An Examen of “The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’” Part Five.

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: There’s been a lot of good work, both scholarly and popular, on the social construction of homosexual desire and identity{13}.

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{13}Editorial Note: There cannot possibly be a lot of good work (be it both scholarly and popular or not) if it includes, as alleged above, the social construction of homosexual desire (as well as the social construction of homosexual identity a.k.a. the very recent invention of the concept of ‘a sexualised homosexual identity’, or ‘a homo-sexualised identity’, as per the previous critique immediately before this).

As the term homosexual desire signifies the erotic same-sex sexual attraction which was prevalent as far back in time as historical sources go—and beyond into prehistory—then there can only have been a lot of bad work, both scholarly and popular, on the social construction of that ages-old erotic same-sex sexual attraction.

Here is an appropriately modified version of the aspirant arguer’s immediately-prior image-caption:

• [example only]: “While *homosexual sex* is clearly as old as humanity, the concept of *homosexuality as an identity* is a very recent invention...”. [emphases added].

And then immediately followed by this modification:

• [example only]: “There’s been a lot of good work, both scholarly and popular, on the social construction of homosexual desire and identity” [strike-through added].

With those corrections in mind it would appear, then, that the mala fide title of this essay—(videlicet: The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’ further above)—might have been more honestly written as follows (as an illustrative example only). Viz.:

• [example only]: “The Social Construction of the Hetero-Sexualised Identity”. [end example].

Of course, a lot less web-surfers would click it open—and waste x-minutes of their life before realising the entire essay is a clumsily-worded social constructionist type screed before clicking it shut again—and move on with their life by finding something worthwhile to read.

(Incidentally, it is notable that the aspirant arguer’s narrative vis-ŕ-vis [quote] The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’ [unquote] is still being framed from an infecundous ‘queer-centric’ viewpoint).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: As a result, few would bat an eye when there’s talk of “the rise of the homosexual”—indeed, most of us have learned that homosexual identity did come into existence at a specific point in human history{14}.

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{14}Editorial Note: First and foremost, words and writings referring to the rise of the homosexual are utilising the word rise in reference to same undergoing an elevation or increase in status, importance, influence, etcetera, rather than representing its origin, source, or beginning (as in “the rise of a stream in a mountain”, for instance, or ‘the rise of the novel in English literature’, and so on.

Besides which, as it is well-recorded that infecundous same-sex sexual liaisons and affaires, etcetera, were prevalent in Ancient Greece, for just one example among many, many instances, it is more than likely that at least some of the personas concerned identified as such—albeit under differing nomenclature—as it stretches credibility to the max to presume that an infecund same-sex sexualised identity is solely a modern-day phenomenon.

Why on earth would that incorporeal entity, which the words homosexual identity refer to, be purely a modern-day phenomenon only? What is so different about the current modern-day period—as distinct from all the previous then-modern periods—that only during the present modern period would an infecund same-sex sexualised identity manifest?

(Nobody, as far as can be ascertained, has addressed this obvious question).

The writings of the classics historian Mr. John Addington Symonds (1840-1893) are particularly revelatory in regard to an infecund same-sex sexualised identity. For example:

• “Philosophically, then, the homosexual passion of female for female, and of male for male, was upon exactly the same footing as the heterosexual passion of each sex for its opposite. Greek logic admitted the homosexual female to equal rights with the homosexual male, and both to the same natural freedom as heterosexual individuals of either species. Although this was the position assumed by philosophers; Lesbian passion, as the Greeks called it, never obtained the same social sanction as boy love. It is significant that Greek mythology offers no legends of the goddesses parallel to those which consecrated paiderastia {= ‘paederasty’; homosexual interrelations between men and boys} among the male deities. (...elided...). Consequently, while the Greeks utilised and ennobled boy-love, they left Lesbian love to follow the same course of degeneracy as it pursues in modern times. (...elided...). There is an important passage in the Amores of Lucien which proves that the Greeks felt an abhorrence of sexual inversion among women similar to that which moderns feel for its manifestation among men. Charicles, who supports the cause of normal heterosexual passion, argues this wise:

▪ ‘If you concede homosexual love to males, you must in justice grant the same to females; you will have to sanction intercourse between them; monstrous instruments of lust {e.g., ‘dildos’} will have to be permitted, in order that their sexual congress may be carried out; that obscene vocable, tribad {= ‘sapphist’, ‘lesbian’}, which so rarely offends our ears—I blush to utter it—will become rampant, and Philaenis will spread androgynous orgies throughout our harems’.

What these monstrous instruments of lust were may be gathered from the sixth mime of Herodas, where one of them is described in detail...”. [curly-bracketed insert added]~ (pp. 70-72, “A Problem in Greek Ethics: Being An Enquiry into the Phenomenon of Sexual Inversion, Addressed Especially to Medical Psychologists and Jurists” by John Addington Symonds, written: 1875; printed privately: 1883; first published by The Areopagitiga Society, London, 1908).

Incidentally, and just for the record, as the above “A Problem in Greek Ethics” was privately printed in English one hundred and thirty-four years ago, in 1883, it is literally the first time the English word heterosexual appeared in print (albeit only ten copies) and records the earliest published defence of infecund same-sex sexualism in the English language.

Mr. Symonds also privately printed fifty copies of a similarly named “A Problem in Modern Ethics” one hundred and twenty-six years ago in 1891—surreptitiously reprinted in an edition limited to a hundred copies in 1896 (three years after his death in Rome on April 19th 1893)—which not only predates both Dr. Kiernan’s and Prof. Chaddock’s publications in May and November 1892, by one year, but also gave him his first widespread exposure as being of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion.

The following opening paragraphs from Mr. Symonds’ “Introduction” graphically convey how widespread and far back in historical records an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion is. Viz.:

• “There is a passion, or a perversion of appetite, which, like all human passions, has played a considerable part in the world’s history for good or evil; but which has hardly yet received the philosophical attention and the scientific investigation it deserves. The reason of this may be that in all Christian societies the passion under consideration has been condemned to pariahdom: consequently, philosophy and science have not deigned to make it the subject of special enquiry. Only one great race in past ages, the Greek race, to whom we owe the inheritance of our ideas, succeeded in raising it to the level of chivalrous enthusiasm. Nevertheless, we find it present everywhere and in all periods of history. We cannot take up the religious books, the legal codes, the annals, the descriptions of the manners of any nation, whether large or small, powerful or feeble, civilised or savage, without meeting with this passion in one form or other.

Sometimes it assumes the calm and dignified attitude of conscious merit, as in Sparta, Athens, Thebes. Sometimes it skulks in holes and corners, hiding an abashed head and shrinking from the light of day, as in the capitals of modern Europe. It confronts us on the steppes of Asia, where hordes of nomads drink the milk of mares; in the bivouac of Celtic warriors, lying wrapped in wolves’ skins round their camp-fires; upon the sands of Arabia, where the Bedouin raise desert dust in flying squadrons. We discern it among the palm-groves of the South Sea Islands, in the card-houses and temple-gardens of Japan, under Eskimo snow-huts, beneath the sultry vegetation of Peru, beside the streams of Shiraz and the waters of the Ganges, in the cold clear air of Scandinavian winters. It throbs in our huge cities. The pulse of it can be felt in London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, no less than in Constantinople, Naples, Teheran, and Moscow. It finds a home in Alpine valleys, Albanian ravines, Californian canyons, and gorges of Caucasian mountains. It once sat, clothed in Imperial purple, on the throne of the Roman Caesars, crowned with the tiara on the chair of St Peter. It has flaunted, emblazoned with the heraldries of France and England, in coronation ceremonies at Rheims and Westminster. The royal palaces of Madrid and Aranjuez tell their tales of it. So do the ruined courtyards of Granada and the castle-keep of Avignon. It shone with clear radiance in the gymnasium of Hellas, and nerved the dying heroes of Greek freedom for their last forlorn hope upon the plains of Chaeronea. Endowed with inextinguishable life, in spite of all that has been done to suppress it, this passion survives at large in modern states and towns, penetrates society, makes itself felt in every quarter of the globe where men are brought into communion with men.

