Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Sex party

 
Wikipedia: Sex party

A sex party is a gathering at which people meet for sexual relations. Most are run by people who are either swingers or couples looking for group sex. The term has similar connotations to a gang bang or an orgy.

Contents

Urban legends

Sex parties have been a common feature in urban legend. Such legends often claim the parties are prominent, or growing in prominence, among teenagers. In the early 1950s, it was alleged that teenage girls throughout the South and Midwest formed "non virgin clubs" to organize and hold sex orgies. There were undocumented accounts of couples being paired off to to have sex by drawing numbers from a hat and boys having to pass inspection by the girls in order to be accepted into the club and an unnamed midwestern high school in which boys were initiated into the non virgin club by performing cunnilingus on all of the girl members. The claims that these clubs existed were later dismissed by the authorities as unfounded.[1][2]

Several similar stories arose in 2003. In New York, rumors began that teens had been taking days off from school to attend "hooky parties" while their parents were at work. One school suspended a group of girls for allegedly skipping school to attend such a party. They refused to allow them back until each had submitted to a medical examination for sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy, and allowed school officials to examine the results. The New York Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit against the school on behalf of the students.[3] A more specific and elaborate urban legend arose about "rainbow parties", at which teenage girls supposedly took turns fellating their male classmates while wearing different shades of lipstick, thereby leaving a "rainbow" of colors on the boys' penises. Similar stories concerning teenagers' gel bracelets being used as coupons for sex also arose at the time, with similar lack of corroborating evidence.[4]

The urban legends saw a resurgence in 2006. This time the gatherings were called "chicken parties", alleged group parties at which more than one woman engages in oral sex, or one woman gives oral sex to more than one man. Author Sabrina Weill was inspired to write her book The Real Truth About Teens and Sex after hearing about chicken parties when she was editor-in-chief of Seventeen magazine. She writes: "[First] there's a word or catchphrase that everyone starts using to describe [the new sexual trend] like "chicken parties". Then everyone's talking about it, which means probably 0.5 to 5 percent of teens are actually doing it."[5]

Variations

Key parties, a phenomenon in the 1970s, were sex parties attended by couples in which the men would all throw their keys into a common bowl, then their wives would pick a key out of the bowl and go home with the man whose key it was.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cahn, Susan (2007). Sexual Reconings: Southern Girls in a Troubling Age. Cambridge, MA. Harvard University Press. (p.199) ISBN 978-0-674-02452-6
  2. ^ Peril, Lynn (2002). Pink Think: Becoming a Woman in Many Uneasy Lessons. New York. W.W. Norton & Company Inc. (pp.100-101) ISBN 0-303-32354-4
  3. ^ "NYCLU Sues New York School Officials for Forcing Teen-Age Girls to Undergo Intrusive Medical Exams" (July 8, 2003). aclu.org. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  4. ^ Mikkelson, Barbara (2003). "Sex Bracelets". snopes.com. Retrieved December 22, 2005.
  5. ^ Weill, The Real Truth About Teens and Sex, p. 41
  6. ^ Bell, Robert (1971). Social Deviance: A Substantive Analysis. University of Michigan: Dorsey Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0256016635. 

References


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sex party" Read more

Mentioned in