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Two men embracing, The Golden Bed 1 by Giovanni Dall'Orto.

Sexual activities involving men who have sex with men (MSM), regardless of their sexual orientation,[1] can include oral sex, manual sex, anal sex and frot. Evidence shows that sex between men is significantly underreported in surveys.[2][3]

Behaviors

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Two men kissing.

Various sex positions may be performed during sexual activity between men. Evidence shows that sex between men is significantly underreported in surveys due to social desirability bias.[2][3]

A 2011 survey of 18,000 MSM showed that oral sex was most commonly practised, followed by mutual masturbation, with anal intercourse in third place."[4] A 2011 survey by The Journal of Sexual Medicine found similar results for U.S. gay and bisexual men. Kissing a partner on the mouth (74.5%), oral sex (72.7%), and partnered masturbation (68.4%) were the three most common behaviors.[5] The most common sexual act practiced, was holding their partner romantically, kissing partner on mouth, solo masturbation, mutual masturbation, and frotting."[6]

Oral sex

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Two men engaging in mutual fellatio in the 69 position, Indian art

MSM may engage in oral sex, including fellatio, which is using the mouth to stimulate another person's penis or scrotum, and anilingus, which is stimulating someone else's anus using the tongue and lips.

Manual sex

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Manual sex is another non-penetrative sex act that can occur between men. This includes handjobs, which is the use of one's hands to stimulate another person's penis or scrotum as well as anal fingering, the use of one's fingers to stimulate someone else's anus.

Anal sex

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The penetrating man lying on his back is the "top" and the receiving man is the "bottom" in the cowboy position.

Historically, anal sex has been popularly associated with male homosexuality. Many MSM, however, do not engage in anal sex.[4][7][8]

Among men who have anal sex with other men, the partner who inserts his penis may be referred to as the top, the one being penetrated may be referred to as the bottom, and those who enjoy either role may be referred to as versatile.[9] When MSM engage in anal sex without using a condom, this is referred to as bareback sex. Pleasure, pain, or both may accompany anal sex. While the nerve endings in the anus can provide pleasurable feelings, an orgasm may be achieved through receptive anal penetration by indirect stimulation of the prostate.[10][11] A study by the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior (NSSHB) indicated that men who self-report taking a receptive position during anal sex in their last encounter were at least as likely to have reached orgasm as men who adopted an insertive role.[12] A study sampling single people in the U.S. indicated that orgasm rates are similar among men across sexual orientations.[13] With regard to pain or being uncomfortable during anal sex,[14] some research indicates that, for 24% to 61% of gay or bisexual men, painful receptive anal sex (known as anodyspareunia) is a frequent lifetime sexual difficulty.[14]

Reports pertaining to the prevalence of anal sex among MSM have varied over time, with some percentages higher than others.[9][15][16][17] A large percentage of gay and bisexual men self-report lifetime participation in anal sex.[9] Studies among gay men have indicated that percentages are similar when comparing men who prefer to penetrate their partners to those who prefer to be the receptive partner.[9][18] Some men who have sex with men, however, believe that being a receptive partner during anal sex questions their masculinity.[19][20]

Anal fingering

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Anal fingering is the use of one's fingers to stimulate someone's anus.

Frot

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Two men engaged in frotting by rubbing their penises together

Frot is a sexual activity between men that usually involves penis-to-penis contact.[21] It is a form of frottage. Frot can be enjoyable because it mutually and simultaneously stimulates the genitals of both partners as it tends to produce pleasurable friction against the frenulum nerve bundle on the underside of each man's penile shaft, just below the urinary opening (meatus) of the penis head (glans penis).

Intercrural sex

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Intercrural sex is another form of non-penetrative sex that can be practiced between MSM. Docking (the insertion of one man's penis into another man's foreskin) is also practiced.

Sex toys

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MSM may use sex toys. According to an online survey of 25,294 men who self-reported a homosexual or bisexual orientation, 49.8% have used vibrators. Most men who had used a vibrator in the past reported use during masturbation (86.2%). When used during partnered interactions, vibrators were incorporated into foreplay (65.9%) and intercourse (59.4%).[22]

Health risks

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Two men embracing, Bedtime stories - 1 by Giovanni Dall'Orto.

A variety of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) can be transmitted through sexual activity, including between men.[23] Infections are more easily transmitted during receptive anal sex compared to other forms of sex.[24][25]

Legality

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20th-century erotic scene of Marquise's book, by Konstantin Somov.

Some or all sexual acts between men are currently or were formerly classified as crimes in jurisdictions of some countries. In its December 2020 report, International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA) found that certain sexual acts between men are criminalized in 67 of 193 UN member states and one non-independent jurisdiction, the Cook Islands, while two UN member states, Iraq and Egypt, criminalize it de facto but not in legislation.[26][27][28] In Egypt, there is no law against homosexuality but gay and bisexual men are prosecuted under other laws, most famously the Cairo 52.[29][30][31] In at least six UN member states—Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Nigeria (only northern Nigeria), Saudi Arabia and Yemen—it is punishable by death.[26][32] In 2007, five countries executed someone as a penalty for homosexual acts.[29] In 2020, ILGA named Iran and Saudi Arabia as the only countries in which executions for same-sex activity have reportedly taken place.[26][33][34] In other countries, such as Yemen and Iraq, extrajudicial executions are carried out by militias such as Islamic State or Al-Qaeda.[26] Many other countries had such laws in the past, but they were repealed, especially since 1945.[35][36] Such laws are inherently difficult to enforce;[37] more often than not, they are not commonly enforced.[36]

  Criminalized
  Decriminalized 1791–1850
  Decriminalized 1850–1945
  Decriminalized 1946–1989
  Decriminalized 1990–present
  Unknown date of legalization
  Always legal

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sexual practices between men consist of erotic physical interactions between male individuals, encompassing behaviors such as mutual manual stimulation of the genitals, oral-genital contact including fellatio and irrumatio, anilingus, intercrural sex, and anal penetration in either insertive or receptive positions.[1][2] Unlike vaginal intercourse, these acts lack anatomical complementarity between penis and vagina, resulting in greater friction, potential for tissue trauma, and absence of natural lubrication in anal receptive roles, which elevates biomechanical risks.[3][4] These practices have been observed in diverse human societies throughout history, from prehistoric and primitive cultures to ancient civilizations, often intertwined with power dynamics, rituals, or situational contexts rather than exclusive orientations, though frequently subject to prohibitions based on procreative imperatives, hygiene considerations, or social norms.[5] Empirical surveys indicate that lifetime engagement in male-male sexual behaviors occurs among approximately 2-6% of men in studied populations, with anal intercourse reported by a subset of those—around 37-65% in recent encounters among participants—while oral acts predominate in frequency.[6][1][7] Notable characteristics include disproportionate health burdens, particularly for receptive anal participants, who face heightened transmission risks for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections due to the rectum's vascularity, thin epithelial lining, and susceptibility to abrasions that breach barriers to pathogens; unprotected anal intercourse remains the highest-risk sexual behavior for HIV acquisition among men engaging with men.[8][9][10] Controversies arise from epidemiological disparities, such as elevated STI prevalence—up to several-fold higher than in general populations—and debates over causal factors including partner multiplicity, condom non-use, and biological vulnerabilities, amid varying public health emphases on risk reduction versus behavioral normalization.[11][12][13]