Yet no one dares to speak of it; or if they do, they bate their breath, and preface their remarks with maledictions.

Those who read these lines will hardly doubt what passion it is that I am hinting at. Quod semper ubique et ab omnibus—surely it deserves a name. Yet I can hardly find a name which will not seem to soil this paper. The accomplished languages of Europe in the nineteenth century supply no term for this persistent feature of human psychology, without importing some implication of disgust, disgrace, vituperation. Science, however, has recently—within the last twenty years in fact—invented a convenient phrase, which does not prejudice the matter under consideration. She speaks of the “inverted sexual instinct”; and with this neutral nomenclature the investigator has good reason to be satisfied.

Inverted sexuality, the sexual instinct diverted from its normal channel, directed (in the case of males) to males, forms the topic of the following discourse. This study will be confined to modern times...”. ~ (pp. 127-128, ‘Introduction’ to “A Problem in Modern Ethics” by John Addington Symonds; 50 copies printed privately: 100 copies surreptitiously printed: 1896; from pp. 123-208 “John Addington Symonds (1840-1893) and Homosexuality: A Critical Edition of Sources” by Prof. Sean Brady; Springer, May 2012).

An enterprising author of literary and cultural history, Dr. Rictor Norton, ʙᴀ, ᴘʜᴅ, whose 1972 doctoral dissertation was on same-sex sexual themes in English Renaissance literature, has assembled a representative collection of Mr. Symonds writings.

To continue: the noun ‘catamite’, a 16th century English name for a sodomitical youth, stems from the Latin Catamītus, from the Etruscan Catmite, from the Greek Ganumēdēs who, in Greek Mythology, was the Trojan youth ‘Ganymede’, a boy of great beauty whom the Greek god Zeus carried away to sodomise—to be his catamite—and to be cupbearer to the Immortals.

Therefore to say that homosexual identity came into existence at a specific point in human history is akin to saying “sodomitical identity” and “catamitical identity” came into existence at a specific point in human prehistory (i.e., in the timeless realm of the Ancient Greek Immortals).

Thus, regardless of what the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay claims most of us have learned vis-ŕ-vis whatever their specific point in human history might be, the roots of the infecundous same-sex sexual identity, by whatever name, abide beyond even legendary prehistory.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: What we’re not taught, though, is that a similar phenomenon brought heterosexuality into its existence {15}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{15}Editorial Note: To clarify the terms: as the aspirant casuist introduced this topic by first referring to published works, both scholarly and popular, on the social construction of homosexual desire and identity (i.e., of infecundous same-sex sexual desire and an incorporeal same-sex sexual identity), as well as the resultant talk of the rise of the homosexual (i.e., the elevation of the aforesaid apparitional same-sex sexual identity), then what they are proposing here is a comparable social construction of the fecundous other-sex sexual desire and identity (and the rise thereof) else that a similar phenomenon brought... qualifier of theirs means not what it says. Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “There’s been a lot of good work, both scholarly and popular, on the social construction of homosexual desire and identity. As a result, few would bat an eye when there’s talk of “the rise of the homosexual”—indeed, most of us have learned that homosexual identity did come into existence at a specific point in human history. What we’re not taught, though, is that *a similar phenomenon* brought heterosexuality into its existence”. [emphasis added].

Therefore, it is vital for comprehension to be aware of what the words a similar phenomenon brought heterosexuality into its existence are really conveying ... to wit: that a similar phenomenon brought the concept of heterosexuality as an identity into its existence (and not fecund other-sex sexuality in and of itself). Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: While heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity, *the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is a very recent invention* (Credit: Getty Images). [emphasis added].

So as to obviate being caught-up in ‘queer-centric’ word-games it is handy to always bear in mind that the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay acknowledges the objectivity of the ab initio mundi nature of fecund other-sex sexuality (as per that as old as humanity phrasing above).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: There are many reasons for this educational omission, including religious bias and other types of homophobia{16}.

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{16}Editorial Note: First of all, the manner in which the linereligious bias and other types of homophobia is phrased conveys the impression, mayhap unwittingly, that homophobia is what constitutes religious bias in and of itself, period (which is such a stretch as to be highly risible).

It is somewhat akin to opining that religious bias and other types of ...err... of dread or hatred of women (for instance) is among many reasons for some-such educational omission regarding humans as the central element of the universe. For example:

• [example only]: “What we’re not taught, though, is that a similar phenomenon brought anthropocentrism into its existence. There are many reasons for this educational omission, including religious bias and other types of gynophobia”.[end example].

Thus the manner in which the line religious bias and other types of gynophobia is phrased in the above illustrative example conveys the impression, demonstrably, that gynophobia is what constitutes religious bias in and of itself, period (which is intentionally such a stretch as to be highly instructive).

Second, and to again clarify the terms, the aspirant arguer is opining that among those many as-yet unspecified reasons why the comparable social construction of the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is not taught, in the worldwide education systems, include various types of “unreasoning fear of or antipathy toward” persons of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion and infecund same-sex sexuality itself—or any dictionary definition of the ilk—on the part of the many and various curricular bureaucrats and pedagogues responsible for curriculum governance in each and every one of the 193+ nations on the planet.

The question immediately arises: how on earth could this much-trumpeted—and ill-named—irrational apprehension and/or abhorrence of infecund same-sex sexuality and its practicians possibly be a reason for any-such educational omission in relation to the concept of other-sex sexuality as an identity?

Third, is the obverse also true—does the same educational omission in relation to the concept of homosexuality as an identity occur because of heterophobia (i.e., “an irrational apprehension toward or an abhorrence of persons of the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity and fecund other-sex sexuality itself) and/or a sexist attitude regarding fecund other-sex sexuality and its practicians (i.e., the entire range of “hetero-negativism” pertaining to fecund other-sex sexism)—or is the aspirant arguer’s unelaborated many reasons lead-in to its follow-up thought-bubble (further below and beginning with But the biggest reason...) just the throwaway line it has every appearance of being?

Fourth, once again the aspirant arguer’s narrative vis-ŕ-vis [quote] The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’ [unquote] is being framed from a ‘queer-centric’ viewpoint insofar as it is persons of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion who have, typically, identified as a sexualised entity (i.e., being homosexual hence homosexual identity earlier) whereas peoples of the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity have, typically, not self-identified in a sexualised way (i.e., as being heterosexual that is)—or at least not primarily—inasmuch fecund other-sex sexuality is simply part-and-parcel of being born as a potentially reproductive member of the sexually-bipartite animal kingdom (i.e., experienced as “a normal sexual instinct” or as “a natural sexual instinct” and thought of and referred to as such).

And in this regard it is pertinent to note how the earlier-quoted “Online Etymology Dictionary” reports noun-usage of the adjective “heterosexual” as being “recorded from 1920, but not in common use until 1960s” (i.e., self-identifying and/or identifying others of that ilk as “heterosexual” is relatively recent) whereas noun-usage of the adjective “homosexual” was already common “by 1895” (i.e., three years after its 1892 English debut). Viz.:

• heterosexual (adj.): 1892, in C. G. Craddock’s translation of Krafft-Ebbing’s “Psychopathia Sexualis”, a hybrid; from hetero-, ‘other’, ‘different’ + sexual. *The noun is recorded from 1920, but not in common use until 1960s*. Colloquial shortening hetero is attested from 1933. [emphasis added]. ~ (Online Etymology Dictionary).

• homosexual (n.): “homosexual person”, *by 1895, from homosexual (adj.), 1892*. In technical use, either male or female; but in non-technical use almost always male. Slang shortened form homo attested by 1929. [emphasis added]. ~ (Online Etymology Dictionary).

