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Dec 26, 2024
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SOC 210 - The Sociology of Sexual Behavior Credits: 3 3 Lecture Hours
Description This course is a study of sex in its varied social contexts. The course emphasizes the values, bases, and constraints of sex in contemporary society, contrasting them with traditional perspectives. Topics include cross-cultural comparisons, sexual scripts and human sexual response, growing up sexually, love and sex, sex in committed and non-committed contexts, sexual variations, and sex and the law. Students examine their own attitudes and values about sexuality in the post-sexual revolution social environment. Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion of the course, the student will:
- Define sexual choices that one makes during the course of a lifetime.
- Outline the transition of sexuality from its association with the sacred, to the scientific, to the secular.
- Explain what is meant by the sexualization of American society and the factors that brought this phenomenon about.
- Outline the historical roots of the sexual values that prevail in the U.S. society today.
- Define cultural variations in human sexuality.
- Explain the biological, psychological, sociological, and feminist theories of sexuality.
- Explain the procedures and methods used in sex research and be familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of sexual studies conducted to date.
- Interpret the impact of sex roles on interpersonal sexual relationships.
- Contrast traditional and current views on individual sexuality (autoeroticism).
- Identify the social factors that impact on sexual orientation (heterosexuality, homosexuality, and bisexuality).
- Compare and contrast biological, sociological and psychological explanations of sexual orientation.
- Interpret variations that occur in one’s sexuality from infancy through adolescence and adulthood.
- Explain the importance of communication to sexual relationships.
- Use the sociological imagination to understand the basis of love relationships and the dilemmas that often accompany them.
- Identify the socio-cultural factors that are associated with sexual dysfunctions.
- Outline the approaches used in sex therapy.
- Interpret the functions and dysfunctions of commercial sex.
- Identify the sources of HIV infection, the threat that AIDS poses to straights and gays alike and suggested ways to reduce and/or prevent the spread of HIV and other STDs.
Listed Topics
- Making sexual choices
- Sexual values – their origins and implications
- Cultural variations in human sexuality
- Research methods used in the study of human sexuality including the strengths and limitations of classic and more recent sex studies
- Theoretical perspectives used in the study of human sexuality
- Human sexual response
- Gender roles and sexual relationships
- Individual and interpersonal sexuality
- Sexual orientations-homosexuality, heterosexuality, and bisexuality
- Love and sexuality
- Communication and sexuality
- HIV infection: myths and realities
- Abuses and uses of commercial sex
- Sex and the law
Reference Materials Self assessment exercises, videotapes, and handouts from current publications (e.g., news magazines and professional journals). Approved By: Johnson, Alex Date Approved: 5/18/2009 Last Reviewed: 1/26/2023
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