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Repression and Aggression

Links Between Sexual Repression and Aggression

There is a relation between sexual repression and aggression. Results of ethnography also allow to verify this relation. Here, different cultures with different level of sexual repression have to be compared.

Contents




Prescott 1975

A cross-cultural investigation by the American psychologist J.M. Prescott, the findings of which were published in The Bulletin of Atomic Scientist (1975), confirmed this relationship between sex-inhibition and violence. The correllation was too consistent to be coincidental. Peoples with a sex-repressive morality are relatively more aggressive, insensitive, more inclined to physical abuse of children and subordinates, to killing and torturing enemies and to other criminal behaviour, while people with moral beliefs which permit sexual freedom, on the other hand, are generally more friendly and kind-hearted, show more affection to their children and are less inclined to criminality.

(Brongersma 1990 p.187-188)


Elwin 1959,p.428

As examples of modern peoples with a life-positive outlook, we can cite the Trobriander and the Indian Muria described by the English missionary Verrier Elwin. Here the children are healthy, hale and hearty, cheerful and helpful; they have sexual contacts nearly every night from infancy on. Deliquency among this free-living young people is very low; afterwards, however, when they became adults, married and subjected to rigidly imposed monogamous relations, deliquancy increases.

(Brongersma 1990 p.188)


Plack 1967,pp.304,321,324

The history of the Eskimo ist most instructive in this regard. They were once extremely gentle, kind and charitable to their fellow beings - and sexually very licentious. Their language did not even have a word for insult. Physical violence was unknown, and they never used to beat their children. With their conversion to Christianity, they became sexually disciplined, but also more hard-hearted, less inclined to charity and more criminal.

(Brongersma 1990 p.188)