Therefore, the reason why the social construction of the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is not taught in the mandatory education systems worldwide is—apart from the sociological theory-of-knowledge called social constructionism being of no substantive utility (hence having no efficacious function in everyday reality)—because the vast majority of the population are indifferent to any such identity.

To say it again for emphasis: the vast majority of the estimated 7.3 billion people worldwide—those of the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity—are indifferent to self-identifying as a sexualised entity.

(In other words, all this brouhaha about [quote] “sexual orientation identity” [unquote] is an infecundous same-sex sexual phenomenon and, as such, is not applicable to around 7.2 billion people worldwide).

Lastly, the reason why the social constructionists’ version of creationism is not taught by educationalists with a religious bias quite obviously centres around venerable scriptural authority taking precedence, as a matter-of-course, over a sociological theory-of-knowledge with, at most, a fifty-year vintage.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: But the biggest reason we don’t interrogate heterosexuality’s origins is probably because it seems so, well, natural. Normal. No need to question something that’s “just there”{17}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{17}Editorial Note: As the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay has already acknowledged how heterosexual people were born heterosexual there can be no doubt whatsoever as to what is being conveyed by their [quote] something that’s ‘just there’ [endquote] way of phrasing it.

And there is indeed no need, of course, to question the fecund other-sex sexual predisposition—which is certainly just there as the “natural sexual instinct” or the “normal sexual instinct” for the vast majority of the population—let alone interrogate any fantastical origins (howsoever gruelling a grilling the aspirant arguer has planned) of something as old as life itself inasmuch without it humankind would be neither present nor having futurity.

Put succinctly, the fecundity inherent to the other-sex sexual proclivity which brought the aspirant arguer into existence in the first place—via the male gamete (spermatozoa) instinctively seeking haploidic fusion with the female gamete (ovum)—is imprescriptible.

Quite frankly, in setting out to interrogate their own imprescriptible origin the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is not only on a hiding to nowhere, but is, in fact, going nowhere fast.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: But heterosexuality has not always “just been there”{18}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{18}Editorial Note: By enclosing the words just been there in those speech-quotes the aspirant arguer is now harking back to the out-of-the-blue it feels as if heterosexuality has always just been there lead-in line of theirs, as an immediate follow-up to those insightful interlocutors’ that can’t be right! exclamation, which has the effect of lending an air of verisimilitude to this rather clumsily structured argument of theirs. Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “Whenever I tell this to people [viz.: “it wasn’t until 1934 that heterosexuality was graced with the meaning we’re familiar with today”, they respond with dramatic incredulity. That can’t be right! Well, it certainly doesn’t feel right. It feels as if heterosexuality has always *“just been there”*. (...elided...). But heterosexuality has not always *“just been there”*. [bracketed insert and emphases added].

Yet, as the appellation heterosexuality has demonstrably had the meaning we’re familiar with today from its very inception—the easily available and thus readily to hand primary source material clearly demonstrates heterosexuality has indeed just been there as a one-word signifier for the “normal sexual instinct” or the “natural sexual instinct” since its inception by Herr Kertbeny in 1868 (the German words Heterosexualität and Normalsexualität were interchangeable for him)—the aspirant arguer has structured their argument upon a premiss which closer inspection reveals to be a falsehood.

In other words, not only is it a vacuous argument—that prior to the German word Heterosexualität making its debut appearance on paper in Berlin, in a private letter, the condition or state of being “heterosexual” (i.e., “heterosexuality”) did not exist—it is an inane presentation as well because the “normal sexual instinct” or the “natural sexual instinct”, which that hybrid term is a one-word signifier for (‘hetero-sexuality’ = ‘normal-sexuality’), has just been there all throughout the sexually-bipartite animal kingdom from the very beginning.

As a reminder of whence these discombobulatory declamations originate (such as heterosexuality has not always ‘just been there’ for example) the following is well worth a re-reading. Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “...at some point during college, my sexual and romantic desires became reoriented toward men. These desires suggested to me a *queer identity*, which I at first reluctantly accepted and then passionately embraced. This *new identity* in turn helped reinforce and grow new gay desires...”. [emphases added].

Put succinctly: a recently increated incorporeal identity—a sexualised socio-cultural persona—is busily persuading its host-body to type-out all manner of vacuous inanities.

To proceed: whilst that But... modifier, which this new identity has persuaded its host-body to type-out as a follow-on from their preceding No need to question something that’s just there statement, is, of course, totally at odds with their candid heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity admission earlier (now much further above) it is nonetheless in accord with the latter half of the sentence which began thataway. Here it is, again, in full. Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “While heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity, the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is a very recent invention”. [endquote].

Thus, when this queer identity persuades its host-body to type-out (albeit quite clumsily this time around) But heterosexuality has not always ‘just been there’ it would aid clarity in communication to be written something like this (as an illustrative example only):

• [example only]: “But the biggest reason we don’t interrogate heterosexuality’s origins is probably because it seems so, well, natural. Normal. No need to question something that’s ‘just there’. But heterosexuality *as an identity* has not always ‘just been there’ because the concept of heterosexuality *as an identity* is a very recent invention”. [end example]. [emphases added].

’Tis all quite simple (when the writer of the words is devoid of an apparitional identity, with its ‘queer-centric’ agenda, dictating the typing—or the reader is not burdened by a ‘queer-centric’ agenda).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: And there’s no reason to imagine it will always be{19}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{19}Editorial Note: If the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is saying there is no reason to imagine heterosexuality as an identity will always be ‘just there’ then it is a no-brainer because the concept of heterosexuality as an identity is a very recent invention, anyway, and has but a minimal take-up by the vast majority of humankind as well.

And yet again: as the vast majority of humankind do not necessarily self-identify, nor identify others of the ilk, as being heterosexual anyway—inasmuch as being of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition is simply part-and-parcel of being born as a potentially reproductive member of the sexually-bipartite animal kingdom—then once again the aspirant arguer’s narrative vis-ŕ-vis [quote] The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’ [unquote] is still being framed from an infecundous ‘queer-centric’ viewpoint.

(As the above thought-bubble comes at the end of this essay’s first section then the general thrust of the way in which its author argues their case, thus far, does not bode well for the next three sections insofar as if the aspirant arguer has not picked up their game hereinafter then this critique-&-commentary, in these editorial notes, may not even make it through to the end of section two).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: When heterosexuality was abnormal{20}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{20}Editorial Note: As the emboldened subtitle above is predicated upon a misapplied fin-de-sičcle dictionary definition, appearing in seven successive editions of the “American Illustrated Medical Dictionary” until its ‘volte-face’ correction in 1915—and a perversive definition if there ever was because, ipso factoid, nobody of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition qualifies as normal—this is a real-life example of how laissez-faire scholarship, in conjunction with an advocatory platform-provider proclaiming an unscholarly travesty to be a BBC Best of 2017 pick, can and does promulgate and perpetuate spin-doctors’ mendacity and/or bull-artists’ paltericity.

As the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is convinced that an estimated 2.1 billion ‘abnormal perverts’[†]—(the twentieth-century descendents of those 1.19 billion heterosexuals springing feyly into existence[‡] ex nihilo on May 6, 1868, who had morphed into ‘pathological passionates’[§] in 1923, remember, instead of being transformed into ‘loving desirers’ back in 1915)—did not become ‘passional manifesters’ of normal sexuality[⁑] until 1934 it remains to be seen just how the aspirant arguer weaves that rainbow-hued factoid into the increasingly arbitrary timeline of their ‘queer-centric’ narrative as this second section unfolds.

[†][Mr. Ambrosino]: The 1901 Dorland’s Medical Dictionary defined heterosexuality as an “*abnormal or perverted* appetite toward the opposite sex”. [emphasis added].

[‡][Mr. Ambrosino]: “Prior to 1868, *there were no heterosexuals*”, writes Hanne Blank. Neither were there homosexuals. [emphasis added].

