Childhood sexual innocence

From BoyWiki
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

There are many arguments related to childhood sexual innocence. Whilst innocence in its purest form (absence of sexuality in women and children, as supported by Victorian Puritanism) is rejected by most modern child advocates (antisexual feminism, victimology, public and charity work), the "safeguarding" of "children" and "childhood" from supposedly corrupting and politically undesirable forces is still alive and well. Nevertheless, the arguments addressed here are more likely to be found on American Christian bulletin boards than Science or Rationalism sites.

Institutional argument

"Childhood is a time to be pure, innocent and uncomplicated by adult emotions such as sexuality. Children do not understand the corruption of adulthood, and require moral protection, as does the institution of childhood".

Sexual contact ("theft") argument

"The theft of a child's innocence (molestation) is an unforgivable crime".

This argument relies on the vague assumption that sex automatically leads to complicated emotional reactions in the first place. It is also based on the assertion that "innocence" and "purity" are somehow the opposites of sexual experience, assuming that sex cannot be "pure" or "innocent". These are beliefs, and have no grounding in objective reality. Similar beliefs in relation to women have already been thoroughly discredited to the point of ridicule.

Grace and virtue argument

Harris Mirkin notes:[1]

The current view of young people mirrors the Victorian construction of the innocent woman who was thought to be corrupted by being viewed lustfully by others, or by having erotic thoughts and desires herself. It is interesting that, although this construction of youth was created by adults and therefore presumably serves their own purposes, it embodies the view that adults are sinful beings that have fallen from a childhood period of grace and virtue.

References