Genital piercing

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Template:Short description Template:Multiple image Genital piercing is a form of body piercing that involves piercing a part of the genitalia, thus creating a suitable place for wearing different types of jewellery. Nevertheless, the term may also be used pars pro toto to indicate all body piercings in the area of the anus, perineum, penis, scrotum, and vulva, including piercings such as anal, guiche, and pubic that do not involve perforation of genitalia. Genital piercings can be done regardless of sex, with various forms of piercings available. The main motive is beautification and individualization; in addition, some piercings enhance sexual pleasure by increasing stimulation.<ref name="bustle"/><ref name="hogan">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Pre-modern genital piercings is most culturally widespread in Southeast Asia, where it has been part of traditional practice since ancient times. Records of genital piercing are found in the Kama Sutra.<ref name="Brown"/>

HistoryEdit

File:Artist rendering of Visayan penis ring and piercing (Boxer Codex c.1590).png
Gilt marginalia on the Boxer Codex (Template:Circa) with the only known illustration of the pre-colonial Visayan tugbuk and sakra genital piercing from the Philippines

The traditional prehistoric and historic practice of genital piercing is most culturally widespread in Southeast Asia (particularly in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, and Myanmar), where the insertion of various kinds of implants into the penis were common until modern times, in addition to other ancient body modifications like tattooing, supercision or circumcision, pearling, ear piercings and ear plugs, gold teeth fillings, teeth filing, teeth blackening, and artificial cranial deformation. The primary purpose of such inserts were to enhance pleasure.<ref name="Brown">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Henley">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Hull">Template:Cite journal</ref> The practice also spread to neighboring regions, where scattered references to genital piercings exist, like the South Asian apadravya, a male genital piercing that passes vertically through the glans (unlike most Southeast Asian piercings which are inserted horizontally), in the Kama Sutra (2nd century AD).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Other smaller traditions of genital piercings also arose independently in other cultures (like in Central America).<ref name="Brown"/>

In the Philippines, penile piercings were widely documented by European explorers among the Visayan people.<ref name="Scott"/> Visayan penile piercings consists of a rod or bar (usually made from gold, brass, tin, or ivory; and often ornamented) called the tugbuk or tudruk that is inserted horizontally through the glans of the penis. Its ends are attached to the sakra (also transcribed as sacra or sagra), a wheel or half-ring (made from the same material as the tugbuk) that goes around the head of the penis, similar to a cock ring. The sakra comes in many variants, but is usually ornamented with blunt knobs around the circumference. The ends of the tugbuk are then secured to the sakra with plugs (also often ornamented). The Italian explorer Antonio Pigafetta who accompanied Ferdinand Magellan in the first circumnavigation of the globe describes the practice as such:<ref name="Scott"/><ref name="Harrisson">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="De Leon"/><ref name="Umali"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

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The males, both large and small, have the head of their member pierced from one side to the other, with a pin of gold or of tin as thick as a goose feather, and at each end of this pin some have a star-shaped decoration like a button, and others, one like the head of a cart nail… In the middle of this pin or tube is a hole through which they urinate, and the pin and the stars always remain firm, holding the member stiff.{{#if:Antonio Pigafetta<ref name="De Leon">Template:Cite news</ref>Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo (1550-1559)|{{#if:|}}

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The anonymously-written Boxer Codex (Template:Circa) also has a similar description:

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Two holes are fashioned in the round part of the hoop or ring, one on the top and the other on the bottom, through which a small bolt or pin made of the same metal as the ring is inserted and which is then thrust through the man’s member as the base of his foreskin. And thus the hoop or ring (sakra) is worn on the genital member itself in the same way a ring is worn on a finger.{{#if:Unknown<ref name="De Leon"/>Boxer Codex (Template:Circa)|{{#if:|}}

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These piercings were done to boys at an early age. They were meant to enhance sensation and pleasure during sexual activity for both men and women. Notably, Pigafetta describes that it was the women who controlled how the penis with the sakra is inserted. Men without penile piercings were reported to be derided by women as asog ("impotent" or "effeminate"). The practice was heavily suppressed by the Spanish clergy and eventually lost during the Spanish colonial period of the Philippines, as it was considered by the Spanish clergy to be a "sin of the flesh."<ref name="Scott">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="De Leon"/><ref name="Harrisson"/><ref name="Jocano">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Junker">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Umali">Template:Cite news</ref>