[§][Mr. Ambrosino]: More than two decades later, in 1923, Merriam Webster’s dictionary similarly defined heterosexuality as “*morbid sexual passion* for one of the opposite sex”. [emphasis added].

[⁑][Mr. Ambrosino]: It wasn’t until 1934 that heterosexuality was graced with the meaning we’re familiar with today: “*manifestation of sexual passion* for one of the opposite sex; normal sexuality”. [emphasis added].

(There is, of course, always the possibility that the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is barking mad).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: The first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented usually involves an appeal to reproduction: it seems obvious that different-genital intercourse has existed for as long as humans have been around—indeed, we wouldn’t have survived this long without it. But this rebuttal assumes that heterosexuality is the same thing as reproductive intercourse{21}. It isn’t.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{21}Editorial Note: First, a minor point of order, as the aspirant arguer has evidentially become entangled in their own discombobulatory declamations insofar as a first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality as an identity[*] was invented would not usually involve an appeal to reproduction because—as sexualised socio-cultural identities are usually those of peoples with an infecundous same-sex sexual orientation—it is those phantasm’s non-reproductive nature which usually defines them.

[*][Mr. Ambrosino]: While heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity, the concept of *heterosexuality as an identity* is a very recent invention. (Credit: Getty Images). [emphasis added].

Second, a major point of order, because when spelled-out as per the above image-caption (as an illustrative example only) the first-rebuttal paragraph carries the implication it is sexualised socio-cultural identities—psychosexual presentations to the mind (as in mental representations in the form of ideas or images)—who are engaging in the reproductive intercourse specifically mentioned. Viz.:

• [example only]: “The first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality *as an identity* was invented usually involves an appeal to reproduction (...). But this rebuttal assumes that heterosexuality as an identity *is the same thing* as reproductive intercourse. It isn’t”. [end example].

O what a tangled web they weave when first they practice to deceive.

Howsoever, to proceed as given: as the raison d’ętre of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition is undeniably the perpetuation of the species (i.e., reproduction)—as it is self-evident that were it not for the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity humankind would be neither present nor having futurity—the aspirant arguer has no choice but to admit that the human race (i.e., we) would not have survived this long without it.

However, their flat denial—that heterosexuality is not the same thing as the coition they had immediately beforehand admitted to—reveals that the first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented (i.e., an appeal to reproduction) was never going to be addressed by the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay even before they typed it out.

By way of demonstration, here is what the above passage looks like when the text conveying what the aspirant arguer had no choice but admit to is elided:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “The first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented usually involves an appeal to reproduction: (...elided...). But this rebuttal assumes that heterosexuality is the same thing as reproductive intercourse. *It isn’t*”. [emphasis added].

Upon this closer inspection it can be seen that it matters not one jot whether the aspirant arguer agreed or disagreed with what seems obvious anyway—or with why it seems obvious even—as all the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is focussed on here is making an assertion about what this thus-far undefined heterosexuality is not (vide: It isn’t above).

In fact, it would have been far simpler (and demonstrative of authorial integrity) to write that opening paragraph for this second section of the narrative thisaway (for example):

• [example only]: “The first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented usually involves the assumption that heterosexuality is the same thing as reproductive intercourse. It isn’t”. [end example].

As the aspirant arguer’s first rebuttal does not make that assumption—they represented it simply as being an appeal to reproduction per se—and as the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition of the vast majority of the men and women on the planet is undeniably the sine qua non of the perpetuation of the species (as it is self-evident that were it not for fecund other-sex sexuality humankind would be neither present nor having futurition), just what is it, then, the aspirant arguer is in denial of?

By hijacking the well-known and oft-used term “sexual intercourse” (i.e., coition, coitus, copulation) with that ‘queer-centric’ pedanticism reproductive intercourse the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is specifically denying that fecund other-sex sexuality is the same thing as an intromissive penile-vaginal act of spermatozoic fertilisation of the ovum (to meet pedanticism with didacticism so as to expose the word-gamesmanship).

To explain: as coitus incurring impregnation (i.e., reproductive intercourse in ‘queer-centric’ propaganda) occurs in affluent industrialised societies on average only about twice per lifetime or less, and, even then, artificial insemination or in vitro fertilisation is sometimes resorted to (albeit the slim minority[‡] though)—and as contraception implies coition sans impregnation (a.k.a. non-procreative copulation, in ‘queer-centric’ binary jargon, as employed much further below[§] by the aspirant arguer)—it is obvious the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay is resorting to ‘queer-centric’ word-games in order to avoid actually addressing the appeal-to-reproduction rebuttal of the vacuous claim that fecund other-sex sexuality was invented.

[‡][Mr. Ambrosino]: “In 2013, more than 63,000 babies were conceived via IVF. In fact, more than five million children have been born through assisted reproductive technologies. Granted, this number still keeps such reproduction in *the slim minority*, but all technological advances start out with the numbers against them. Socially, too, heterosexuality is losing its ”high ground“, as it were...”. [emphasis added]. ~ (from “The Future of Heterosexuality”; the fourth section of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay).

[§][Mr. Ambrosino]: “In the Western world, long before sex acts were separated into the categories hetero/homo, there was a different ruling *binary*: procreative or *non-procreative*. The Bible, for instance, condemns homosexual intercourse for the same reason it condemns masturbation: because life-bearing seed is spilled in the act...”. [emphases added].~ (from “When Heterosexuality was Abnormal”; the second section of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay).

In other words, the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay presents what is known as a “straw-man” argument—inasmuch the likelihood of any real-life first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented actually involving an assumption about fecund other-sex sexuality being the same thing as an intromissive penile-vaginal act of spermatozoic fertilisation of the ovum (let alone usually involving same) is so remote as to approach zero—and then rebuts that (straw-man) assumption in lieu of addressing the appeal to reproduction per se.

Otherwise, by virtue of the aspirant arguer having no choice but to admit that humankind would be neither present nor having futurity without the vast majority of the men and women on the planet actively engaging in coition per favour their fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity (vide: indeed, we wouldn’t have survived this long without it above)—that is, engaging in coital union per favour heterosexuality as distinct from engaging in forever-barren same-sex imitative sex acts per favour homosexuality, as typified—any such flat denial (as in their unelaborated It isn’t ipse-dixit further above), vis-ŕ-vis the very raison d’ętre of fecund other-sex sexuality, would leave them going about their daily business having to pretend how all the egg on their face is really the latest thing in beauty-treatment.

Furthermore, as the well-known and oft-used term “sexual intercourse” means precisely what the technical terms coitus or coition refer to—(vide “the act of sexual procreation between a man and a woman” below)—there is no syntactical necessity whatsoever for the aspirant arguer to replace it with that clumsily-constructed different-genital intercourse nonce word because it already refers, specifically, to the copulatory act “in which the penis is inserted into the vagina” whereby the male gamete (spermatozoa) instinctively seeks haploidic fusion with the female gamete (ovum).

As it is well-known what the oft-used term “sexual intercourse” references then why would the aspirant arguer confect their ungainly different-genital intercourse redundancy in lieu thereof?

A possible clue lies much further below (already-quoted above). Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: The Bible, for instance, condemns *homosexual intercourse* for the same reason...” [emphasis added].

As the term “sexual intercourse” specifically refers to the copulatory act whereby “the man’s penis is inserted into the woman’s vagina and excited until orgasm and ejaculation occur” then this presumptuous affixation of the infecundous same-sex sexual prefix homo- to the fecundous other-sex sexual term “sexual intercourse” (as in their homo-misappropriation’ of a traditional penile-vaginal term) is a classic example of the shabby appeal word-gamesmanship has to whomsoever it entices into its snares.

