Exhibitionism

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File:Naked woman on Budapest street (rear view).jpg
Naked exhibitionist woman on a Budapest street in 2007

Exhibitionism is a practice of exposing one's intimate parts – such as the breasts, genitals, or buttocks – in a public or semi-public environment. This can be done live or virtually as with nude selfies using technologies like smartphones to take nude pictures of oneself for show.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Such a display may be innocuous: to friends, acquaintances or strangers for their amusement or sexual satisfaction. It may also be to a bystander to shock them.<ref name="baunach">Template:Cite book</ref> In the latter case it classically involves men showing themselves to women and goes by legal terms such as indecent exposure or exposing one's person.

Psychologists and psychiatrists are solely concerned with this case and speak of an "exhibitionistic disorder" rather than just "exhibitionism". This is specifically an uncontrollable urge to exhibit one's genitals to an unsuspecting stranger. It is an obsessive-compulsive paraphilic pathology requiring psychiatric treatment.<ref name="DSM-5">Template:Cite book</ref>

Types of exposure

Various types of behavior are classified as exhibitionism,<ref name="baunach"/> including:

The DSM-5 diagnosis for exhibitionistic disorder has three subtypes: exhibitionists interested in exposing themselves to non-consenting adults, to prepubescent children, or to both.<ref name="DSM-5" />

Psychological aspects

File:Charles Lasegue.jpg
Charles Lasègue was the first to use the term exhibitionist, in 1877.

The term exhibitionist was first used in 1877 by French physician and psychiatrist Charles Lasègue.<ref>Lasègue, Charles. Les Exhibitionistes. L'Union Médicale (Paris), series 3, vol. 23; 1877. Pages 709–714.</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Various earlier medical-forensic texts discuss genital self-exhibition, however.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

When exhibitionistic sexual interest is acted on with a non-consenting person or interferes with a person's quality of life or normal functioning, it can be diagnosed as exhibitionistic disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-5). The DSM states that the highest possible prevalence for exhibitionistic disorder in men is 2% to 4%. It is thought to be much less common in women.<ref name="DSM-5"/>

In a Swedish survey, 2.1% of women and 4.1% of men admitted to becoming sexually aroused from the exposure of their genitals to a stranger.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

A research team asked a sample of 185 exhibitionists, "How would you have preferred a person to react if you were to expose your privates to him or her?" The most common response was "Would want to have sexual intercourse" (35.1%), followed by "No reaction necessary at all" (19.5%), "To show their privates also" (15.1%), "Admiration" (14.1%), and "Any reaction" (11.9%). Only very few exhibitionists chose "Anger and disgust" (3.8%) or "Fear" (0.5%).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

History

File:Streaker Hong Kong 1994.jpg
Mark Roberts, a well-known streaker, at the Hong Kong Sevens Rugby tournament in 1994

Public exhibitionism by women has been recorded since classical times, often in the context of women shaming groups of men into committing, or inciting them to commit, some public action.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The ancient Greek historian Herodotus gives an account of exhibitionistic behaviors from the fifth century BC in The Histories. Herodotus writes that:

Template:Blockquote A case of what appears to be exhibitionism in a clinical sense was recorded in a report by the Commission against Blasphemy in Venice in 1550.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester was an early libertine in England, who was known for his exhibitionism.<ref name="Lewis Zunshine 2013 p. 267">Template:Cite book</ref>

In the United Kingdom, the 4th draft of the revised Vagrancy Act 1824 included an additional clause "or openly and indecently exposing their persons" which gave rise to difficulties because of its ill-defined scope. During the course of a subsequent debate on the topic in Parliament, the then-Home Secretary Robert Peel observed that "there was not a more flagrant offence than that of indecently exposing the person which had been carried to an immense extent in the parks ... wanton exposure was a very different thing from accidental exposure".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>


See also

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References

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