Terminology and Scope

Definitions and distinctions

Sexual practices between men refer to physical acts of sexual intimacy between biological males, encompassing behaviors such as oral-genital contact, manual stimulation of the genitals, anal penetration, and genital rubbing (frottage). These acts are distinct from sexual orientation, as they describe observable behaviors rather than enduring patterns of attraction; men engaging in such practices may identify as homosexual, bisexual, or neither, with the term "men who have sex with men" (MSM) used in epidemiological contexts to capture this behavioral category irrespective of self-identification.[14][15] Empirical data from large-scale surveys indicate variability in prevalence, with non-penetrative acts often more common than anal intercourse. In a 2012 study of 24,787 gay and bisexually identified men in the United States, the most reported behaviors during recent male-partnered sexual events were kissing on the mouth (74.5%), oral sex (72.7%), and partnered masturbation (68.4%), while anal intercourse occurred in 37.2% of cases, rising to 42.7% among those aged 18-24.[16] Such findings highlight that male-male sexual repertoires frequently involve multiple behaviors per encounter, with 63.2% including 5-9 distinct acts.[16] Key distinctions include penetrative versus non-penetrative practices, with anal sex carrying distinct physiological implications due to the anatomy of the rectum, which lacks natural lubrication and self-cleaning mechanisms compared to the vagina.[17] Within penetrative acts, participants often differentiate roles as insertive (active penetration) or receptive (receiving penetration), influencing partner dynamics and health considerations like HIV transmission risk, which is higher for receptive anal intercourse.[18] Additional categorizations separate these practices from non-consensual acts, intergenerational encounters (e.g., pederasty), or those involving non-human elements, emphasizing consent and adulthood as definitional boundaries in legal and ethical frameworks.

Historical terminology evolution

In ancient Greece, male-male sexual relations were not conceptualized under a unified term denoting an innate orientation but rather described through specific relational and role-based vocabulary. The practice of paiderastia, derived from pais (boy) and erastes (lover), referred to socially structured mentorship-sexual bonds between an adult male (erastes) and an adolescent youth (eromenos or beloved), emphasizing the active penetrative role of the elder and the passive reception by the younger as normative within elite contexts.[19] [20] This terminology highlighted acts and hierarchies rather than identity, with no direct equivalent to modern "homosexuality"; terms like kinaidos denoted effeminate or receptive adult males pejoratively, distinguishing passive partners from the idealized active ones.[21] By the medieval period in Europe, terminology shifted toward moral and legal condemnation of acts, coalescing around "sodomy" (sodomia in Latin), which originated from the biblical destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19, initially interpreted as inhospitality and violence but increasingly narrowed to non-procreative intercourse, particularly anal sex between men.[22] Theologian Peter Damian's 11th-century Liber Gomorrhianus applied "sodomy" specifically to clerical male-male acts, framing them as grave sins akin to bestiality or masturbation, influencing ecclesiastical and secular laws that prescribed penalties like castration or burning.[23] Concurrently, "buggery" emerged in the 14th century from Anglo-Norman bougrerie, denoting heresy linked to Bulgarian Cathar sects accused of unnatural vices, evolving to signify anal intercourse between males or with animals, as codified in England's 1533 Buggery Act under Henry VIII.[24] These terms emphasized criminalized behaviors over personal disposition, reflecting theological views of deviation from natural law. The 19th century marked a transition to pseudo-scientific nomenclature amid emerging sexology, with Hungarian writer Karl-Maria Kertbeny coining "homosexual" (HomosexualitƤt) in a private 1868 letter and public 1869 pamphlet, framing it as an innate congenital trait to argue against criminalization, distinct from acts alone.[25] [26] Earlier, Karl Heinrich Ulrichs introduced "urning" in 1862 for male same-sex attracted individuals as a "third sex," influencing Kertbeny's neologism, while terms like "uranian" (from Plato's Symposium) and "invert" gained traction in medical discourse by the 1880s, pathologizing attractions as inversions of normal heterosexuality.[27] This evolution reflected a causal shift from act-focused moral opprobrium to identity-based categorization, enabling both advocacy and psychiatric classification, though pre-modern sources lacked such orientation-centric framing.[28]

Historical Development

Ancient and classical periods

In ancient Mesopotamia, around the third millennium BCE, literary texts such as the Epic of Gilgamesh depict homoerotic bonds between male figures, including Gilgamesh and Enkidu, whose relationship involved physical intimacy interpreted by scholars as potentially sexual, though not explicitly penetrative.[29] Same-sex interactions between men appear infrequently in cuneiform records but without evidence of legal prohibition or widespread condemnation, as seen in the Code of Hammurabi (circa 1750 BCE), which omits penalties for such acts unlike those for adultery or incest.[30] These relations differed from modern homosexuality, often embedded in ritual or mythic contexts rather than identity-based orientations, with male cult prostitutes (gala) sometimes engaging in same-sex acts during temple ceremonies dedicated to deities like Inanna.[31] Evidence for male-male sexual practices in ancient Egypt (circa 3000–30 BCE) remains sparse and indirect, with no explicit legal codes addressing them. The Middle Kingdom tale of King Neferkare (possibly Pepi II, circa 2278–2184 BCE) and General Sasenet describes nocturnal visits implying anal intercourse, satirized in a surviving papyrus as a scandalous liaison spied upon by courtiers. The Book of the Dead (New Kingdom, circa 1550–1070 BCE) lists abstaining from sex with males as a moral virtue for the afterlife, suggesting passive reception was viewed negatively as emasculating, though active roles by dominant males faced less stigma.[32] Mythic allusions, such as Seth's attempted seduction of Horus involving semen ingestion, portray same-sex acts as manipulative or transgressive, but tomb art and documents prioritize heterosexual fertility rites, indicating such practices were marginal and not institutionalized.[33] In classical Greece (circa 800–323 BCE), pederasty—erotic mentorship between an adult erastes (typically aged 20–30) and adolescent eromenos (aged 12–17)—emerged as a structured practice, particularly in Athens and Sparta from the Archaic period onward. Vase paintings from the 6th–4th centuries BCE illustrate intercrural intercourse (thrusting between thighs) as the preferred non-penetrative method, preserving the youth's future citizen virility while allowing the elder's dominance; anal penetration occurred but was rarer and riskier due to cultural aversion to adult male passivity.[19] Plato's Symposium (circa 385–370 BCE) philosophizes these bonds as elevating the soul through beauty, yet Aristophanes' comedies mock excessive indulgence, revealing social tensions; the practice was elite, asymmetrical, and tied to gymnasium training, with laws in some poleis like Elis barring it during Olympic contests to avoid favoritism.[34] Equal-age relations between adult males were stigmatized as hubristic, contrasting with pederasty's pedagogical rationale. Roman practices (circa 509 BCE–476 CE) emphasized dominance over gender, permitting freeborn men active roles with slaves, prostitutes, or foreigners, but condemning passivity among citizens as effeminizing and legally infamizing under customs reinforced by the Lex Scantinia (circa 149 BCE), which fined assaults on freeborn youth.[35] Emperors exemplified variability: Nero (r. 54–68 CE) publicly wed two men in ceremonial marriages involving anal and oral acts, per Suetonius, while Hadrian (r. 117–138 CE) deified his eromenos Antinous after his 130 CE drowning, commissioning widespread statues implying ongoing sexual favoritism.[36] Literary sources like Petronius' Satyricon (1st century CE) depict group oral and anal encounters among elites, but elite anxiety over moral decay linked passive homosexuality to imperial decline, as in Tacitus' critiques; no laws banned active male-male sex outright, but social norms prioritized procreative marriage for patricians.[37]

