Virginity Is A Social Construct

19 Dec

Jezebel published a piece today with the title “Nearly 1% Of Women Claim They Were Virgins When They Gave Birth,” and, because this is Jezebel we’re talking about here, they used this as an opportunity to shame and belittle the women who say that they became pregnant while still virgins. And just so we all understand what author Erin Gloria Ryan means by virgins, she writes that they are women who,

“… were unpenetrated by the peen of a man when they became pregnant.”

She further explains,

“This doesn’t include women who became pregnant via in vitro fertilization or artificial insemination; these are women who gave birth the old fashioned way and were like *shrug! SERIOUSLY GUYS I DON’T EVEN KNOW HOW THIS HAPPENED!”

Then (incorrectly) asserts,

“Getting pregnant without sex is virtually scientifically impossible, yet dozens of women in the study (who were teens when the research began) swear up and down that their babies happened sans man. This is the biological equivalent of claiming that your glass of drinking water spontaneously began boiling itself without the presence of heat. I mean, maybe it’s Unsolved Mysteries-possible, but it’s highly doubtful that 0.8% of all glasses of water boil themselves. Come on.”

Also, just so that we’re really super clear on how Jezebel views these women, the article was posted to their Facebook page with the following header:

Nearly 1% of women insist they were virgins when they gave birth, which means that nearly 1% of women are delusional.

Oh, Jezebel. Jezebel. I know all the cool kids have already said it, but damn. You sure do suck at feminism.

First of all, it is definitely scientifically possible to become pregnant without having penetrative vaginal sex. It’s unlikely to happen, but it’s possible – all you need is for a someone to ejaculate on or in close proximity to the vagina, or else have some other thing with sperm on it – a finger, say, or a sex toy – penetrate the vagina. Yes, these are unlikely ways in which to become pregnant, but they’re not within the same realm as water spontaneously boiling.

Second of all, can we not have this discussion without calling women stupid or crazy or just flat out accuse them of lying?

Third of all, can we please stop talking about virginity as if it is a real, measurable thing?

Virginity is not a thing. Not really. It is a social construct meant to make people, especially women, feel badly about their sexuality and sexual experience. It is a way of policing other people’s bodies and passing judgment on how they use them. It is, at its very core, a way of controlling and subjugating women.

One problem with the idea of virginity is that there’s no hard and fast way of deciding who’s a virgin and who isn’t. Many people would define loss of virginity in a very heteronormative sense – a sexual act where the penis penetrates the vagina. But does that mean, then, that a queer woman who has only ever been with other women is a virgin? Is a gay man, who has only ever had anal sex, a virgin? Most people, when pressed, would agree that no, those folks aren’t really virgins, even if they’ve never had penis-in-vagina-style intercourse. The flip side of this is that many rape victims don’t feel as if they have lost their virginity even if they’ve had penetrative intercourse forced on them. They consider themselves to be virgins because they don’t consider what happened to them to be sex. So taking all of that into consideration, how do we then define virginity?

Some people have said that performing any sexual act constitutes losing one’s virginity, but that seems like much too broad of a definition. Kids start experimenting with sexual play and experimentation at a fairly young age, so does it then follow that anyone who’s kissed someone of the opposite sex or shown them their genitals has de facto lost their virginity? I’m not sure that this idea makes any more sense than saying that virginity can only be lost through one very specific sexual act.

Another problem is that there is literally no way of knowing if someone is a virgin or not. Oh, people will tell you that you can check if a woman’s hymen is broken, but that’s not a reliable indicator at all. A hymen can be broken without any kind of sexual intercourse, through sports or through some kind of injury. Not all women are born with hymens. Not all hymens tear during penetrative sex. And yet we’ve all been sold this idea of torn flesh and blood on sheets as some kind of definite rite of passage for women. This idea – that you can somehow tell if a woman has been sexually active – has contributed to the oppression and subjugation of women for pretty much all of recorded history. It’s given men a way to control women, to make them ashamed of their bodies their sexuality. It’s led to a double standard where it’s fine – even encouraged – for boys to gain sexual experience, but women who are sexually active before marriage or have sex with too many people are considered to be slutty or damaged goods.

