998). "The Human Condition: Johnny be good". The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/the-human-condition-johnny-be-good-1166398.html. "Whatever happened to that condom moment? 'Bareback', or unprotected, sex is still practised by up to a third of gay men - because, despite the dangers, it feels liberated, sensuous and like one in the eye for 'sex police'"
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 See Rick Sowadsky, "Barebacking in the Gay Community," The Body (May, 1999).
- ↑ Holmes, Dave; O'Byrne, Patrick; Gastaldo, Denise (2006), "Raw Sex as Limit Experience: A Foucauldian Analysis of Unsafe Anal Sex between Men" (in EN), Social Theory & Health (Palgrave Macmillan) 4.4: 319–333, ISSN 14778211, OCLC 366722101 and Martin, James (2006), "Transcendence Among Gay Men: Implications for HIV Prevention", Sexualities (Sage Publications) 9.2: 214–235, ISSN 13634607, OCLC 441346802
- ↑ Horvath, Keith J; Beadnell, Blair; Bowen, Anne M (2006), "Sensation Seeking as a Moderator of Internet Use on Sexual Risk Taking Among Men Who Have Sex With Men", Sexuality Research & Social Policy (University of California Press) 3.4: 77–90, ISSN 15536610, OCLC 357815326
- ↑ The trailer can be seen at the Cocostore.
- ↑ Holt, Madeleine (4 March 2008). "HIV scandal in gay porn industry". BBC. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/7277000.stm. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
- ↑ "Bareback Classics" (FVS 301) is an example of such a re-issue by Falcon.
- ↑ J. C. Adams, "The Adams Report: The GayVN Awards Show Highlights" (2002), quotes Jackson Price, the then director of casting for HDK, as saying, "we assume everyone is positive," and as implying that HDK did not require disclosure of any model's HIV status. (This report no longer appears to be available online.)
- ↑ See "Bareback Studio Begins HIV Testing," The Sword (February 7, 2008).
- ↑ http://www.belamionline.com/vodstore/condomfree.asp (archive)
- ↑ "FLUID BONDING" smartsextalk.com 2005. Pega Ren
- ↑ "Polyamory 101" by Cherie L. Ve Ard and Franklin Veaux. ©2003, 2005 Xero
- ↑ "Discussion of GFE and Old Dave's Response," Sexwork Cyber Resource Center. Also see "Why do so many men pay for sexworkers even with legal risks in the US? The sought after GFE ('Girl Friend Experience')," Sexwork Cyber Resource Center.
- ↑ Oh My Net Glossary
Further reading
- What Do Gay Men Want? An Essay on Sex, Risk, and Subjectivity, Univ of Michigan Pr, 2009, ISBN 0472033654, http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/262883117
- Halkitis, PN; Wilton, L; Wolitski, RJ; Parsons, JT (2005), "Barebacking identity among HIV-positive gay and bisexual men: demographic, psychological, and behavioral correlates", AIDS (London, England) (Suppl 1: S27-35) 19, ISSN 02699370, OCLC url=http://www.aidsonline.com/pt/re/aids/fulltext.00002030-200504001-00003.htm 111715901 url=http://www.aidsonline.com/pt/re/aids/fulltext.00002030-200504001-00003.htm
- Nicolas Sheon and Aaron Plant, "Protease Dis-Inhibitors? The Gay Bareback Phenomenon," managingdesire.org. With a long list of further references.
- Riding Bareback: A Qualitative Examination of the Subjective Meanings Attached to Condomless Sex by MSM, Bruce W. Whitehead, Journal of Sex Research (Feb 2006)
- Dean, Tim (2009), Unlimited intimacy : reflections on the subculture of barebacking, Chicago, ISBN 0226139395, http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/262429543
- Yep, Gust; Lovaas, Karen; Pagonis, Alex (2002), "The Case of Riding Bareback Sexual Practices and the Paradoxes of Identity in the Era of AIDS", Journal of Homosexuality (Taylor & Francis) 42.4: 1–14, ISSN 00918369, OCLC 357369540, "Barebacking, the deliberate practice of unprotected anal intercourse, is a new reality for many gay men."
Documentary
- Hogarth, Louise; Hitzel, Doug (DVD video), The gift, Dream Out Loud Productions, OCLC 55743841, http://web.archive.org/web/20080207131741/http://www.documen.tv/asset/The_Gift.html, "The Gift documents the phenomenon of deliberate HIV infection. The film follows the stories of two ”bug chasers” who sought out ”the gift” of HIV infection. Also interviewed are AIDS activist and author, Walt Odets, PhD, and HIV+ and HIV- men. The film explores the normalization and glamorization of HIV/AIDS and discusses the isolation and division caused by HIV status in the gay community."