Medieval to Enlightenment eras

In medieval Europe, Christian doctrine strictly condemned sexual acts between men as violations of natural law, equating them with the biblical sin of Sodom and prescribing severe ecclesiastical penances. Early Irish penitentials from around 650 AD detailed punishments for male-male anal intercourse, ranging from one to seven years of fasting depending on the act's frequency and participants' roles.[23] By the 11th century, reformer Peter Damian's Book of Gomorrah (1051) decried sodomy—encompassing anal, oral, and masturbatory acts—among clergy as a grave corruption undermining ecclesiastical authority, urging Pope Leo IX to impose deposition or mutilation on offenders.[38] The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 reinforced this by prohibiting "unnatural" intercourse, reflecting a consensus that such practices deviated from procreative purposes inherent to heterosexual unions.[23] Despite doctrinal opposition, evidence from court records, poetry, and confessions indicates male-male sexual practices persisted across social strata, often involving pederasty between adult men and youths or mutual acts among peers. In 11th-13th century Spanish Jewish communities, poets like Yehuda Halevi alluded to homoerotic relations without explicit condemnation, suggesting cultural tolerance in non-Christian contexts.[23] Monastic and urban settings facilitated encounters, as seen in Baudri of Bourgueil's 11th-century verses praising youthful male beauty in erotic terms.[23] Practices included anal penetration, interfemoral friction, and oral stimulation, with roles often hierarchical—the penetrator retaining masculine status while the receptive partner risked stigma as effeminate.[23] In Renaissance Florence, records from the Office of Decency show over 17,000 prosecutions for sodomy between 1432 and 1502, implying widespread participation among artisans, clergy, and elites, though many cases stemmed from denunciations rather than routine enforcement.[39] Secular authorities increasingly adopted capital punishments from the 13th century, aligning with church influence to deter perceived moral decay. In Ghent, burnings for sodomy began in 1292, escalating to mass executions like Bruges in 1403, where economic crises fueled scapegoating of marginalized groups for homoerotic acts.[23][40] Italian city-states varied: Florence fined or exiled first offenders but burned repeaters, while Venice imposed maiming or death after 1400s trials targeting networks of practitioners.[41] Clergy often received leniency, such as fines or exile, highlighting inconsistencies driven by institutional protection rather than uniform application.[40] During the Renaissance and Enlightenment, theological condemnation endured amid classical revivals, but philosophical scrutiny emerged challenging legal severity. In Italy, pederastic relations echoed Greco-Roman models among humanists, yet papal bulls like Si si est probatum (1232) and secular statutes maintained bans, with executions continuing into the 16th century.[39] Jeremy Bentham, in unpublished 18th-century essays, argued sodomy harmed no one if consensual and private, critiquing laws as superstitious relics violating utility and individual liberty.[42] Voltaire viewed same-sex acts as a "mistake in nature" risking depopulation but mocked religious zealotry in persecutions, prioritizing reason over dogma.[43] Persecutions peaked in places like the Dutch Republic's Utrecht trials (1730), executing over 20 men for sodomitical networks, underscoring persistent state-church alliance against practices seen as threats to social order.[44]

Modern era and 20th-21st century shifts

In the early 20th century, sexual practices between men remained largely clandestine in Western societies due to prevailing sodomy laws, with enforcement targeting public cruising and private encounters, as seen in New York City's policing under Penal Law 722, which explicitly criminalized male homosexual conduct. Underground networks persisted, but visibility was limited; the first U.S. gay rights organization, the Society for Human Rights, formed in Chicago in 1924, though it faced swift suppression. Alfred Kinsey's 1948 report, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, documented that 37% of American males had experienced orgasm through homosexual contact at some point, with 10% being predominantly homosexual for at least three years, challenging assumptions of rarity based on a sample of over 5,000 interviews, though later critiqued for sampling biases toward urban and non-random groups.[45][46][47] Decriminalization accelerated mid-century, with Illinois becoming the first U.S. state to repeal sodomy laws in 1961, allowing private consensual acts between adults, followed by broader reforms amid the sexual revolution. The Stonewall riots in 1969 marked a turning point, catalyzing gay liberation movements that increased public discourse on practices like anal intercourse and mutual masturbation, previously confined to subcultures. Globally, the proportion of countries decriminalizing homosexual acts rose from 35% in 1950 to over 60% by 2000, driven by post-colonial legal shifts and human rights advocacy, though recriminalization occurred in places like the Soviet Union in 1933 after brief post-revolution decriminalization.[48][49][50] The AIDS epidemic, identified in 1981 and peaking in the 1980s-1990s, profoundly altered practices among men who have sex with men (MSM), prompting widespread adoption of safer sex protocols; in New York, 78% reported reduced sexual activity after AIDS awareness, with sharp declines in fluid-exchange acts like unprotected anal sex, which dropped from common pre-1980s levels to under 30% in some cohorts by 1988. Community-led education emphasized condom use and reduced partner numbers, reducing HIV transmission temporarily, though MSM continued to bear disproportionate burden, accounting for over 70% of U.S. cases by 1990. Anal sex remained prevalent, with 70-80% of gay men reporting lifetime engagement in Western surveys, but frequency shifted toward caution amid grief and stigma.[51][52][53] In the 21st century, technological and biomedical advances reshaped behaviors: geosocial apps like Grindr, launched in 2009, facilitated rapid partner-seeking, correlating with increased casual encounters and higher-risk acts, including condomless anal sex among 40-50% of users in some studies, as apps normalized explicit profiles and immediate hookups. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), approved by the FDA in 2012, reduced HIV acquisition by over 90% in adherent MSM, leading to relaxed condom use in subsets—e.g., generational data show younger men on PrEP reporting more unprotected intercourse—though overall HIV diagnoses among MSM declined 10% from 2015-2022 per CDC surveillance. Legal milestones, such as U.S. nationwide decriminalization via Lawrence v. Texas in 2003 and same-sex marriage in Obergefell v. Hodges in 2015, fostered visibility, yet persistent health disparities underscore ongoing risks, with MSM comprising 69% of new U.S. HIV infections in 2022 despite these shifts.[54][55][56]

Biological and Evolutionary Context

Evolutionary theories and reproductive paradoxes

Exclusive male homosexuality presents an evolutionary paradox because individuals engaging primarily in sexual practices with the same sex produce fewer offspring than heterosexual counterparts, thereby reducing direct fitness and seemingly defying natural selection's pressure for reproductive success. Studies indicate that homosexual men have approximately 80% fewer children on average compared to heterosexual men, a disparity that should erode the trait's prevalence over generations unless offset by indirect benefits.[57] This persistence, observed at rates of 2-5% across human populations, challenges standard Darwinian models, prompting hypotheses that invoke inclusive fitness or balancing selection to explain its maintenance.[58] The kin selection hypothesis posits that homosexual males enhance the survival and reproduction of genetic relatives, thereby propagating shared genes indirectly through elevated altruism toward kin. Proposed as the "gay uncle" effect, it predicts greater investment in nieces and nephews by non-reproducing individuals, as evidenced in some non-Western contexts like Samoan fa'afafine, where androphilic males report higher resource allocation to siblings' offspring.[59] However, empirical tests in Western samples often fail to confirm increased kin-directed generosity or avuncularity among gay men, suggesting the mechanism may not universally sustain the trait and could be culturally contingent rather than genetically driven.[60] Critics argue this theory struggles to account for exclusive homosexuality, as partial bisexuality would better align with reproductive trade-offs, and kin selection alone insufficiently explains the trait's heritability estimates around 30-40%.[61] A more robust explanation emerges from sexually antagonistic selection, where genetic variants confer reproductive advantages in females but homosexuality in males, maintaining alleles via female carriers. Research on large pedigrees shows that female relatives of homosexual men, particularly mothers and maternal aunts, exhibit higher fecundity—up to 20-30% more offspring—potentially balancing the male fitness cost.[62] This multilocus effect, often linked to X-chromosome loci, aligns with observed fraternal birth order effects and genomic data indicating partial X-linkage, positioning male homosexuality as a paradigmatic case of sexually dimorphic selection.[63] While promising, the hypothesis requires further validation against alternative models like epigenetic influences or social alliance formation in ancestral groups, as no single theory fully resolves the paradox without invoking gene-environment interactions.[61] Empirical scrutiny reveals academia's occasional overemphasis on adaptive narratives, yet data-driven analyses prioritize these genetic mechanisms over purely social constructs.[64]