Finally, why is virginity so damn important to us? We don’t have nouns for who or what we were before we hit any other life milestones – there’s no term to refer to a person before they can walk or talk or read and write – all of which I would argue are more important achievements than getting laid – and yet it’s the sex that we focus on. Why do we put so much more weight on this one small facet of human life than we do on any of the others? Why are we still making a big deal out of who is a virgin and who isn’t?

This is the discussion that we should be having – not about whether women are lying or delusional about their virginity, but about why we still use this damaging term. We need to talk about why the idea of virginity continues to hold such sway over our cultural consciousness, and why so-called feminist websites a perpetuating the thought that virginity is a tangible, definable thing. Most of all, we need to figure out a better way to talk to kids about their bodies and their sexuality, because the way that we’re doing it now clearly isn’t working.

Even Mary agrees - virginity is bullshit

Even Mary agrees – virginity is bullshit

221 Responses to “Virginity Is A Social Construct”

  1. ilakaka's avatar
    johnadebola659 December 21, 2013 at 9:53 pm #

    good piece

  2. Jesse's avatar
    strainofthought December 21, 2013 at 11:32 pm #

    Society has certainly moved on in many ways, but I think the heteronormative act of penis penetrating vagina is still a relevant benchmark because it’s, you know, one of the leading causes of pregnancy.

  3. rockinyourbiz's avatar
    rockinyourbiz December 22, 2013 at 3:13 am #

    Reblogged this on rockinyourbiz.

  4. abbylmay's avatar
    abbylmay December 22, 2013 at 4:45 am #

    excellently written piece on social construct versus virginity – always been something i felt strongly about. Thank you for sharing!

  5. thisbeautifullifeisallthatmatters's avatar
    CHope December 22, 2013 at 6:52 am #

    Wow, as someone who was a virgin on my wedding night at 31, I say THANK YOU!

    • thisbeautifullifeisallthatmatters's avatar
      CHope December 22, 2013 at 7:12 am #

      I’m sorry, I somehow posted without finishing my comment. Pretty much the only thing that I was told about about sex during my Fundamentalist upbringing was “DON’T DO IT!” My husband was the same way. We both had been told all our lives not to have intercourse and when the time came, when it was supposedly moral and godly, we both struggled to perform and it was MISERABLE for a couple of days. You just can’t flip that switch from virginity to penetration without some intense drama to follow the years of programming that you shouldn’t do it!

      I think we use the term “virgin” to keep women down for it’s rarely used to describe teenage boys or men. We use it for the same reason people judge Miley Cyrus for her sexuality, sexism. Let’s be real, if she were a man no one would care. I remember this same crap said about Madonna in her twenties while I was a pre-teen in the early 1980s. How sad, thirty years later and it’s the same ole shit, different day.

  6. thisbeautifullifeisallthatmatters's avatar
    CHope December 22, 2013 at 7:16 am #

    Reblogged this on Nice Atheist and commented:
    I can see why this was freshly pressed, it’s a phenomenal article.

  7. Navanee Viswa's avatar
    Navan December 22, 2013 at 9:40 am #

    Reblogged this on Purely Photography.

  8. Preethi Raj's avatar
    Preethi Raj Nair December 22, 2013 at 2:31 pm #

    Personally I know girls that are virgins by definition only because they are just scared to take a thrusting. :/

  9. Philton Galinton's avatar
    Philton Galinton December 22, 2013 at 2:41 pm #

    Reblogged this on Life goes on and commented:
    Wow, I really did not finish reading your story, though I did find your looking very appealing.

  10. Lloyd Lofthouse's avatar
    Lloyd Lofthouse December 22, 2013 at 2:51 pm #

    I think it is wrong to judge women differently than men with it comes to virginity. Both should be treated the same.

    But what about hermaphroditism? Humans born with both sex organs intact. It’s also known as “intersex bodies”.

    Research in the late 20th century has led to a growing medical consensus that diverse intersex bodies are normal—if relatively rare—forms of human biology.

    “Although fertility is possible in true hermaphrodites (as of 2010 there have been at least 11 reported cases of fertility in true hermaphrodite humans in scientific literature),[2] there has yet to be a documented case where both gonadal tissues function; contrary to rumors of hermaphrodites being able to impregnate themselves.”