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The ampallang, a similar piercing (which also passes horizontally through the glans, but differs in that it is not attached to a ring), is found in different tribes throughout Sarawak and Sabah on the island of Borneo. Genital piercings became first introduced in western countries by ethnographic report, done by explorers such as in the 19th century. The Dutch explorer Anton Willem Nieuwenhuis described in his ethnographic record In Centraal Borneo: reis van Pontianak naar Samarinda – documenting his travel through Borneo in 1897 – the procedure of an ampallang piercing:

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Template:Multiple image Piercing the genitals became a short-lived trend at the end of the 19th century, in particular for upper classes of the society: "It was during the Victorian era that the practice of body piercing in the Western world reemerged. Many men and women of the Victorian royalty chose to receive nipple and genital piercings.″<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

However, the popularity diminished again, with genital piercings becoming rather uncommon in the western world until the second half of the 20th century. In the 1970s, they were introduced to the emerging body modification community by the early piercings pioneers like Jim Ward and Doug Malloy, many of them associated with the legendary piercing studio The Gauntlet in Los Angeles. With the advent of Piercing Fans International Quarterly in 1977, information about genital piercings became available to a wider community. Genital piercings were later sported by the modern primitives movement that developed during the 1980s in the San Francisco Bay Area. Still, only until the 21st century, genital piercing was confined to a body modification subculture.

Just like nipple piercings,<ref>Free the Nipple Ring! Why One Vogue Writer Got Pierced - Vogue</ref> genital piercings became increasingly more popular and part of mainstream culture in the second decade of the 21st century, with ″nice and normal″ people endorsing them.<ref>Nice, Normal Girls Don't Get Their Genitals Pierced - Vice Magazine</ref> Many celebrities such as Christina Aguilera,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Fantasia Barrino,<ref>Fantasia’s Pierced Down There Template:Webarchive - Socialite Life</ref> Pete Doherty,<ref>Pete Doherty's penis piercing Template:Webarchive - Female First</ref> Janet Jackson,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Lenny Kravitz,<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Katarina Waters,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> or Pete Wentz,<ref name="naij">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> stated that they had or planned to have genital piercings. Genital piercings nowadays have a growing demand, especially in a young adult, college-aged population.Template:Sfn<ref>Genital piercing increasing among Kumasi youth - Ghanaweb</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

With regard to (female) genital piercings, Marilyn W. Edmunds, adjunct clinical professor at the Johns Hopkins University, stated, "Women with genital piercings are no longer on the social fringe or part of the 'punk' culture who are experimenting with behaviors that are 'socially provocative.' Over the past 30 years, genital piercing has become mainstream, and women engage in it for a variety of reasons."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

However, according to Chelsea Bunz, professional piercer from UK, the clearly existing rise in popularity might as well be an effect of more people openly talking about their genital piercings: "I think genital piercing has always been popular – it's just discussed more openly these days, which makes it increasingly acceptable to the mainstream. People from all classes and professions have them (...)."<ref name="metro">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

MotivesEdit

Like body piercings at large, genital piercings are often done for aesthetic reasons and as an expression of personal style. In addition, some (but not all) types of genital piercing increase sensitivity and provide additional stimulation during sexual activity. According to an Association of Professional Piercers expert report by Elayne Angel, body piercing pioneer, former member of The Gauntlet and inventor of several genital piercings such as the fourchette and the lorum, individual motives and preferences are quite diverse: Template:Multiple image Template:Quote

Aesthetic reasonsEdit

Motivation can be restricted purely to aesthetic taste. Like all other types of body piercing, genital piercings are decorative, appealing to the people wearing them. Violet Fenn of Metro stated, "For me personally, it was sheer aesthetics – I just like how it looks. Even if I was the only person who ever saw my piercing, I’d like it in the same way that I like having painted toenails – something pretty for my own personal pleasure.″<ref name="metro"/>