Physiological and genetic factors

Twin studies have estimated the heritability of male same-sex sexual orientation at approximately 30-40%, indicating a moderate genetic influence but substantial roles for environmental and non-shared factors, as monozygotic twin concordance rates range from 20-52% rather than 100%.[65][66] A 2019 genome-wide association study of nearly 500,000 individuals found that genetic variants collectively explain 8-25% of the variance in same-sex behavior among men, with no single locus accounting for more than a small fraction, underscoring a polygenic architecture rather than deterministic genes.[67] These findings align with earlier linkage studies, such as those implicating regions like Xq28, but subsequent replications have been inconsistent, highlighting the challenges in isolating causal genetic effects amid gene-environment interactions.[68] Physiological differences in brain structure have been observed between homosexual and heterosexual men, including a smaller volume in the third interstitial nucleus of the anterior hypothalamus (INAH-3), which approximates the size typical in heterosexual women.[69] Neuroimaging studies, such as those using MRI, reveal patterns of cortical thickness, subcortical volumes, and amygdala connectivity in homosexual men that show partial shifts toward female-typical phenotypes, particularly in regions associated with sexual arousal and partner preference.[70][71] Functional responses to pheromones also differ, with homosexual men exhibiting hypothalamic activation patterns more akin to heterosexual women when exposed to male stimuli.[72] Prenatal hormonal influences contribute to these physiological variations, with evidence from digit ratio (2D:4D) proxies suggesting that lower prenatal androgen exposure correlates with increased likelihood of male same-sex attraction, as lower ratios indicate relatively reduced testosterone effects in utero.[73] The fraternal birth order effect, where each additional older brother raises the probability of homosexuality in later-born sons by about 33%, points to maternal immune responses against male-specific proteins like NLGN4Y, potentially altering fetal brain development and androgen sensitivity.[74] Animal models and human proxy measures support that atypical prenatal steroid exposure disrupts typical sexual differentiation, leading to cross-sex shifts in neural circuits underlying attraction, though direct causation remains inferential due to ethical limits on experimentation.[75][76]

Prevalence and Patterns

Global and demographic statistics

Surveys indicate that the lifetime prevalence of men reporting sexual contact with other men ranges from approximately 3% to 5% in population-based studies from Western countries, though global figures are less reliable due to underreporting in regions with legal or social penalties for same-sex behavior.[77] [78] In the United States, a 2024 meta-analysis of five national surveys estimated that 3.3% (95% CI: 1.7%-4.9%) of adult males reported recent sex with men, rising to 4.7% for lifetime experiences.[77] Internationally, a 2019 analysis across 28 nations using data from 191,088 participants found the prevalence of male homosexuality (defined by attraction and behavior) averaged around 2.5%, with higher rates in North America and Europe (up to 4-5%) compared to Asia and Africa (under 2%).[79] Demographic patterns show variations by age, with younger cohorts reporting higher rates of same-sex behavior or identification; U.S. data from 2022 indicate that 15.5% of men under 30 identify as LGBT (including bisexual), versus 2-3% among those over 50.[80] Racial and ethnic breakdowns in the U.S. reveal comparable identification rates among young White (15.5%), Hispanic (15.5%), and Black (14.1%) men, though lifetime MSM estimates suggest disproportionate representation among Hispanic (36%) and Black (9%) populations relative to their share of the general male populace.[80] [81] Urban residence correlates with elevated prevalence, often 2-3 times rural rates, attributable to greater anonymity and opportunity rather than inherent differences.[82] Cross-national comparisons highlight environmental influences: self-reported homosexual identification hovers at 3% globally per a 2021 Ipsos survey of 19,069 adults across 27 countries, but this likely understates behavior in conservative societies where 80-90% of respondents in places like Nigeria or Indonesia report non-acceptance, suppressing disclosure.[83] [84] Many men engaging in same-sex practices (up to 50% in some estimates) also report heterosexual partners, complicating demographic tallies focused solely on exclusive homosexuality.[79] These figures derive primarily from self-report surveys, which may inflate in liberal contexts due to social desirability or deflate elsewhere due to stigma, underscoring the need for behavioral indicators over identity-based metrics for accurate prevalence assessment. Surveys of men who have sex with men (MSM) indicate higher rates of multiple sexual partners and concurrent partnerships compared to heterosexual men, with MSM reporting earlier sexual debuts and more frequent age-disassortative mixing in partnerships.[17] [17] Among MSM, anal intercourse remains a predominant practice, with lifetime rates around 70–90%, often comprising 70-90% of encounters with casual partners, alongside oral-genital contact in over 80% of such interactions.[85] Longitudinal data from the early 2000s to 2010s show an increase in condomless anal sex (CAS), including with HIV-discordant partners, rising from approximately 20% to over 30% in some cohorts, despite ongoing HIV prevention campaigns.[15] This trend correlates with declining condom use but also a reduction in overall partner numbers in certain urban MSM populations post-1980s AIDS crisis, where non-steady partners dropped by up to 50% in response to heightened risk awareness.[15] [86] Generational patterns reveal relative stability in core behaviors across cohorts, with baby boomers, millennials, and younger MSM exhibiting similar frequencies of anal and oral practices, though older generations report lower rates of masturbation and sex work involvement.[87] [87] Older gay and bisexual men over 70 maintain elevated partner counts, contrasting with general population declines in sexual activity with age, suggesting sustained behavioral patterns influenced by lifelong community norms.[88] Casual partner repertoires have expanded since the 1980s, incorporating more varied acts like fisting or group sex, potentially driven by both HIV adaptation—such as serosorting—and broader sexual liberalization.[85] [85] Key influences include substance use, with periods of alcohol or cannabis consumption linked to 20-50% increases in casual and one-time partners among MSM, elevating risks for unprotected acts.[89] [90] HIV treatment optimism and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) availability have facilitated rises in CAS by reducing perceived infection risks, with PrEP users showing 2-3 times higher rates of condomless encounters.[91] Social engagement within gay communities correlates with more frequent HIV testing and partner acquisition, while exposure to sexually explicit online media shapes preferences for specific acts, as measured by scales assessing perceived behavioral influence.[92] [93] Among HIV-positive MSM, emotions like vengeance against serostatus discrimination predict lower adherence to safe practices, contributing to transmission clusters.[94] These factors interact with network dynamics, where dense sexual connections amplify behavioral diffusion, underscoring causal roles of biology, psychology, and environment over purely attitudinal shifts.[95]

