scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Lovemaps: Clinical Concepts of Sexual/Erotic Health and Pathology, Paraphilia, and Gender Transposition in Childhood, Adolescence, and Maturity

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The word "lovemap" was first used by Dr. John Money in lectures at Johns Hopkins University in 1980 to symbolize "the neutral template expressed in every individual's sexuoerotic fantasies and practices." The word connotes our often subconscious pattern of erotic yearnings and desire.
Abstract
The word "lovemap" was first used by Dr. John Money in lectures at Johns Hopkins University in 1980 to symbolize "the neutral template expressed in every individual's sexuoerotic fantasies and practices." The word connotes our often subconscious pattern of erotic yearnings and desire. Each of us has a distinctive lovemap, as different and individual as a fingerprint. In this book, Dr. Money outlines healthy lovemap development as well as lovemap pathology - lovemaps gone awry. Such pathology falls into three categories: hypophilia (sexual dysfunction, such as impotence), hyperphilia (erotomania), and paraphilia (perversions). Paraphilia, another term coined by Money (from the Latin para - away from what is expected, and philia - love) can range from "those that are playful and harmless to those that are bizarre and deadly." Presenting case histories, Lovemaps describes the sexual practices of several patients and subsequent treatments of their paraphilias. Money pioneered the application of the hormone MPA, or Depo-Provera, to treat repeat sex criminals. He believes he has proved that science can prevent paraphilic sex offending, as is the case for other, physiological diseases. Lovemaps and its stirring accounts of lovemap pathology in case histories, (which are indexed under "paraphilia"), can be invaluable tools for those in the fields of sexology, child psychology, clinical psychology, criminology and, with its comprehensive glossary, the general reader - in short, anyone interested in human sexual development.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a comprehensive theory of child sexual abuse: A theory knitting perspective

TL;DR: The Pathways Model as mentioned in this paper is a comprehensive theoretical framework integrating both the overlapping and unique elements of these broad perspectives with some additional concepts derived from various psychological domains, and it integrates the best elements of the three theories into a comprehensive etiological theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond Sexual Orientation: Integrating Gender/Sex and Diverse Sexualities via Sexual Configurations Theory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a testable, empirically grounded framework for understanding diverse partnered sexualities, separate from solitary sexualities and discuss a sexual diversity lens as a way to study the particularities and generalities of diverse sexualities without privileging either.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypersexual Desire in Males: An Operational Definition and Clinical Implications for Males with Paraphilias and Paraphilia-Related Disorders

TL;DR: Clinical implications of reconceptualizing PAs and PRD as sexual desire disorders are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demographic and Psychosocial Features of Participants in Bondage and Discipline, “Sadomasochism” or Dominance and Submission (BDSM): Data from a National Survey

TL;DR: The idea that BDSM is simply a sexual interest or subculture attractive to a minority, and for most participants not a pathological symptom of past abuse or difficulty with "normal" sex, is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pornography, Sexual Socialization, and Satisfaction Among Young Men

TL;DR: A theoretical model of the effects of sexually explicit materials (SEM) mediated by sexual scripting and moderated by the type of SEM used is presented, finding that negative effects of early exposure to SEM on young men’s sexual satisfaction, albeit small, could be stronger than positive effects.