Purity culture

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Revision as of 21:42, 24 March 2023 by The Admins (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Purity culture''' is a term often used in relation to the American evangelical movement that attempts to promote a biblical view of purity (1 Thess. 4:3-8)<ref>[https://www.esv.org/verses/1%20Thess.%204%3A3-8/ 1 Thess. 4:3-8]</ref> promoting virginity before marriage and so-called purity pledges, purity rings, and events such as purity balls. Since the 90s heyday of evangelism, the term has seen increasing usage among Minor Attracted Peo...")
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Purity culture is a term often used in relation to the American evangelical movement that attempts to promote a biblical view of purity (1 Thess. 4:3-8)[1] promoting virginity before marriage and so-called purity pledges, purity rings, and events such as purity balls. Since the 90s heyday of evangelism, the term has seen increasing usage among Minor Attracted People, the sex-positive movement, paraphilia activists, sex educators and sex workers, and in these instances, it is often applied to broader cultural trends such as #MeToo and inflexible/doxaic Child Sexual Abuse discourse.

For example, actress Catherine Deneuve co-signed an open letter in the French daily Le Monde, criticizing #MeToo as puritanical:

This frenzy for sending the "pigs" to the slaughterhouse, far from helping women empower themselves, actually serves the interests of the enemies of sexual freedom, the religious extremists, the reactionaries and those who believe — in their righteousness and the Victorian moral outlook that goes with it — that women are a species "apart," children with adult faces who demand to be protected.[2]

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