    Just because there is no scientific proof, it doesn’t mean it is impossible.

    Have you read “Middlesex”, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Jeffrey Eugenides. Worth reading.

  11. shewhowrites's avatar
    shewhowrites December 22, 2013 at 4:12 pm #

    virginity is linked to an idea that once you have had sex, something is physically different about you- your “cherry” has been popped. But we know with science and anatomy that there is no cherry, only sex without foreplay inflicts that type of pain. A lot of women experience that typical first time experience multiple times, and are accused of being “virgins.” It’s all social construct.

  12. Web Design Dubai's avatar
    Smart Baba December 22, 2013 at 5:13 pm #

    Reblogged this on Smart Baba.

  13. baseball91's avatar
    baseball91 December 22, 2013 at 5:31 pm #

    From a story-telling people, stories of what you were born into, with all the conflicts of imperfection – with the past. And you were probably, like so many Americans these days, compromising any sense of your personal privacy, intellectually or behaviorally, posting “it” on Facebook and/or WordPress, in pursuit of belonging with others who felt like you did. Mostly your piece is about anger about how unfair the world is. Whether you carried a hostility because you were born Jewish or Christian or Muslim, or nothing, I enjoyed reading of the struggle of a young woman, when you are not perfect, and your love ones knew it. I think WordPress did a nice job featuring this very seasonal holiday piece about the universal struggle for identity in decade when you, like so many Americans these days, were willing to annihilate the virgins of the world or any people willing to make some kind of personal sacrifice, as if this was some kind of personal threat, in how they carried on their lives. Whether male or female, when the real theme of the season is how everyone was born so imperfect.

  14. thesuitcaseundermybed's avatar
    thesuitcaseundermybed December 22, 2013 at 6:40 pm #

    Wait a minute. I agree with all of this, except that it is no mystery why “virginity” has such a hold in society. Everything boils down to sex (not saying that that is either fortunate or unfortunate). Why do we care so much about appearance, about money, doing good? Much of it, for many people, is about impressing possible mates. There is nothing strange about this, it is just our evolutionary drive to reproduce. That is all.

    Then we can discuss the sense of it all, which I think this post does very well. Thanks!

  15. cutepepsi85's avatar
    cutepepsi85 December 22, 2013 at 8:54 pm #

    Reblogged this on cutepepsi85 and commented:
    Yesssss !! I love it!!!

  16. Stephanie's avatar
    Stephanie W. December 22, 2013 at 9:59 pm #

    Reblogged this on Musing on life and commented:
    Women should be judged by their quality, not by their sexuality. Everyone should take time reading this post. Food for thought.

  17. Fitsum T. Hailemariam's avatar
    fitsum98 December 23, 2013 at 3:52 am #

    Reblogged this on fitsumtilahun and commented:
    Interesting idea on the virginity hula bulala

  18. k.vick's avatar
    k.vick December 23, 2013 at 5:47 am #

    This is literally the most articulate article about virginity I’ve seen on the internet. A-fucking-men.

  19. Uncle Guacamole's avatar
    Uncle Guacamole December 23, 2013 at 5:50 am #

    Very well said! Regarding terminology, however, you may be interested to know that one who does not yet speak is “preverbal,” one who does not yet walk is “premobile” and one who does not yet read and write is “preliterate.” Perhaps we need to swap out the word “virgin” for “precoital?”

    • cindy's avatar
      cindy December 24, 2013 at 6:21 pm #

      why the need to name it anyhow?

  20. katya940's avatar
    katya940 December 23, 2013 at 6:11 am #

    Reblogged this on Post-Past Me.

  21. darkrook's avatar
    darkrook December 23, 2013 at 11:03 am #

    Reblogged this on The Speaking Rook and commented:
    Great post!

  22. Harbans's avatar
    Harbans December 23, 2013 at 3:29 pm #

    Humans cannot truly interpret the domain of our LORD.

  23. Alia's avatar
    CoochCoach December 23, 2013 at 4:11 pm #

    Its a really interesting point that virginity perpetuates the heteronormative only beliefs. I had not given it much thought, but it certainly is not a scientific term!

  24. aworldoffilm's avatar
    aworldoffilm December 23, 2013 at 4:43 pm #

    Nice post and blog.