Primary Sexual Practices

Oral-genital stimulation

Oral-genital stimulation, also termed fellatio, entails one male using the mouth, lips, or tongue to stimulate the penis of another male. This practice encompasses receptive forms, where the penis is stimulated by a partner's oral actions, and insertive forms, involving thrusting into the partner's mouth (irrumatio). It frequently occurs mutually, as in the 69 position, or sequentially within encounters. Empirical observations note its commonality independent of penetrative acts, often serving as a primary or supplementary behavior in male-male sexual interactions.[96] Prevalence data from behavioral surveys of men who have sex with men (MSM) reveal oral-genital contact as one of the most reported acts. In assessments of recent sexual episodes, 77% of MSM engaged in oral sex, surpassing rates for mutual masturbation (64%) but below kissing (75%).[96] Among urban MSM samples, 96.9% reported performing oral sex on a male partner within the preceding six months, with many having multiple partners.[97] Cross-sectional studies comparing homosexual and heterosexual men indicate similar knowledge levels regarding transmission risks, though homosexual men exhibit higher engagement frequencies.[98] While oral-genital stimulation carries lower HIV transmission risk compared to anal intercourse—estimated at 0.10% to 0.31% population attributable risk for limited partners—it facilitates bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs) like gonorrhea and chlamydia via mucosal contact.[99][100] Each additional oral sex partner correlates with a 3% increase in STI odds among MSM, independent of condomless anal sex.[101] These patterns underscore its role in STI epidemiology, prompting targeted screening recommendations for pharyngeal infections in MSM populations.[95]

Manual and frictional contact

Manual stimulation, commonly referred to as mutual masturbation or handjobs, entails one or both partners using their hands to caress, stroke, or otherwise manipulate the penis and surrounding areas to induce arousal, erection, or ejaculation. This practice occurs frequently in sexual encounters between men, often as a preliminary activity or standalone act. In a web-based survey of 24,787 men who have sex with men (MSM), 66% reported participating in mutual masturbation, positioning it as one of the most common non-oral genital activities.[102] Empirical data from venue-based studies, such as those in Australian saunas and sex clubs involving 430 encounters, indicate that solo or mutual masturbation featured in 36.3% of interactions.[103] Frictional contact encompasses non-penetrative rubbing of genitals or bodies against one another, including frottage (penis-to-penis or penis-to-body grinding), intercrural stimulation (penis between thighs), and broader body-to-body contact for erotic friction. These acts prioritize external pressure and motion over insertion, facilitating orgasm through sustained genital stimulation without mucosal exposure. Frottage and related rubbing are documented as risk-reduction alternatives in MSM communities, with studies noting their inclusion alongside manual and oral acts to minimize HIV transmission potential compared to receptive anal intercourse.[104] In the same Australian venue study, frottage combined with massage and kissing occurred in 53.7% of encounters, highlighting its role in multifaceted sessions.[103] Variations may incorporate lubricants to enhance glide or focus on erogenous zones like the perineum, though direct genital friction remains central.[105] Both manual and frictional methods are versatile, adaptable to solo, partnered, or group contexts, and often integrated with other practices for varied sensory input. Prevalence data underscore their accessibility and appeal, with mutual masturbation rivaling oral sex in reported frequency among MSM, potentially reflecting preferences for lower physical demands or STI risks.[102] Limited longitudinal studies exist on long-term patterns, but cross-sectional evidence from diverse samples consistently affirms these acts' ubiquity, independent of anal involvement.[106] Anal penetration, also known as anal intercourse, consists of the insertion of one man's erect penis into the anus and rectum of another man, typically facilitated by lubrication to reduce friction.[107] This practice is distinguished by roles: the insertive partner, termed the "top," penetrates, while the receptive partner, the "bottom," receives; men identifying as "versatile" alternate between roles.[107] Surveys of men who have sex with men (MSM) indicate that 70-80% report engaging in anal intercourse within the past six to twelve months, though frequency varies, with some studies finding it as the primary act in only about 35% of encounters.[108][109] Preparation often includes manual stimulation or anilingus (rimming), involving oral contact with the anus to relax sphincter muscles and enhance pleasure.[110] Common positions mirror those in heterosexual anal sex but adapted for male anatomy, such as missionary, where the bottom lies supine with legs elevated for deeper access and prostate stimulation; doggy style, emphasizing rear entry; or cowboy, with the bottom straddling the top for control over depth and angle.[111][112] Prostate massage via penile thrusting can induce orgasm in the receptive partner, distinct from ejaculatory climax.[113] Related acts encompass variations like fisting, the gradual insertion of a hand or fist into the rectum, practiced by a minority of MSM and requiring extensive relaxation and lubrication.[2] Historical depictions appear in ancient Mesopotamian art from circa 2400 BC and later erotic illustrations, such as those by Ɖdouard-Henri Avril in the 19th century, reflecting its longstanding presence across cultures despite varying social acceptance.[114][115]

Use of aids and variations

Lubricants are routinely employed during anal intercourse among men who have sex with men (MSM) to minimize tissue friction and associated discomfort. In a survey of MSM in the United States, 93% of participants who reported anal sex in the preceding year used lubricants, with 59% applying them in every encounter and 74% in at least 80% of instances, irrespective of condom utilization.[116] Primary motivations include enhancing comfort and pleasure, as articulated by users in qualitative assessments of anal practices.[117] Water-based formulations predominate due to compatibility with latex condoms, though silicone-based variants are selected for extended duration despite incompatibility risks with certain barriers and toys.[118] Sex toys constitute another prevalent category of aids, facilitating solo masturbation, foreplay, or integration into partnered acts such as anal stimulation or erection enhancement. Among gay and bisexual men in the United States, 78.5% have utilized at least one sex toy type, with dildos (62.1%) and non-vibrating cock rings leading in adoption for rectal insertion and penile constriction, respectively.[119] Vibrators, often applied for prostate massage, are used by approximately 49.8% of this population, typically during masturbation (solo or mutual) or intercourse to amplify sensations.[120] These devices are perceived as augmenting sexual satisfaction without supplanting interpersonal contact, though sharing practices elevate transmission risks for infections like HIV when not sanitized.[121] Variations in aid usage extend to combined applications, such as pairing lubricants with toys for progressive dilation or employing constriction rings alongside manual or oral stimulation to prolong arousal. Empirical data indicate toys are incorporated in both receptive and insertive roles, with dildos simulating penile penetration and vibrators targeting erogenous zones independently of partner involvement.[122] Less frequent but documented variations involve BDSM elements, where aids like restraints or plugs complement power dynamics; involvement in such practices is elevated among gay men relative to heterosexual counterparts, correlating with bisexual orientations and non-monogamous patterns.[123] Manual fisting, a extreme variation entailing hand insertion for rectal expansion, appears more prevalent historically among gay cohorts but lacks robust quantitative prevalence metrics in contemporary surveys, often requiring extensive preparation with copious lubrication to avert injury.[124]

