“I find it fascinating,” she writes, “how people like the ‘completely straight’ former inmate I quoted earlier compartmentalise these experiences rather than using them to consider and perhaps question their self-identification as heterosexual.”
As with pigeons, or finches, or tortoises … the sex ratio of a human population can cause changes in sexual behaviour.” And she suggests that people should all think less rigidly about the categories and labels we assign ourselves. She examines studies of prisoners that show that “even in a hyper-heteronormative setting, sexual behaviour can be flexible. Shaw celebrates bisexual bonobos, debunks myths about gay giraffes and contends that “starfish should be the mascots for queerness engage in homosexual and heterosexual behaviour, they can reproduce asexually, and … some species can switch their sex”. The result is a tour of the science, culture and history of bisexuality that ranges from the vehemently political to the charmingly weird. And: “We also need to call heterosexuality into question.” Aside from being proudly, solidly and delightedly bisexual herself, Shaw has a PhD in psychology, and to prepare for writing the book she “started a bisexual research group with regular meetings, spearheaded an international bisexuality research conference which had 485 attenders and 70 researchers presenting their work, and … completed a master’s degree in queer history”. “Your sexuality is political, whether you want it to be or not,” Shaw writes. The book begins with bold intentions, guaranteed to enrage Anonymous Dads everywhere. Here, “penile plethysmography” rubs shoulders with “ adorable bi bubble” and a church minister “so sparkly gay that he is a bit of a local legend”. “The book was intended for clinical-forensic settings, and Krafft-Ebing wrote it in intentionally difficult language and with parts in Latin so that laypeople couldn’t read it.” There is a rich seam of nonfiction that translates impenetrable academese about interesting subjects into language that curious lay readers can understand, including this book with its juxtaposition of academic language and cute social media speak. Criminal psychologist Julia Shaw’s book is an impassioned attempt to bring decades of serious academic research out of the shadows, to show that being bisexual is nothing new, it’s here to stay and is simultaneously less and more provocative than you think.Īs Shaw explains, the first use of the word in English was probably in 1892, in a translation of German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing’s book Psychopathia Sexualis.
“But she says she is attracted to both to jump on another woke bandwagon, because for snowflake Gen Z, it’s trendy.” Like flares, student protest and hating your children’s taste in music, it seems bisexuality is always back in fashion. “My daughter doesn’t like girls and boys, she likes boys”, he fumed. In 2021, the Daily Telegraph parodied itself with a letter from an “Anonymous Dad” complaining about his bisexual daughter. A generation later, in 1995, the same magazine published a cover story declaring it “A new sexual identity”.
It was all the rage in 1974, for example, when the US magazine Newsweek discovered “Bisexual Chic: Anyone Goes”. A ccording to periodic reports in the media, bisexuality has been a brand-new fad since at least the 1890s.