Culture and life styleEdit

Traditional culturesEdit

In many traditional cultures, these piercings are done as a rite of passage during adolescence and, symbolically and literally, mark the admittance to the adult world and serve as a marker of cultural identity. Similar to religiously motivated circumcision, it may be regarded as a "purification of the flesh" and a common bodily sign to members of the same faith. These traditional meanings of modifying the body were revived in contemporary western society by the modern primitive. Inspired by ethnographic accounts of tribal practices, this subculture adopted genital piercings as a matter of individuation and spirituality.<ref name="Lane2017">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Contemporary western societyEdit

For most people that seek genital piercings nowaday, a sense of uniqueness and non-conformism prevails.<ref name="bust_What">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A 2015 study that evaluated a qualitative dataset of 484 self-reports and characteristics of men and women with genital piercings came to the conclusion that: Template:Quote

Enhanced pleasure and sensationEdit

Additionally, genital piercings can enhance sexual pleasure during masturbation, foreplay and intercourse. While female genital piercings do this only to the women wearing them, male genital piercings can enhance stimulation for both the person wearing the jewelry and their partner by stimulating both the glans of the wearer and the vaginal wall or the anus of the penetrated partner. Due to genital physiology, women seem to gain more sexual pleasure from both, their own as well as her partner's genital piercings.

File:Male Genital Piercing.jpg
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For the sexual partnerEdit

This effect is in particular reported for piercings passing through the glans penis: the ampallang and apadravya piercing. Women of the Dayak in Sarawak, Borneo prefer men with an ampallang, claiming that intercourse without would be dull:

File:Ampalang, for insertion through the penis. Wellcome M0000038.jpg
Historic photograph of a Dayak with ampallang piercing (top), detailed view of traditional jewelry (bottom)

Paolo Mantegazza stated, "The Dayak women have a right to insist upon the ampallang and if the man does not consent they may seek separation. They say that the embrace without this contrivance is plain rice; with it is rice with salt."<ref name="Mantegazza2001">Template:Cite book</ref> On another account by the anthropologist Tom Harrisson, who spent much of his life in Borneo and interviewed natives about the traditional ampallang; he stated, "the function of this device is, superficially, to add to the sexual pleasure of the women by stimulating and extending the inner walls of the vagina. It is, in this, in my experience, decidedly successful."<ref name="Rowanchilde1996">Template:Cite journal</ref>

For the pierced personEdit

For men, piercings that stimulate the sensitive urethra, either during masturbation or sexual intercourse, increase sensation.<ref name="hogan"/> Female genital piercings that are reported to enhance pleasure are the piercings that pass through or close to the clitoris, i.e. the clitoris piercing and the clitoral hood piercing.<ref name="bustle">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In an empirical study at the University of South Alabama, the authors reported a positive relationship between vertical clitoral hood piercings and desire, frequency of intercourse, and sexual arousal.<ref name="MillnerEichold2005">Template:Cite journal</ref> However, this might depend on many factors such as placement, jewelry shape, and the individual. The triangle piercing is known to be quite pleasurable by providing stimulation of the underside of the clitoral glans, an area that is usually not stimulated at all.<ref name="nbcn_Cans">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Potential health risksEdit

Comparable to other piercings, improper hygiene during the piercings process carries the risk of transmitting blood borne diseases and during the healing process it might lead to infection.

Some physicians believe that male genital piercings increase the risk of STI transmission by making safer sex barriers (condoms) less effective.<ref name="Stirn2003">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Gokhale2001">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Tampa_etal2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> Most professional piercers and body art enthusiasts believe these risks are over-stated or nonexistent. In two surveys, 5%–18% of men with genital piercings reported unspecified "problems using condoms" though it is unclear how many of these men used condoms regularly.<ref name="NeliusArmstrong2011">Template:Cite journal</ref> There is no conclusive evidence that wearers of genital piercings are more likely to contract sexually transmitted infections.<ref name="NeliusArmstrong2011" />

AftercareEdit

The time to fully heal a genital piercing varies tremendously, depending on piercing site and individual characteristics: it can range from a week up to six months. Until fully healed, preparations should be made against possible causes of infection, such as proper cleaning on a daily basis. People with fresh piercings should abstain from sexual activity for the first few days and also then should use physical protection barriers such as condoms until the piercing is fully healed.