Health Implications

Infectious disease risks

Sexual practices between men, particularly receptive anal intercourse, confer elevated risks for infectious disease transmission compared to vaginal intercourse due to the fragility of rectal mucosa, which facilitates microbial entry, and higher concentrations of pathogens in rectal secretions. Empirical data indicate that men who have sex with men (MSM) experience disproportionately higher incidence rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) than heterosexual populations, attributable in large part to the biomechanical vulnerabilities of anal tissue and behavioral patterns such as condomless sex.[95][125][126] Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission risk is markedly higher via receptive anal sex, estimated at 138 infections per 10,000 exposures, exceeding that of insertive anal or penile-vaginal acts by factors of 10 to 20. Among MSM, HIV acquisition stems predominantly from condomless receptive anal intercourse, with unaware HIV-positive individuals over twice as likely to engage in such unprotected discordant acts. CDC surveillance confirms MSM bear the brunt of new U.S. HIV diagnoses, with anal sex as the primary vector amplifying viral loads in semen and rectal fluids.[127][128][95] Bacterial STIs, including syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia, exhibit higher prevalence in MSM, with rectal sites often asymptomatic and thus undetected without targeted screening—up to 85% of rectal gonorrhea or chlamydia cases in MSM lack symptoms. Syphilis rates have surged among MSM, linked to mucosal breaches during anal penetration, while gonorrhea and chlamydia rectal infections correlate with subsequent HIV seroconversion, elevating repeat infection risks. Comparative studies show bacterial STI burdens in MSM exceed those in non-MSM males, with chlamydia as the most common, driven by extragenital transmission via anal and oral routes.[129][95][126] Viral pathogens like human papillomavirus (HPV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV) also transmit efficiently through MSM practices; anal HPV prevalence reaches 41-90% in affected cohorts, persisting in over one-third of HIV-negative MSM for more than 24 months and associating with oncogenic risks absent in comparable heterosexual groups. HBV screening is recommended for all MSM due to fecal-oral and sexual fluid transmission heightened by anal contact, with vaccination uptake critical to mitigate outbreaks. These risks compound in networks with multiple partners or concurrent infections, underscoring causal links between practice-specific exposures and empirical STI disparities.[130][131][95]

Physical trauma and chronic effects

Receptive anal intercourse can cause acute physical trauma, including anal fissures, lacerations, abrasions, and hematomas, often resulting in pain, bleeding, and inflammation shortly after penetration.[132] [133] Such injuries arise from the anus's lack of natural lubrication and its sphincter muscles' resistance to stretching, with fissures occurring in up to 10% of cases involving forceful or unprepared entry.[134] Severe trauma, such as sphincter tears or perforation, is rarer but documented in proctological reports, particularly with aggressive practices or inadequate preparation, leading to complications like cellulitis or fistulae requiring surgical intervention.[135] [136] Chronic effects primarily involve damage to the anal sphincter complex, manifesting as reduced resting anal pressure and weakened continence mechanisms in men engaging in frequent receptive anal intercourse.[137] [138] A 1993 manometric study of 40 anoreceptive men found significantly lower mean resting anal pressures (59 mmHg) compared to non-anoreceptive controls (78 mmHg), indicating structural compromise from repeated dilatation.[137] This sphincter weakening correlates with fecal incontinence (FI), where involuntary leakage occurs due to impaired closure; prevalence among men who have sex with men (MSM) practicing receptive anal intercourse reaches 8% overall, rising to 12.7% for those engaging weekly or more versus 5.7% for non-practitioners.[139] [140] Population-level data reinforce the association: the 2009-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey reported FI rates of 11.6% in men acknowledging anal intercourse, doubling the 5.3% rate in non-reporting men, independent of other confounders like age or parity.[4] Risk escalates with factors such as high-frequency intercourse (odds ratio 1.64), fisting (OR 1.61), chemsex (OR 1.67), HIV seropositivity (OR 1.78), and low socioeconomic status (OR 1.32-1.40), as identified in a 2021 survey of 21,762 MSM.[140] [141] A narrative review of 68 studies confirms receptive anal penetration as a causal risk for FI and anodyspareunia (painful intercourse) via cumulative sphincter trauma, with men showing up to 119% increased FI odds compared to non-receptive counterparts.[3] [134] Insertive partners face lower chronic risks, though acute penile injuries like frenulum tears or fractures can occur from vigorous thrusting against resistance, typically resolving without long-term sequelae.[133] Overall, while mild trauma often heals spontaneously, persistent engagement without mitigation heightens irreversible sphincter dysfunction, underscoring the anus's anatomical unsuitability for repeated non-vaginal penetration absent preparatory measures.[3]

Empirical mitigation strategies

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with daily oral tenofovir disoproxil fumarate-emtricitabine reduces HIV acquisition risk by approximately 99% among men who have sex with men (MSM) engaging in receptive anal intercourse when adherence is high.[142][143] Condom use during anal sex lowers HIV transmission risk by 70-80% in observational studies of MSM, though real-world effectiveness diminishes with inconsistent application or breakage, which occurs in up to 3% of uses.[144] Combining PrEP with condoms achieves synergistic protection, with models estimating population-level HIV incidence reductions of over 50% in high-risk MSM networks when uptake reaches 30-50%.[145] For bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs), post-exposure doxycycline (DoxyPEP), taken within 72 hours after condomless sex, decreases chlamydia incidence by 74% and syphilis by 88% in MSM trials, though efficacy against gonorrhea varies (interim reductions of 47-65%, with full analyses showing lesser or null effects).[146][147] Regular screening at pharyngeal, urethral, and rectal sites, per 2014 guidelines for high-risk MSM, identifies asymptomatic infections, enabling treatment that curtails onward transmission; triple-site testing correlates with 20-30% lower HIV seroconversion rates via reduced STI cofactors.[148] Meningococcal B vaccination (e.g., 4CMenB) provides cross-protection against gonorrhea, with two doses yielding 44% efficacy in HIV-positive MSM cohorts.[149] Pre-exposure vaccines for hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and human papillomavirus (HPV) prevent up to 95% of targeted infections in MSM, averting oncogenic sequelae like anal cancer.[150] To mitigate physical trauma from receptive anal penetration, water- or silicone-based lubricants reduce friction-induced microtears, with biomechanical studies showing decreased epithelial abrasion compared to insufficient lubrication.[151] Non-oil-based formulations preserve condom integrity, avoiding slippage or rupture risks elevated by petroleum products. Gradual sphincter relaxation via manual massage and progressive dilation, supported by pelvic floor therapy evidence, lowers acute pain and tearing incidence in hypertonic cases, though randomized data remain limited to small cohorts.[152] Emergent operative repair without diversion for sphincter disruptions post-intercourse yields favorable continence outcomes in low-energy injuries, per case series.[153]