Put explicitly: it is a classic example of ‘queer-centric’ misappropriation of fecundous other-sex sexual terminology because, no matter how many times a female of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion becomes “excited until orgasm” she never can have “ejaculation occur” in her penile substitute (e.g. dildo or a surgically-confected inflatable penial facsimile)—nor any gametic deposition inside her cohort’s vagina (let alone have any haploidic fusion potentiality) of course—and no matter how many times any male of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion becomes “excited until orgasm and ejaculation occurs”, complete with its gametic deposition inside his cohort’s vaginal substitute (e.g. rectum or rima oris), that surrogate depository cannot ever be a vulvouterine matrix (let alone have any haploidic fusion potentiality).

To spell it out in no uncertain terms, those who are enticed into a word-games appropriation of fecundous other-sex sexual terminology (as per the homo-sexual intercourse’ arrogation of a traditional penile-vaginal term) can befool themselves that their impersonation of complemental male-female sexual union is indeed “sexual intercourse” (a.k.a. intromissive penile-vaginal coition)—unto the moon turning blue even—yet any such imposturage is not and never was nor ever will be “sexual intercourse” (a.k.a. complemental male-female sexual union) because the non-complemental and, hence, forever-barren male-male and female-female imitative sex acts are *caricatural* by their very nature as the perpetuation of the species is exclusively the province of fecund other-sex sexuality—its raison d’ętre (i.e., sole or ultimate purpose; lit. ‘reason to be’) is purely of the procreative, propagative, generative kind—and in which respect infecund same-sex sexuality is an evolutionary dead-end.

It is the same word-games appropriation of fecundous other-sex sexual terminology as is being played-out of late over the time-honoured and august institution of nuptials (a.k.a. connubiality or conjugality) whereby the ages-old “in wedlock” signifier by any name—designating the complemental male-female marital state (a pre-historical matrimonial institution predating even the most primeval society[*] as the regularisation and normalisation of cohabitation is the genesis of any such primitive societal ordering)—is in the process of having the antipodean prefix ‘same-sex’ appended to the word ‘marriage’ as normative usage such as to have the otherwise unnecessary ‘other-sex’ qualifier likewise prefixed, eventually, for differentiation purposes (just as the aspirant arguer’s different-genital and different-sex[†] displacements of the long-established qualifier “sexual” intrinsic to the traditional penile-vaginal term “sexual intercourse” presages an otherwise unnecessary prefixal appendance of the ‘different-genital’ and ‘different-sex’ qualifiers to the word ‘marriage’ in the not-too-distant future were their shabby ‘queer-centric’ misappropriation ever to gain some wheels).

[*]The complemental male-female nuptial union—a pre-historical institution predating even the most primeval society as the regularisation and normalisation of cohabitation is the genesis of any such primitive societal ordering—was addressed at length in 1877 by the pioneering anthropologist and social theorist Mr. Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881) in his voluminous five-hundred-and-seventy-page “Ancient Society” study. He was acutely aware of how the earliest interactions between the eighteenth-century “civilised” British and the stone-aged “savages” living a hunter-gatherer lifestyle on the land-mass then-latterly known as ‘Terra Australis Incognita’ afforded a rare glimpse into the eolithic forebears everybody currently alive has as their remotest ancestors.

In similar vein the clarifier and critic currently typing-out these words has long been acutely aware of civilisation’s primal genesis and has oft-times stressed how man-woman sexuality and intimacy is the genesis of family and thus *the very core of civilisation itself*. (e.g., 28 February, 2016; 15 July, 2015; 23 June, 2013; 28 February, 2012; 05 January 2010; 11 December, 2009; 13 November 2009).

[†][Mr. Ambrosino]: “Debates about sexual orientation have tended to focus on a badly defined concept of “nature”. Because *different sex intercourse* generally results in the propagation of the species, we award it a special moral status. (...elided...). Until this point in our Earth’s history, the human species has been furthered by *different-sex reproductive intercourse*. About a century ago, we attached specific meanings to this kind of intercourse, partly because we wanted to encourage it. But our world is very different now than what it was...”. [emphases added]. ~ (from “The Future of Heterosexuality”; the fourth section of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay).

Not unsurprisingly, what again springs to mind—prompted by the writer typing these words just recently conducting a check-for-typos re-read of the spontaneously-written “the time-honoured and august institution of nuptials” part-sentence previously typed-out further above—is Herr Rudi Dutschke’s remarkably prescient late 1960s catchphrase “der lange Marsch durch die Institutionen” (‘the long march through the institutions’).

Who could have thought “the august institution of nuptials” would be one of those institutions being ‘marched-through’ (and by judicial fiat, even, in the USA) back in the late 1920s / early 1930s when Mr. Antonio Gramsci was busily devising his war-of-position formulation in those “Prison Notebooks”, eh?

*

To proceed: conveniently overlooked, however, is how “heterosexuality” itself (publicly categorised as “the hetero-sexual instinct” in that specialist volume, “Psychopathia Sexualis”, of November 1892)—the very experiencing of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition as a consistent state or condition—is the instinctive attraction to, and of, the complementary other sex in all matters pertaining to connubiality or conjugality, and not just coition (which may or may not be fructuous for whatever reason), as is exemplified by each and every aspect relating to the conjugal or connubial ménage which, by virtue of the instinctive bonding-&-nesting nature of the aforesaid “hetero-sexual instinct”, includes the immanency and intimacy of complemental togetherness and closeness, and, thusly, the complementary companionship and conviviality which ensues upon sharing adulthood comprehensively with the complemental other sex, through all the vicissitudes of life, and thereby conjointly establishing the stable and secure complementarity—complete with the dependable presence of instinctively nurturing-&-nourishing and protecting-&-providing role-models of both sexes—so essential for wholesomely raising a family.

By framing their ‘queer-centric’ narrative so narrowly (not to forget first basing it, and erroneously at that, upon anomalous and/or aberrant dictionary definitions) as to selectively have their first rebuttal equate fecund other-sex sexuality solely with the act of reproductive copulation the aspirant arguer is evidentially in utter denial of the instinctive nature of fecund other-sex sexuality (in total denial of the very raison d’ętre of fecund other-sex sexuality).

This is borne out when they glibly lecture (further on below) about the origins of fecund other-sex sexuality as if the experientially ascertainable instinctivity of fecund other-sex sexuality itself was, and despite also being self-evident throughout the animal kingdom, nothing other than a ‘social construction’ product—a societal production a.k.a. cultural production (further below) in other words—being thoughtlessly played-out under the baleful influence of mindlessly learned-by-rote societal directives (a.k.a. cultural diktats) and which societal produce inevitably comes complete with that cultural-product’s date-stamped production-line history via which the canny constructionists can liberate themselves from ...drum-roll, please, maestro... from labels!

Alors! La Matrice n’est plus!

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “Sex has no history”, writes queer theorist David Halperin at the University of Michigan, because it’s “grounded in the functioning of the body”. Sexuality, on the other hand, precisely because it’s a “cultural production”{22}, does have a history. In other words, while sex is something that appears hardwired into most species, the naming and categorising of those acts, and those who practise those acts, is a historical phenomenon, and can and should be studied as such.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{22}Editorial Note: First, and just to further up-date the objectivity record: as well as granting the ab initio mundi nature of the fecund other-sex sexuality its objectivity (as per the candid heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity admission) and according coition its objectivity (as per the honest indeed, we wouldn’t have survived this long without it agreement) the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay now concedes the objectivity of the very drive which causes coitus to take place (as per the frank sex is something that appears hardwired into most species acknowledgement) which is elsewhere known as “natural sexual instinct”, “normal sexual instinct” (a.k.a. “the hetero-sexual instinct” in 1892), etcetera.