    If there is any chance you like films from around the world from any period please check out my blog. http://aworldoffilm.com/

  25. alijade02's avatar
    alijade02 December 23, 2013 at 4:46 pm #

    Interesting piece. It just further proves that people need to believe things in a way that allows them suppress feelings about the reality of how something happened.

  26. theninetiesgirl's avatar
    theninetiesgirl December 23, 2013 at 7:43 pm #

    Reblogged this on The Nineties Girl and commented:
    Hello Kitty must die by Angela S. Choi combines the nihilism and violence of Chuck Palanhuik and American Psycho with a Fiona Yu (female) as the central protagonist, a 27 year old chinese woman, who lives with her parents, has no lover, is not “fair” enough and has had to play the perfectly docile hello kitty all her life, in the first few pages of the book tired of the burden of her virginity decides to take what is rightly hers, only to realise that she never had a hymen. losing her virginity to herself, her autoeroticism becomes the first in a series of her revenge against everything that perpetuates the stereotype of the hello kitty.
    all girls in India must be aware of the kind of stupid importance that is placed on virginity. we had the two finger test for rape cases until very recently the Verma Committee scrapped it. isn’t it ridiculous that the test was to determine if the rape victim was a virgin or promiscuous, because of you’ve-done-it with-someone-you-can-do-it-with-everyone thought process? either way virgin or whore the sexuality of women…eh? what’s that?…the male sexuality is served either way.

  27. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 4:54 am #

    While I agree these claims made by these women are absurd, I still think chastity is a great virtue. It keeps one pure and free of STDS. Also, our Lord’s Mother was a virgin, since she was an exception, because Christ chose to tabernacle among us.

  28. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 5:00 am #

    Mary gave birth to Jesus’ Human Incarnation through the Holy Spirit.

  29. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 5:08 am #

    Also, thinking lustful thoughts about someone who is married is not a good idea. This can be destructive, and good for neither of you. Marriage sanctifies a union, and makes it harder for parents to separate, so that children are better looked after.

  30. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 5:14 am #

    Virginity is sacred for both men and women, and monasticism is a life of dedication to God. There is nothing sexist about this. Chastity is good for both men and women. Also, it is nice to have your first time with someone you are married to.

  31. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 5:22 am #

    Sex is more meaningful with someone that you love, and will be with you forever. One night stands usually end in heart break anyway, despite the fact that its a temptation, or if the person is attractive. It’s just not worth it.

  32. orthodoxchristian2's avatar
    orthodoxchristian2 December 24, 2013 at 5:26 am #

    Besides, a little self restraint never hurt anyone, and there males that are virgins, despite what the media tells us. There is no shame in being a virgin.

  33. Cynthia's avatar
    Cynthia December 24, 2013 at 5:58 am #

    “It is a social construct meant to make people, especially women, feel badly about their sexuality and sexual experience.”

    Especially women? That statement would be laughable if it weren’t so nakedly misandrist. You must never have had any interactions with adolescent males. Or you just hate men so much you can’t imagine life from their perspective.

    • Anne Thériault's avatar
      bellejarblog December 25, 2013 at 3:50 am #

      Yes, I definitely think that dudes making fun of each other for being virgins is pretty much on par with women being shunned or considered damaged goods or even being killed because they’ve lost their virginity before marriage.

      You caught me. Definitely a misandrist.

  34. Sade's avatar
    Sade December 24, 2013 at 9:48 am #

    I actually really enjoyed reading this lol 😀

  35. Sabrina LeBoeuf's avatar
    sabrinakaye December 24, 2013 at 4:44 pm #

    Bravo

  36. Christina Tasca's avatar
    Christina December 24, 2013 at 10:04 pm #

    Dude. This was such a good post. I loved reading it. Like some other commenters have already stated, I think the discussion on “symbolic” virginity and exposure in our overly sexualized Western society is long overdue and not had enough as it is. I’m going to be writing a post on male modesty and gender divides on my blog in an upcoming post. I’ll be linking back to you if you don’t mind. Cheers!