Psychological Dimensions

Motivations and satisfaction levels

Men engaging in sexual practices with other men primarily cite physical attraction to male partners and the pursuit of sexual pleasure as key motivations, mirroring general human sexual motives documented in large-scale surveys where "I was attracted to the person" (endorsed by 87.9% of men) and "It feels good" (88.3%) rank highest.[154] For homosexual and bisexual men, these drives are directed toward same-sex encounters, often emphasizing intense sensations such as prostate stimulation during receptive anal intercourse or dominance in insertive roles, with pilot studies linking role preferences to intimacy and power motives.[155] Additional factors include emotional bonding and stress relief, though coping-oriented motives correlate with riskier behaviors and more partners.[156] Among non-exclusively homosexual men, situational elements like curiosity or opportunity play a role, as seen in qualitative accounts of straight-identified men engaging in same-sex acts without primary attraction to men.[157] Self-reported sexual satisfaction among homosexual men is frequently comparable to that of heterosexual men, with studies noting similarities in orgasm frequency during partnered sex, duration, and overall pleasure, despite differences in practices.[158] However, empirical data on orgasm occurrence reveal heterosexual men usually or always climaxing at 95% of encounters, compared to 89% for gay men, potentially due to variations in stimulation techniques or role dynamics.[159] Some surveys indicate higher autonomy and satisfaction in gay men's sex lives, attributed to greater partner variety and frequency, though these self-reports may reflect selection biases in samples drawn from affirmative communities.[160] Receptive anal intercourse, a common practice, often involves pain for 30-40% of men experiencing it frequently, termed anodyspareunia, which can diminish satisfaction and prompt role avoidance or cessation in some cases.[161] Despite this, many persist for the unique pleasure potential, with emotional satisfaction from first same-sex experiences predicting ongoing engagement.[162] Homosexual men experience elevated rates of mental health disorders compared to heterosexual men, including higher prevalence of depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation. A meta-analysis of population-based studies found consistent disparities, with sexual minorities showing poorer outcomes across multiple indicators of psychological distress. Specifically, lifetime suicide attempt rates among homosexual males are substantially higher, with co-twin control studies reporting increased prevalence relative to heterosexual controls. Empirical data indicate gay men are approximately six times more likely to attempt suicide than heterosexual men.[163][164][165] The predominant explanatory framework attributes these associations to minority stress, positing that chronic exposure to stigma, discrimination, and internalized homophobia causally elevates risk through heightened physiological and psychological strain. However, meta-analyses reveal this model accounts for less than 9% of observed health disparities between non-heterosexual and heterosexual individuals, with much of the evidence relying on subjective self-reports rather than objective measures of prejudice. Critiques highlight that disparities persist even in contexts of high societal acceptance; for instance, a multinational study across 28 European countries found no correlation between country-level LGBT acceptance and the magnitude of psychiatric morbidity gaps between LGB and heterosexual adults. Similarly, in the Netherlands—one of the world's most progressive nations regarding homosexuality—LGB adults continue to report poorer mental health and quality of life compared to heterosexuals. Legalization of same-sex marriage has shown mixed effects, with some reductions in youth suicide rates but no consistent improvements in adult mental health outcomes or behaviors like substance use.[166][167][168][169][170] Alternative causal pathways include bidirectional influences, where same-sex attraction directly contributes to psychological distress and risky sexual behaviors, independent of external stressors. Mendelian randomization analyses using twin data demonstrate causal effects from same-sex attraction to elevated depression/anxiety (standardized coefficient 0.13) and increased sociosexual risk-taking (0.16), alongside reverse pathways suggesting feedback loops. Underlying common factors—such as genetic or early developmental vulnerabilities—may predispose individuals to both non-heterosexual orientation and mental health vulnerabilities, rather than orientation alone driving outcomes. Behaviors associated with male-male sexual practices, including higher average partner counts and promiscuity among men who have sex with men, correlate with elevated STI burdens and potential relational instability, which in turn link to worsened mental health via physical health sequelae or dissatisfaction, though direct causation remains understudied. Longitudinal evidence of fluidity in same-sex attraction, particularly in early adulthood, further complicates unidirectional causal claims, with some individuals reporting shifts away from exclusive homosexuality. Academic sources favoring minority stress often underemphasize these persistent gaps and behavioral factors, potentially reflecting institutional biases toward environmental attributions over intrinsic ones.[171][167][172][173]

Cultural and Religious Views

Traditional prohibitions and rationales

In Abrahamic traditions, male-male sexual acts, particularly anal penetration, have been prohibited as violations of divine law. The Hebrew Bible's Leviticus 18:22 states, "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination," with Leviticus 20:13 prescribing death for such acts, framed within a holiness code distinguishing Israelite practices from surrounding Canaanite idolatry and cultic prostitution.[174][175] Traditional Jewish rationales emphasize preservation of procreative heterosexual unions, viewing male-male intercourse as thwarting reproduction and familial lineage central to covenantal obligations.[174] Christian theology extended these prohibitions through natural law reasoning, as articulated by Thomas Aquinas in the 13th century, who classified sodomy—defined as non-vaginal intercourse, including male-male acts—as a grave sin against nature because it misuses generative organs oriented toward procreation and species preservation.[176] Aquinas argued that such acts frustrate the intrinsic finality of human sexuality, rendering them intrinsically disordered regardless of consent or circumstance, a view rooted in Aristotelian teleology where acts must align with natural ends.[176] Early Church Fathers like John Chrysostom similarly condemned it as contrary to God's created order, linking it to Sodom's destruction for inverting natural relations.[177] Islamic texts prohibit male-male sodomy (liwat) based on the Quran's account of Prophet Lut's people, destroyed for approaching men with desire instead of women (Quran 7:80-81, 26:165-166), interpreted as rejecting natural heterosexual complementarity.[178] Hadith collections, such as those in Sahih Bukhari, reinforce this with reports of the Prophet Muhammad prescribing severe punishments like stoning, rationalized as safeguarding societal order, family structure, and divine fitrah (innate disposition toward procreation).[179] Jurists across Sunni and Shi'a schools viewed it as a corruption of human nature, prioritizing reproductive unions to ensure lineage and moral purity.[178] Pre-Christian philosophers provided secular rationales echoing these themes. Plato, in his later work Laws (circa 360 BCE), advocated prohibiting male-male intercourse in an ideal state, deeming it a threat to self-control and civic virtue, as it indulges base passions over rational order.[176] Aristotle, in Nicomachean Ethics and Politics, regarded such acts as "contrary to nature" (para physin), shameful for failing to fulfill the reproductive purpose of intercourse and undermining the household's role in perpetuating the polis.[180][181] These thinkers prioritized acts' alignment with biological function and social stability over individual desires, influencing later Western prohibitions.[181]

Contemporary acceptance and resistance

In Western Europe and North America, societal acceptance of homosexuality, including sexual practices between men, has risen markedly since the early 2000s, with surveys indicating majorities viewing it as morally acceptable or deserving societal acceptance. For instance, a 2020 Pew Research Center survey across 34 countries found acceptance rates exceeding 80% in Sweden (94%), Canada (85%), and the United States (72%), reflecting shifts driven by legal reforms like same-sex marriage legalization in the U.S. in 2015 and widespread in Europe by 2020.[84] Gallup polls in the U.S. show moral approval of gay-lesbian relations climbing from 40% in 2001 to 67% in 2024-2025, correlating with declining religiosity and cultural normalization efforts.[182] However, these figures mask nuances, as acceptance often conflates identity with practices, and some polls reveal lower endorsement for specific acts like anal intercourse when queried separately. Globally, acceptance remains polarized, with high levels in secularized nations contrasting stark resistance elsewhere. The Williams Institute's Global Acceptance Index, analyzing data through 2021, ranks Iceland, Norway, and the Netherlands highest, while sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East score lowest, with over 100 countries showing stagnant or declining tolerance since 1980.[183] An Ipsos 2025 survey across 30 countries reported 69% support for same-sex marriage recognition, yet this dropped below 40% in Hungary, Poland, and Turkey, highlighting Eastern Europe's conservative backlash amid EU pressures.[184] In Asia, medians hover around 49% favoring gay marriage per Pew data, with Japan at 68% but South Korea at 41%.[185] Resistance persists strongly in religious and traditional contexts, where sexual practices between men are often viewed as violating scriptural prohibitions or natural order. As of 2025, homosexuality remains criminalized in approximately 67 countries, primarily Muslim-majority states like Iran and Saudi Arabia (punishable by death) and African nations such as Ghana and Uganda, where 2023-2024 laws impose life imprisonment or forced rehabilitation.[186] [187] Pew's 2025 U.S. data shows 62% of evangelical Protestants opposing same-sex marriage, citing biblical condemnations in Leviticus and Romans as rationale, compared to 87% acceptance among the religiously unaffiliated.[188] Similar patterns hold in Orthodox Christianity and Islam, where fatwas and doctrines frame such acts as sinful, fueling public opposition; for example, Nigerian surveys report only 7% acceptance.[84] This resistance is amplified by demographic trends, as higher religiosity correlates with disapproval across studies, countering narratives of inevitable progress.[189] Cultural pushback has intensified in some regions, including Europe, where 2023-2025 saw protests against pride events in France and Italy over perceived promotion of practices amid rising awareness of health risks and child exposure concerns, though media coverage often frames such opposition as fringe.[190] In Russia and parts of Latin America, state policies reinforce traditional family structures, banning "gay propaganda" since 2013 in Russia, with public support exceeding 70% in polls.[84] Empirical data from the Gallup World Poll underscores that moral views on homosexual acts as "wrong" prevail in 57 countries, linking resistance to stable factors like fertility rates and religious adherence rather than transient activism.[191]