To proceed: on an undated day, circa October 1989, immediately after he had written “Sex has no history. It is a natural fact, grounded in the functioning of the body, and, as such, it lies outside of history and culture” Prof. David M. Halperin, ᴘʜᴅ. (born 1952), then declaimed, complete with the requisite tone of assurance, that “Sexuality, by contrast, does not properly refer to some aspect or attribute of bodies” as if giving public voice to that attuned assurance thaumaturgically grants declamatory bull the verity it sorely lacks (as he effectively goes on to admit, in the second paragraph, whilst reaching for a dead man’s prestige to bolster that bull with). Viz.:

• “Sex has no history. It is a natural fact, grounded in the functioning of the body, and, as such, it lies outside of history and culture. Sexuality, by contrast, does not properly refer to some aspect or attribute of bodies. Unlike sex, sexuality is a cultural production: it represents the appropriation of the human body and of its physiological capacities by an ideological discourse. Sexuality is not a somatic fact; it is a cultural effect. Sexuality, then, does have a history—though (as I shall argue) not a very long one.

To say that, of course, is *not* to state the obvious—despite *the tone of assurance* with which I just said it—but to advance a controversial, suspiciously fashionable, and, perhaps, a strongly counter-intuitive *claim*. The plausibility of such a claim might seem to rest on nothing more substantial than *the prestige of the brilliant, pioneering, but largely theoretical work of the late French philosopher Michel Foucault*. According to Foucault, sexuality is not a thing, a natural fact, a fixed and immovable element in the eternal grammar of human subjectivity, but that “set of effects produced in bodies, behaviours, and social relations by a certain deployment” of “a complex political technology...”. [emphases added]. ~ (pp. 257-258, “Is There a History of Sexuality?” by David M. Halperin; “History and Theory”, Vol. 28, No. 3; Oct. 1989, pp. 257-274).

And the reason why it is bull is because, quite simply, as sexuality does indeed properly refer to some aspect or attribute of bodies just like sex does (i.e., just like being male or female does)—inasmuch sexuality refers, as a matter-of-course, to the sexual aspect of bodies—then it, too, has no history by virtue of being a natural fact, grounded in the sexual functioning of the body and, as such, lying outside of history and culture (to couch such a foregone conclusion in accordance with the above rather eccentric phraseology).

Therefore—and because the aspirant arguer, drawn into legerdemain like a moth to the flame by witlessly absorbing the bull a 37-year-old ‘queer-centric’ theorist declaimed nearly thirty years ago, conjures up an historical-unhistorical distinction betwixt sexualityand sex out of thin air, baldly declaring the former to have a history despite the latter having none, on an ipse dixit premise that the former is precisely a societal product (cultural production = ‘social construction’)—this is obviously the apposite moment to point out that sexuality (i.e., sexual + -ity) is the state or condition of being sexual and that to be sexual (i.e., sexu[s] + -al) is to be having the form or character of sex. Viz.:

• sexual (adj.): 1. of or pertaining to sex; 2. occurring between or involving the sexes; [e.g.]: “sexual relations”; 3. having sexual organs, or reproducing by processes involving both sexes; (adv.): sexually. [1645-55; from Late Latin sexuālis = Latin sexu[s], ‘sex’ + -ālis, from Latin -āle (sing.), nominalised neuter of -ālis, ‘-al’, a suffix with the general sense “of the kind of”, pertaining to, *having the form or character of that named by the stem*, occurring in loanwords from Latin; [e.g.]: “autumnal”; “natural”; “pastoral”, and productive in English on the Latin model, usu. with bases of Latin origin; [e.g.]: “accidental”; “seasonal”; “tribal”]. [emphasis added]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary).

Put succinctly: sexuality is a state or condition having the form or character of sex.

What is mind-bogglingly implicit in this “social constructionist” psychosexuality, then, is that sexuality itself—a state or condition having the form or character of unhistorical sex mind you—is (thaumaturgically) a historical state or condition precisely because that state or condition having the form or character of unhistorical sex is (phantasmagorically) a cultural production wrought by the (incantatory) naming and categorising those acts and those who practise those acts which are grounded in the functioning of the body.

Bedazzled by the abracadabra power of word-magic to increate and proliferate and present to the mind an alluring array of wraithlike identities and/or sexualities, of every alphabetical dial-a-definition description imaginable, more than a few entrepreneurial social constructionists are, perforce, driven to similarly razzle-dazzle their listeners and readers.

And the underlying motive fuelling this phantasmagorical fad—this latest psychosexual craze of affecting a presentation to the mind, in the form of an idea or image, of a state or condition actually having the character or form of unhistorical sex (i.e., grammatically correct sexuality), yet all the while thaumaturgically imprinting itself as an historical sexuality (i.e., politically correct sexuality), regardless—is unintentionally revealed in the next paragraph.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: Or put another way: there have always been sexual instincts throughout the animal world (sex). But at a specific point in time, humans attached meaning to these instincts (sexuality). When humans talk about heterosexuality, we’re talking about the second thing{23}.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{23}Editorial Note: First, and just to further up-date the objectivity record again: as well as granting the ab initio mundi nature of the fecund other-sex sexuality its objectivity (as per the candid heterosexual sex is clearly as old as humanity admission) and according coition its objectivity (as per the honest indeed, we wouldn’t have survived this long without it agreement), plus further conceding the objectivity of the very drive which causes coitus to take place (as per the frank sex is something that appears hardwired into most species acknowledgement)—which drive’s objectivity is elsewhere endorsed by labels such as “natural sexual instinct”, “normal sexual instinct” (a.k.a. “the hetero-sexual instinct” in 1892), etcetera—the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay not only now reconfirms its ab initio mundi objectivity (as per the graphic there have always been sexual instincts throughout the animal world (sex) admittance) but in doing so also grants objectivity to the word sexual as well.

All what remains, now, is a similar acknowledgment of the obvious objectivity of sexuality—the sexual aspect of bodies—by virtue of sexuality being thus grounded in the sexual functioning of the body (and, as such, lying outside of history and culture just like sex does).

To proceed: so as to keep track of the sequence leading up to the aspirant arguer’s absurd definition, of what heterosexuality is, as they laid-out so helpfully above—(to wit: some unstipulated meaning attached to sexual instincts, by the entire human race (as in “humans” plural as above), on a specific but unnamed and undated day)—the following edited text is a reminder of the aspirant arguer’s flat denial, of what it is not, which resulted in their laying-out what it is to them (i.e., to their imaginative faculty). Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “The first rebuttal to the claim that heterosexuality was invented usually involves an appeal to reproduction: (...elided...). But this rebuttal assumes that heterosexuality is the same thing as reproductive intercourse. *It isn’t*”. [emphasis added].

As almost anything can be posited as ‘true’—bearing in mind how ‘truthiness’ abounds in the mentalistically-based phantasmagorical world of ‘queer-centric’ social constructionists (a creative mind-space where ‘truths’ not only trump facts but where facts are ‘truths’ to be dissed at will, or even whim, at times)—those sentences so helpfully defining what heterosexuality is, to the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay, do require considerable parsing (a.k.a. unpacking), in order to adequately ascertain just what they are talking about above, insofar as what is really being conveyed is as follows:

When homosexual humans (as per the switchover to we’re above) talk about heterosexuality what they’re talking about is the meaning homosexuals attach to the sexual instincts throughout the animal world (sex) because at a specific point in time homosexuals attached ‘queer-centric’ meaning to these instincts (‘queer-centric’ sexuality) so when homosexuals talk about heterosexuality what they’re talking about is the second thing (i.e., a ‘queer-centric’ view of heterosexuality).

And it is this second thing thusly referred to—an automorphic version of heterosexuality which is, in effect, an internalised end-product of an atavistically defensive ‘queer-centric’ Weltanschauung (a.k.a. their ancestrally beleaguered same-sex oriented worldview)—which is problematic to more than just a few clamorous vocalists and vociferous activists, from that tiny minority of the population, and not fecund other-sex sexuality per se (i.e., as it actually is, in and of itself, in everyday reality) without which humankind would be neither present nor having futurity.

