Abstract

Female-oriented male–male erotica is a genre of popular culture often know as Boys’ Love (BL), yaoi, and danmei. It is one of the largest by-and-for women sexual subcultures and a global phenomenon. With the largest data sets in the field, we ask: Which risqué sexual content do Sinophone (Chinese-speaking) and Anglophone (English-speaking) participants particularly enjoy in BL and does this differ between cultures?, and Are there sub-demographics in Sinophone and in Anglophone culture who enjoy particular forms of risqué sexual content in BL and do these forms relate also to enjoyment of particular storylines and concern with legal issues? The material studied meets the DSM-5 definition of the paraphilic, and little is known about paraphilias in women or in the general population. Using Categorical Principal Component Analysis we explored one 15-response question from our Sinophone (N = 1922) and Anglophone (N = 1715) BL fandom surveys: Which risqué sexual content do you particularly enjoy in BL? We also tested for associations with seven demographic and other BL content-related questions. Notably, the component structure was nearly replicated between the two independent samples, in order of strength: BDSM Specialist, Mechanoid/Animal Sex Specialist, Underage Sex Specialist, and Minority Paraphilia Specialist. In both samples, it was the avid BL fans and/or those who liked explicitly sexual stories, a largely overlapping demographic, who most engage the risqué content, while, for the Sinophone, this included also more non-heterosexual and/or other-gendered people. We conclude that women’s paraphilias have been largely overlooked because they might be expressed more commonly through fantasy than action, that their mass expression has awaited both the means and the market force, and that current conceptualization of, and assumptions about, paraphilias is overly modeled on that of men.

Highlights

  • Female-oriented male–male erotica is a genre of popular culture known by several names, predominantly Boys’ Love (BL), yaoi, and, in Mainland China, danmei

  • We address two research questions: Which risqué sexual content do Sinophone and Anglophone participants enjoy in BL and does this differ between cultures?, and Are there sub-demographics in Sinophone and in Anglophone culture who enjoy particular forms of risqué sexual content in BL and do these forms relate to enjoyment of particular storylines and concern with legal issues? Addressing these questions has potential for novel insights into the BL fandom and, more generally, into paraphilias in women and in the general population of two culturally diverse regions of global importance

  • To address research question Which risqué sexual content do Sinophone and Anglophone participants enjoy in BL and does this differ between cultures?, we analyzed the multiple response survey question, Which risqué sexual content do you enjoy in BL? Participants could select as many of the response options as they wanted

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Summary

Introduction

Female-oriented male–male erotica is a genre of popular culture known by several names, predominantly Boys’ Love (BL), yaoi, and, in Mainland China, danmei. BL presents in manga, light novels, anime, video games, fan art, and fan fiction, amongst others. Its defining theme is romantic and sexual relationships between men. Male–male romance appeared in Japanese girls’ manga in the early 1970s. Anglophone fan fiction of the TV series Star Trek appeared focusing on a fantasized love affair between the male characters Kirk and Spock (McLelland & Welker, 2015). Female-oriented male–male erotica took off in the Sinophone regions of southeast Asia during the 1980s (Madill, 2020)

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