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So, what you’re saying is, one more theory can’t hurt right?
We often shout from the rooftops that the clitoris is the one organ in the entire human body that’s the sole purpose is pleasure. However, one researcher and former staff member of the Department of Biomedical Science at the University of Sheffield argues that this isn’t the only purpose of the clitoris.
Roy J Levin, writes that it’s other reason is...you guessed it, reproduction!
This argument might have many of us already on the defensive; we are tired of our sexual pleasure being defined by reproduction from the very first sex ed class we take at school. It appears that this research aims to strengthen the battle against the clitoridectomies that are “undertaken in a number of countries and cultures.” Of which versions include the psychological, symbolic, Freudian, ritualistic and medical clitoridectomy. Levin is most interested in the latter.
So, what has the clitoris as a reproductive organ, Freud and clitoridectomy got to do with one another? And WTH is “tenting!”
In his lengthy The Clitoris—An Appraisal of its Reproductive Function During the Fertile Years: Why Was It, and Still Is, Overlooked in Accounts of Female Sexual Arousal, Levin shares key findings in 20th Century research, citing too the famous, Masters & Johnson. He lists ways that the clitoris, upon stimulation, signals to the brain to set in to motion “a combination of changes in the female reproductive tract that creates its readiness to receive and process sperm to achieve possible fertilisation of the egg.”
Levin’s list of clitoris-brain-vagina changes include;
All these points, with a little assistance from Google, are somewhat self-explanatory. One point that struck us however is Activating vaginal tenting and ballooning which delays sperm transport from the vagina.
How does delaying sperm help with reproduction?
During arousal lots of things occur, two of those are tenting and ballooning.
During arousal the vagina lengthens or pulls upward along with the cervix due to increased muscle tension.
The vagina balloons to accommodate penetration - this case of Levin’s reproduction theory, a male penis – more comfortably, therefore freeing up room for the semen because…
When the vagina tents and balloons, it gives the semen space to liquify, in order to move toward the uterus and then the ovum (female egg). Given that only 30-40% of sperm, in one normal ejaculate, are forward moving, they need all the help they can get to go in the right direction! Levin argues that this assistance is usually set in motion by clitoral stimulation.
Levin touched on Sigmund Freud and his disdain for the female organ, which arguably caused immeasurable ramifications for the medical and cultural understanding and emancipation of female sexuality. He does note, however, that “the detailed physiological responses of the female genital tract to sexual arousal were not yet identified and described” in Freud’s day.
This does cause an aching amount of cognitive dissonance when we think how women and vulva owners may not have been so deprived of pleasure if Levin’s findings were mainstream before Freud’s misogynistic prognosis of the clitoral orgasm as “immature” and a sign of mental illness. BIGGEST EYE ROLL! Would Freud have reconsidered? Would he have championed the female orgasm as important, nay crucial to the survival of humanity?
A clitoridectomy is a type of female genital mutilation involving the surgical removal of all or part of the clitoris.
Levin shares that some “apologists” have argued that the ramifications of female clitoridectomy mean only an impairment on a female sexual enjoyment, and so the procedure is comparable to male circumcision. Levin goes on to share some post-surgery and post-reconstructive surgery stats of women and people with vulvas who have undergone some form of clitoridectomy. This type of research is still lacking. However, it is known that a variety of complications, disability and death can result from FGM and clit cutting.
To conclude, citing back to the reproductive role of the clitoris or rather the neurological and physiological effects of clitoral stimulation, Levin states then that “clitoridectomy creates not only sexual disability but also a reproductive disability.”
WHO predicts 200 million girls and women currently living have undergone clitoridectomy.
Blog post based on Roy J Levins’ The Clitoris—An Appraisal of its Reproductive Function During the Fertile Years: Why Was It, and Still Is, Overlooked in Accounts of Female Sexual Arousal
Our ability to explore and enjoy our sexuality stems from a better knowledge of our body, and a curiosity to experiment new things. So, this week, we want to talk clitoris sensitivity, multiple orgasms, and masturbation techniques.
It is likely that you have one of three types of reactions to your vulva (the visible part of your reproductive organs below the belt; comprised of your mons, labia, clitoris and vaginal entrance).
In a society where sex, nudity and desire have become commonly talked about and displayed, masturbation, and specifically, female masturbation, still stands as a taboo.