It is for self-centric reasons, then, that the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay, quite understandably yet inexcusably, has their agenda whereby fecund other-sex sexuality as a way of life [*] may well die out through public re-educational tracts such as this unscholarly travesty—this BBC Best of 2017 pick—which is presently in the process of being relentlessly critiqued in these editorial notes by a septuagenarian widower of ‘Fair Albion’ parentage (both matrilineal and patrilineal), nowadays retired and living on a veteran’s pension in a self-built houseboat on a large river-system meandering through the rain-forested countryside, on the eastern seaboard of an affluent industrialised and technologised nation, in a paradisaical sub-tropical wonderland and—due to blessedly being of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition—procreant by sequential generational descent (via hereditably passing-on, intact, those fecund other-sex sexual instincts) of four offspring and nigh-on a score of grandchildren, plus, by the latest count, upwards of a dozen great-grandchildren.

[*]The following dénouement is copied & pasted, directly from the concluding paragraph of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay, for contemporaneous comprehension. Viz.:

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “Men and women will continue to have different-genital sex {i.e., coitus, coition, copulation} with each other until the human species is no more. But heterosexuality—as a social marker, *as a way of life*, as an identity—may well die out long before then”. [emphasis added].

The dearth of appreciation for the very fecundity which is the raison d’ętre of other-sex sexuality—noticeably lacking all throughout this self-centred and other-blaming queer-centric’ essay—provides a sobering insight into what impelled peoples of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition down through ages (the more-intolerant eras) to deal with persons of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion so severely.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: Hanne Blank offers a helpful way into this discussion in her book “Straight: The Surprisingly Short History of Heterosexuality” with an analogy from natural history. In 2007, the International Institute for Species Exploration listed the fish Electrolux addisoni as one of the year’s “top 10 new species”. But of course, the species didn’t suddenly spring into existence 10 years ago—that’s just when it was discovered and scientifically named. As Blank concludes: “Written documentation of a particular kind, by an authority figure of a particular kind, was what turned Electrolux from a thing that just was ... into a thing that was known{24}.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{24}Editorial Note: It is not at all a helpful way into this discussion as there is a distinct difference betwixt discovering (and then naming and documenting) something already-existent but previously unknown to humans—such as that particular species of fish exampled above—and renaming (and then documenting) something already-existent and previously known to humans by other names.

(As the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition of approximately 99% of the population was already known as normal sex or natural sex or various other terms of that ilk, and as an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion was already known as abnormal sex or unnatural sex or various other terms of that ilk, this should come as no surprise).

And it is such a distinct difference as to readily demonstrate how that particular-species-of-fish example is not at all analogous.

But, then again, what can be expected from someone who does not even comprehend that sex and gender really were exactly the same[*] for more than half a millennia (although such usage had essentially remained the preserve of grammarians). In 1955, however, the word ‘gender’ was press-ganged by the monstrous Dr. John William Money (1921-2006) for an entirely different rôle (which gender feminists, as distinct from equity feminists, seized upon in the 1970s when ‘feminist theory’ took up his concept of a distinction between biological sex and the social construct of gender)

[*][Ms. Hanne Blank]: “The world we live in desperately wants there to be only two sexes and only two genders that go along with in the strictest lockstep. In fact, sex and gender should, in their scheme of things, be virtually identical, so much so that they can print the word ”gender“ on a form when what they really mean is ”sex“ and expect everyone to blithely mark “F” or “M” in the box *as if sex and gender really were exactly the same*...”. [emphasis added]. ~ (from “Tits of Clay: Genderphilia and Changing the World, One Lipstick at a Time” by Hanne Blank; August 11, 2006; Keynote Speech, Femme 2006 Conference San Francisco, California).

Some fourteen years ago Ms. Hanne Blank was upfront about her doctoral dissertation proposals being twice rejected, and about her career trajectory thereafter, in an extensive review article promoting her then-latest book Unruly Appetites in the 2003 “Baltimore City Paper Online”. Viz.:

The Naughty Professor.

Writer of Smut and Champion of Porn, Hanne Blank is Baltimore’s Grande Dame of Erotica.

By Lizzie Skurnick; February 18, 2003.

Pornography has historically been the stuff of plain brown wrappers and back-alley bookstores—books thumbed through and passed around as furtively as a joint. But since “erotica” has entered the storied realms of Barnes & Noble and the Book-of-the-Month Club, pornographers have gotten something of a makeover, too. Hanne Blank, Baltimore transplant, self-described publisher of “veritable bushels of smut”, and author of the recently published “Unruly Appetites” from Seal Press, is also a classically trained singer and university instructor who bears the imprimatur of the New England Conservatory, Tanglewood, and Brandeis University, Massachusetts, where she sang Schubert Lieder {=‘Songs for voice & piano’} while leading seminars on sex in Boston.

“People are always trying to figure out how I got into sex work from being an opera singer”, she explains. “And really, they’re not all that different”.

Blank has been something of a freelance sexologist since grade school. Raised by a middle-school teacher and an anthropologist with a subscription to Playboy, she was paging through Hugh Hefner’s rag by the age of 5. (...elided...). Out as bisexual at 15 and writing her first erotic stories at 17, Blank refused to hide any of her more controversial pursuits, publishing Zaftig!, a zine {=short for ‘magazine’; an inexpensively produced, self-published, underground publication} about sex and people of size, at the same time that her doctoral committee at Brandeis was busily rejecting her two dissertation proposals—one, a study of women with low voices, the other, a biography of Sophie Tucker. (“Musicology only discovered feminism in, like, 1986”, Blank comments wryly). “I got really tired really early on trying to make nice with people who were never going to approve of me”, Blank explains. “And when you grow up fat, smart, Jewish, and female, everything else is kind of gravy”.

The same maverick streak that led her to announce herself as a “fat, kinky, trannie-chasing Jew” at a fuddy-duddy academic conference garnered her a first book deal—but not from her horrified colleagues. Greenery Press, attracted by Zaftig! and Blank’s popular seminars in Boston, brought out “Big Big Love: A Sourcebook for People of Size and Those Who Love Them” when Blank was turning 30. She has since edited/ authored five other works, including “Shameless: Women’s Intimate Erotica” (Seal Press) and “Best Transgender Erotica” (Circlet Press, with Raven Kaldera). (...elided...). In the is-porn-good-for-us-or-bad-for-us debates, Blank coolly abstains, refusing to put her work either under the “porn” or “erotica” moniker: “I like to use the word smut because it doesn’t let people hide. As far as I can tell, erotica is smut you like, and porn is smut you don’t like”. She also dismisses those that would link her work to the Paris Review over Penthouse.

“A lot of people like to say, ‘Oh, but it’s literary erotica!’ I don’t give a fuck if it’s floor wax. What do you use it for? What does it do for you?” (...elided...). Literary erotica is a veritable drop in the vast ocean of mass-market pornography, and whether the porn is “erotica” or merely formulaic—a dead body and a smoking gun replaced by a hot body and a smoke—there’s no guarantee that it can change people’s lives.

But Blank is hopeful. “Part of the game in writing erotica is to produce something that people will find sexy, just like part of writing horror stories is to produce something that will scare people—it is genre fiction, let’s face facts”, she says. “But there’s no reason genre fiction can’t be insightful and useful at the same time”.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: Something remarkably similar happened with heterosexuals, who, at the end of the 19th Century, went from merely being there to being known{25}.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{25}Editorial Note: The author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay conveniently leaves out the crucial unknown and discovering parts of the (non-analogous) particular-species-of-fish example in order to spin their phantasmagorical narrative about how the estimated 1.5 billion fin de sičcle humans of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition went thusly:

01. from merely being there...”.

(NB.: The reader has to pretend, of course, that the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition of those 1.5 billion humans was already-existent but unknown—despite being referred to with terms such as ‘natural sexual instinct’ or ‘normal sexual instinct’ or various other terms of that ilk—by those 1.5 billion humans of the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity and the approximately 15 million humans of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion).

02.“...to being known”.