Legal considerationsEdit

Laws in other countries vary. In many European countries, minors are required to bring a signed consent form from or to be escorted by a legal guardian. Even in countries that have no laws regulating genital piercing in minors, many piercers refrain from doing them (since physiological development is not completed in minors). In the United States, it is prohibited to pierce the genitals of persons younger than 18 years.

Types of genital piercingsEdit

Male genital piercingsEdit

Possible piercing sites on the male genitalia include the glans, the skin of the penis shaft, the scrotum or the perineum.

Glans penisEdit

Piercings through the glans of the penis include the ampallang, which passes horizontally, and the apadravya, that passes vertically through the glans. The Prince Albert piercing is situated on the ventral side (underside) of the penis immediately behind the glans, while the reverse Prince Albert piercing passes through the dorsal (top) side of the glans. The dydoe pierces through the coronal rim of the glans. With the exception of the dydoe, all these piercings traditionally pass through the urethra. This is preferred because healing time and incidence of infection are reduced by the flow of sterile urine.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

These piercings provide increased stimulation during intercourse to the male (who is carrying the piercing) as well as to the partner. Piercings through the head, or the glans, are the genital piercings with the best-documented historical evidence.<ref>The Point Template:Webarchive - An Approach to Genital Piercings Part 5</ref>

Skin of the penis shaft and scrotumEdit

Foreskin piercing passes through the penile prepuce on the dorsal, ventral or lateral side. It is required that the male is not circumcised. The frenum piercing passes through the penile frenum, a small skin bridge that connects the glans with the shaft skin. This anatomical part is also often missing in circumcised men. The hafada piercing is situated on the skin of the scrotum while a transscrotal piercing travels through it. As an intermediate version between frenulum and hafada, the lorum piercing (low frenum) sits at the point where penis and scrotum connect. The Jacob's Ladder is a ladder from frenum to scrotum. The guiche piercing is a body piercing on the perineum. These piercings play a lesser role in adding stimulation and more or less fulfill only a decorative purpose.

Female genital piercingsEdit

In female individuals as well, various anatomical parts can be suitable for piercings. These include the mons pubis, the clitoral hood, the outer, inner labia and the vulval vestibule (which is the area surrounding the vaginal opening).

Clitoris and clitoral hoodEdit

The glans of the clitoris itself can be pierced. Since this anatomical part is too small in many cases and is susceptible to nerve damage, this piercing is not very common.<ref name="Pitts-Talyor">Template:Cite book</ref> In contrast, the clitoral hood piercing is the most common genital piercing for women. It can be applied horizontally and vertically. The deep hood piercing is a variation of the clitoral hood piercing that pass deeper through the clitoral hood. The Isabella piercing passes vertically through the clitoral shaft and is rather complicated to pierce.

Labia and vulval vestibuleEdit

Labia piercing can be applied to the labia majora or the labia minora. The triangle piercing is located at the ventral end of the labia minora, at the point of transition between labia and clitoral hood. It runs horizontally, partly under the clitoral shaft. The fourchette piercing passes through the dorsal rim of the vulval vestibule. A less common version of the fourchette piercing is the suitcase piercing which can be considered as a deeper version of the fourchette because it enters through the perineum. Also rather uncommon is the Princess Albertina piercing, the female version of the Prince Albert piercing, that passes through the ventral (lower) wall of the urethra.

Mons pubisEdit

The Christina piercing is a surface piercing, situated on the upper part of the mons pubis where the outer labia meet. It is similar to the Nefertiti piercing, that can be seen as a combination between vertical clitoral hood piercing and Christina piercing.

Unisex genital piercingsEdit

Body piercings that do not involve perforation of genitalia but referred to as "genital piercings" by convention can be worn by both males and females. These include the pubic piercing, which is situated above the penis in males and on the mons pubis in females (comparable to the Christina piercing, but horizontally). The guiche piercing passes horizontally through the perineum while the anal piercing passes through the anus.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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General informationEdit

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