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Journal of Sex Research

Volume 46, Issue 5, 2009

Narratives of Desire in Mid-Age Women With and Without Arousal Difficulties

Narratives of Desire in Mid-Age Women With and Without Arousal Difficulties

DOI:
10.1080/00224490902792624
Lori A. Brottoa*, Julia R. Heimanb & Deborah L. Tolmancd

pages 387-398

Available online: 02 Oct 2009

Abstract

There is controversy about the nature of women's sexual desire. The aim was to explore narrative descriptions of sexual desire among mid-aged women in hopes of clarifying how women define and experience sexual desire, and how these might differ among women with and without female sexual arousal disorder (FSAD). Mid-aged women without (age: M = 45, n = 12) and with (age: M = 55, n = 10) FSAD took part in in-depth interviews that invited them to share personal stories of sexual desire. Women also completed the Brief Index of Sexual Functioning and the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI). Women in both groups described sexual desire in genital, non-genital physical, and in cognitive–emotional terms. Although women with FSAD had low ratings of sexual desire on the FSFI, they could recall recent experiences of desire that did not differ from the control group. Women identified a number of triggers of desire including touch, memories, and partner's responses—the latter of which acted as both a trigger and an inhibitor. Women in the control group were more likely to express conflation about the distinction between desire and arousal. Among the different “objects” of women's desire, most women acknowledged emotional connection as most important.

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 02 Oct 2009

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of British Columbia,
  • b Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction,
  • c Hunter College School of Social Work,
  • d The Graduate Center, City University of New York,

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