(NB.: The reader has to pretend, of course, that the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition of those 1.5 billion humans—which was referred to with terms such as ‘natural sexual instinct’ or ‘normal sexual instinct’ or various other terms of that ilk—was not only already-existent but was now known as “the hetero-sexual instinct” (albeit only by a number of physicians, specialising in psychiatry, and a smattering of laypersons) even though still being referred to with terms such as ‘natural sexual instinct’ or ‘normal sexual instinct’, or various other terms of that ilk, by the vast majority of those 1.5 billion humans of the fecundative other-sex sexual proclivity and the 15 million humans of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion).

This ‘queer-centric’ narrative about how 1.5 billion fin de sičcle humans of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition went from merely being there to being known revolves around the word Heterosexuale being coined in Germany, in the 1860s, as a corollary to the Homosexuale neologism.

(NB.: The reader has to also pretend, of course, that the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition of those 1.5 billion humans was not already known as normal sexual instinct or natural sexual instinct, or various other terms of that ilk, and that an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion of those 15 million humans was not already known as abnormal sexual instinct or unnatural sexual instinct, or various other terms of that ilk, because the latter terms, although biologically correct, are not politically correct).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: “Prior to 1868, there were no heterosexuals”, writes Hanne Blank. Neither were there homosexuals{26}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{26}Editorial Note: The pivotal event for ‘queer-centric’ vocalists and activists nigh-on 150 years ago, in 1868 in Berlin, was Herr Károly Mária Kertbeny writing a private letter, dated May 6, 1868, to Herr Karl Heinrich Ulrichs containing the hybrid word Homosexuale as a replacement for the then-prevalent words sodomy, sodomite and/or sodomist (plus sodomitical)—which he coined via the affixation of the prefix homo- (Greek ὁμός, ‘same’, ‘identical’) to the adjective sexual (Late Latin sexuālis from Latin sexus, ‘sex’ + -ālis, ‘-al’)—and the similarly hybrid word Heterosexuale which he had derived via the affixation of the prefix hetero- (Greek ἕτερος, ‘other’, ‘different’) to the same Late-Latin adjective.

To declare, ex cathedra (as befits Baltimore’s Grande Dame of Erotica as it were), that there were no heterosexuals and that neither were there homosexuals prior to 1868—that is, prior to the sixth day of the month of May in that year, of course, at some indeterminate hour and minute—is to endow the written word with miraculous creative and destructive powers insofar as the very moment Herr Kertbeny put his ink-dipped pen to paper (and in a private letter at that) an estimated 1.19 billion heterosexuals and approximately 12 million homosexuals sprang ex nihilo into existence, all around the globe, thereby requiring the 1.2 billion humans who were already alive, all over the planet, to simultaneously plunge ad nihil out of existence (despite 1.19 billion of them being of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition and the other 15 million being of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion).

Howsoever, these miraculous creative and destructive powers apparently did not extend to Herr Ulrichs—who had four years earlier coined the words ‘urning’ (representing a male of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion), ‘urninde’ (representing a female of an infecundous same-sex sexual persuasion), and ‘dionings’ (representing persons of the fecundous other-sex sexual predisposition)—no matter how many times he put his ink-dipped pen to paper.

(There is, of course, always the possibility that both Ms. Blank and Mr. Ambrosino are barking mad).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: It hadn’t yet occurred to humans that they might be “differentiated from one another by the kinds of love or sexual desire they experienced”. Sexual behaviours, of course, were identified and catalogued, and often times, forbidden. But the emphasis was always on the act, not the agent{27}.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{27}Editorial Note: As it was most definitely the agent who was charged, and not the act itself, in the already-mentioned court case whereof Mr. Karl Ulrichs wrote those two lengthy pamphlets “Incubus” & “Argonauticus” in 1869—defending Mr. Karl von Zastrow who had been charged with the rape and murder of a five year-old boy—then it quite obviously had indeed occurred to humans that they might be differentiated from one another by the kinds of love or sexual desire they experienced in relation to another human being/ to other human beings.

(This is such a nonsensical argument).

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: So what changed? Language{28}.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{28}Editorial Note: And as that particular referent, which the Language previously signified in a different way than is currently the case, is none other than that exact-same referent, which the Language currently signifies in a different way than was previously the case, it is patently obvious that the referent which those respective words reference, both before and after the Language changed, did not change at all.

Ergo (as only the Language changed) this entire 3,391-word article is much ado about nothing.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: In the late 1860s, Hungarian journalist Karl Maria Kertbeny coined four terms to describe sexual experiences: heterosexual, homosexual, and two now forgotten terms to describe masturbation and bestiality; namely, monosexual and heterogenit{29}.

{cont’d after next ...}

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{29}Editorial Note: It would appear, then, that those miraculous creative and destructive powers Herr Kertbeny was endowed with, when putting his ink-dipped pen to paper on that fateful day, did not extend to autoeroticists and bestialists else the aspirant arguer would surely have written something like the following lines (for example). Viz.:

• [example only]: ‘Prior to 1868, there were no monosexuals. Neither were there heterogenits’. [end example].

(The case for the ‘barking mad’ possibility grows stronger the more this essay unfolds).

What also springs to mind, of course, is whether it is a ‘queer-centric’ truth too that prior to 1815-25 there were no bisexuals and neither were there transsexuals prior to 1955-60?

’Tis rather revealing that the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay did not write something like the following lines (for example). Viz.:

• [example only]: ‘Prior to 1815-25, there were no bisexuals. Neither were there transsexuals prior to 1955-60’. [end example].

It becomes quite evident that consistency is not a feature of ‘queer-centric’ lucubration, either.

(End Editorial Note).

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{... cont’d from before}.

• [Mr. Ambrosino]: Kertbeny used the term “heterosexual” a decade later when he was asked to write a book chapter arguing for the decriminalisation of homosexuality. The editor, Gustav Jager, decided not to publish it, but he ended up using Kertbeny’s novel term in a book he later published in 1880.

The next time the word was published was in 1889{30}, when Austro-German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing included the word in “Psychopathia Sexualis”, a catalogue of sexual disorders.

{cont’d after next ...}.

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{30}Editorial Note: First, a point of order, because the medico-legal study “Psychopathia Sexualis” (i.e., ‘Psychopathy of Sex’), by the Austro-German neurologist and psychiatrist Professor Dr. Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing (1840-1902), was published in 1886 and not 1889 as adverted to above by the aspirant arguer.

Furthermore, the word [quote]: “heterosexual” [endquote] does not appear anywhere at all in its 110 pages. It can be accessed online at the following URL. Viz.:

The version published in1889 is his expanded 4th edition comprising of 226 pages of German text (whereupon the word “heterosexuale” features on 15 occasions in its several grammatical forms) and not almost 500 pages as adverted to below by the author of this ʙʙᴄ-hosted essay. Viz.:

heterosexualem Fühlen (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexualer (heterosexual)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexualen Gefühle (heterosexual feelings)
heterosexual empfindet (feels heterosexual)
heterosexualen Sinne (heterosexual sense
)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexualem Verkehr (heterosexual intercourse)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexuale Empfindung (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexualen Liebe (heterosexual love)
heterosexualer Gefühlsweise (heterosexual feeling)
heterosexualen Liebe (heterosexual love)

▪ German text (1889):

Just as a matter of convenience the URLs for all online versions are as follows. Viz:

▪ 1886 (German Text):

▪ 1888 (German Text):

▪ 1889 (German Text):

▪ 1890 (German Text):

▪ 1892 (German Text):

▪ 1892 (1892 English Text):

▪ 1893 (1892 English Text):

▪ 1894 (1892 English Text):

▪ 1894 (German Text):

▪ 1895 (German Text):

▪ 1898 (German Text):

▪ 1899 (1899 English Text):

▪ 1906 (1906 English Text):

▪ 1907 (1907 German Text):

▪ 1922 (1906 English Text):

(End Editorial Note).

 

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An examen of “The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’” Part Six.

An examen of “The Invention of ‘Heterosexuality’” Contents.

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