    • Anne Thériault's avatar
      bellejarblog December 25, 2013 at 3:52 am #

      Oh amazing! Yes, please do link back to this, if only because I’m super interested in seeing what you write about male modesty 🙂

      • Christina Tasca's avatar
        Christina December 25, 2013 at 10:45 am #

        Thanks, I appreciate that; and definitely will do! Have a great day. 🙂

      • Christina Tasca's avatar
        Christina January 3, 2014 at 1:54 am #

        Thanks! I will definitely keep you posted! (Sorry for the late response btw.) 🙂

  37. ThroughTheLookingGlassAndDownTheRabbitHole's avatar
    ThroughTheLookingGlassAndDownTheRabbitHole December 25, 2013 at 12:35 am #

    Excellent post! I hate the double standards for women, and I often feel conflicted and trapped by them, myself. Something for us all to think about.

  38. vanillasense's avatar
    vanillasense December 25, 2013 at 12:58 pm #

    Reblogged this on Vanillasense's Blog and commented:
    A post that I (gladly) came across. Explicates what has been on my mind for a while, quite well

  39. annuj's avatar
    annuj December 25, 2013 at 9:19 pm #

    Reblogged this on My Blog annuj.

  40. blogsmogfrog's avatar
    blogsmogfrog December 25, 2013 at 10:43 pm #

    Yes

  41. jhazi's avatar
    jhazi December 26, 2013 at 4:27 am #

    I disagree that the social construct of the idea of virginity is meant to make people feel bad. I don’t see how that means people are trying to control me. I do agree with virginity loss not being measurable across the sexual orientations though. But like you said it’s Jezebel we are talking about.

  42. goodrumo's avatar
    goodrumo December 26, 2013 at 5:36 am #

    Reblogged this on iheariseeilearn.

  43. meighanson's avatar
    meighanson December 26, 2013 at 11:26 am #

    Love!!!

  44. meighanson's avatar
    meighanson December 26, 2013 at 11:26 am #

    Reblogged this on meighanson and commented:
    Love!!!

  45. anwhalen's avatar
    anwhalen December 26, 2013 at 1:16 pm #

    Great article. I agree that virginity is a social construct. Attempts to define it in the US, Kenya, China and Uzbekistan may all yield different answers. However – you may want to rephrase the contrast you draw in the following quote:
    “We don’t have words for who or what we were before we hit any other life milestones – there’s no term to refer to a person before they can walk or talk or read and write – all of which I would argue are more important achievements than getting laid – and yet it’s the sex that we focus on.”
    Those who have not learned to walk are either pre-mobile or mobility-delayed. Those who do not talk are pre-lingual, and those who do not read or write are illiterate. Also – pertaining to this particular argument, failure to do these things are usually indicative of developmental concerns. Whereas failure to have sex, is more often related to either choice or a protected upbringing (consider girls who are sold into sex slavery by their very parents). I feel your article would be stronger without this emotive but fallacious point.

    • Anne Thériault's avatar
      bellejarblog December 26, 2013 at 2:43 pm #

      Yeah, that’s a good point. What we don’t have are nouns, I guess, to describe these things (I phrased it badly in the post). I’ll change that. Thank you!

  46. nabiljmo's avatar
    nabiljmo December 26, 2013 at 3:44 pm #

    Reblogged this on beauty of life and commented:
    Well written, and very informative .

  47. jalalzuberi's avatar
    jalalzuberi December 26, 2013 at 5:29 pm #

    Reblogged this on jalalzuberi says.

  48. Sarah Sexy Plants's avatar
    Sarah Sexy Plants December 26, 2013 at 10:23 pm #

    I know Jezebel comes across as a bit… smarmy at times, but I viewed the article in question as more depressing: how many of these women actually don’t understand how egg meets sperm and what can happen if that happens.

    I was shocked my freshman year of college, how much some of the girls I met didn’t know about sex. Like, you mentioned in your post, the use of a sex toy could introduce sperm but if you are only explicitly taught the only way to make sure you never get pregnant is to never have sex with a man, well, *technically* these woman don’t consider themselves to have taken part in a sex act.

  49. VillageBeadShop's avatar
    villagebeadshop December 27, 2013 at 12:41 am #

    I just find it disgraceful for you to use the Blessed Mothers picture on this blog…Please rethink your choice, and remover her picture.

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