- Voyeurism - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Voyeurism is defined as a sexual interest in, or the practice of spying on, individuals engaged in intimate or private behaviors, such as undressing or sexual acts, often without their knowledge It encompasses activities like looking through windows or taking pictures in private settings, and is considered one of several non-contact sex offenses
- Voyeurism - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Voyeurism, or scopophilia as it is sometimes called, is of theoretical interest beyond its forensic implications First, there is a tendency for most people to look at sexually interesting scenes In some, looking is preferred to actually participating, presumably because real contact is too threatening for one reason or another
- How exhibitionism and voyeurism contribute to engagement in SNS use . . .
Furthermore, exhibitionism and voyeurism have indirect effects on intensity of SNS use through content production and content consumption These findings support empirical evidence that the relationship between individuals’ psychological traits and their intensity of SNS use may be in fact mediated through content use
- The impact of childhood trauma, personality, and sexuality on the . . .
The DSM-5 proposes eight categories of paraphilic disorder: Voyeurism (e g , achieving sexual arousal from observing an unsuspecting and non-consenting person who is naked or engaged in sexual activity), exhibitionism (e g , exposing genitals to unsuspecting strangers and becoming sexually aroused by it), frotteurism (e g , touching or rubbing
- How exhibitionism and voyeurism contribute to engagement in SNS use . . .
Meanwhile, exhibitionism and voyeurism are positively related to the intensity of SNS use through content production and content consumption Except for the direct association between exhibitionism and content production, voyeurism is directly associated with content consumption
- Agonistic approaches to sexuality: A critical analysis of the . . .
Porn sells voyeurism, but that will change once virtual sex apparatuses allow for personal participation in any sex act without real-life visibility and accountability [[33], [34]]
- Theorising township tourism: Moving beyond the ‘slum’
However, important place-based insights remain marginal within mainstream ‘slum’ tourism literature - studies characteristically adopt a demand-side perspective which filters out the role of place Normative arguments concerning the touristic valorisation, and the ethics of poverty voyeurism are continuously recycled
- Poverty porn or poverty planning? Slum photography and the politics of . . .
Early literary genres, such as ethnographic travelogues, indulged in voyeurism that eroticized the living environments of the colonized “Other ” For instance, Pierre Loti's lurid “slumming” accounts from the late 1800s fetishized the moral and sexual deviances of impoverished urban areas in Constantinople and Algiers
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