Historical criminalization

In England, the Buggery Act of 1533, enacted under Henry VIII, marked the first secular criminalization of sodomy—defined as anal intercourse between men or with animals—as a felony punishable by death through hanging, transferring jurisdiction from ecclesiastical courts to the state.[192] This statute reflected broader European concerns rooted in religious doctrine, viewing the act as a violation of natural order and procreation, though enforcement was sporadic and often tied to political purges.[193] The English model spread through colonialism, embedding sodomy prohibitions in the penal codes of territories including parts of North America, India, and Africa, where penalties ranged from death to life imprisonment and persisted post-independence in many jurisdictions.[194] In the American colonies, all 13 original states adopted similar laws by the time of independence in 1776, typically classifying sodomy as a capital offense under common law derivations, with executions documented in cases like that of Thomas Granger in 1642 in Plymouth Colony for bestiality-related sodomy.[195] Continental European nations exhibited parallel developments; for example, Holy Roman Empire territories under the Constitutio Criminalis Carolina of 1532 prescribed burning at the stake for male sodomy, drawing from canon law traditions that deemed it a mortal sin second only to heresy.[194] In France, sodomy was criminalized under ordinances like the 1570 edict of Charles IX, with death penalties enforced until partial decriminalization during the Revolution in 1791, though colonial exports retained stricter codes.[194] Islamic legal traditions, based on interpretations of hudud punishments in Sharia for liwat (analogous to sodomy), imposed flogging, stoning, or execution in historical caliphates from the 7th century onward, influencing enduring penal codes in regions like the Middle East and South Asia.[192] These laws uniformly targeted the act rather than orientation, but prosecutions disproportionately affected men due to anatomical focus on penetration, often conflating homosexuality with bestiality or pederasty; empirical records indicate low conviction rates—fewer than 1% of reported cases in 18th-century England leading to execution—suggesting deterrence via threat over consistent application.[196] Rationales emphasized public health risks, demographic imperatives for reproduction amid high mortality, and moral frameworks prioritizing familial stability, though enforcement varied by regime stability and evidentiary standards requiring witnesses to the act.[192]

Current global variations and 2025 updates

As of October 2025, consensual sexual acts between men are legal in approximately 130 countries and territories, including most of Europe, the Americas (with exceptions in parts of the Caribbean), East Asia (such as Japan and Taiwan), and Oceania.[197] These jurisdictions typically do not criminalize private, adult same-sex conduct, though public displays or promotion may face restrictions in some, like Russia.[198] In contrast, such acts remain criminalized in about 65 countries, predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, and certain Caribbean and Pacific island nations, often under colonial-era "sodomy," "buggery," or "unnatural offenses" laws that explicitly target anal intercourse between men.[199] [200] Penalties vary widely: fines or short imprisonment in places like Malawi and Zambia; up to 14 years or life in Malaysia and Kenya; and death under Sharia-based codes in Iran, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Afghanistan, Brunei, Mauritania, northern Nigeria, Somalia, and parts of the UAE.[201] Enforcement is inconsistent but frequently involves entrapment, vigilante violence, or harsh application against men, with women less often prosecuted.[202] Notable 2025 developments include Saint Lucia's decriminalization of homosexuality in July, equalizing the age of consent and removing colonial-era prohibitions, marking progress in the Caribbean amid regional resistance.[203] Conversely, Burkina Faso reinforced criminalization under military rule, imposing up to three years' imprisonment for same-sex acts, reflecting a trend in some Sahel nations toward stricter Islamic-influenced laws.[203] Ghana advanced a proposed "anti-LGBT" bill in early 2025, potentially expanding penalties to include up to 10 years for promotion of homosexuality, though its final passage remains pending as of October.[186] Thailand's same-sex marriage law, effective January 22, 2025, builds on prior decriminalization but does not alter core act legality, which was already permitted.[204] These shifts highlight ongoing divergence: liberalization in isolated Western-aligned states versus entrenchment in conservative, religiously governed regions.[205]

Controversies and Empirical Debates

Normalization versus risk acknowledgment

Efforts to normalize sexual practices between men, particularly receptive anal intercourse, have emphasized equivalence to heterosexual activities, often framing health risks as comparable or mitigated by consent and technology like PrEP. Public health campaigns and media representations frequently prioritize destigmatization, portraying such practices as inherently safe when practiced responsibly, with minimal emphasis on anatomical differences that elevate vulnerability. This approach aligns with broader cultural shifts toward acceptance, yet critiques argue it understates empirical disparities in disease transmission and injury rates, potentially influenced by institutional reluctance to highlight group-specific risks amid anti-stigma priorities.[172] In contrast, data indicate substantially higher risks for men engaging in receptive anal sex. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that receptive anal intercourse with an HIV-positive partner carries approximately a 1.38% per-act transmission probability (1 in 72), over 18 times higher than receptive vaginal intercourse (0.08%, or 1 in 1,250). Men who have sex with men (MSM) accounted for 67% of the 31,800 estimated new HIV diagnoses in the U.S. in 2022, despite comprising about 2-4% of the male population, with transmission predominantly linked to anal sex. Rectal infections like gonorrhea and chlamydia are also prevalent among MSM, even in those not engaging in receptive acts, due to mucosal fragility and bacterial exposure.[206] [207] Physical trauma represents another under-acknowledged domain. Receptive anal intercourse correlates with elevated fecal incontinence rates, with studies showing 12.7% prevalence among MSM practicing it several times weekly versus 5.7% in less frequent practitioners; risk factors include frequency exceeding once weekly, chemsex, and fisting. Anatomical constraints—no natural lubrication, thin rectal lining prone to tears, and proximity to fecal matter—facilitate micro-abrasions, infections, and long-term sphincter damage, independent of condom use. While normalization narratives invoke harm reduction, empirical patterns suggest causal links persist, prompting calls for balanced acknowledgment over ideological minimization.[141] [140] [152]

Evolutionary implausibility critiques

Critiques of male same-sex sexual practices from an evolutionary standpoint center on their apparent incompatibility with natural selection, as such behaviors typically do not facilitate reproduction and may reduce an individual's direct fitness. Exclusive male homosexuality, defined as a persistent preference for same-sex partners over opposite-sex ones capable of producing offspring, has been observed to correlate with lower lifetime reproductive success compared to heterosexual males, with studies estimating that homosexual men produce approximately 20-30% fewer offspring on average.[64] This reproductive cost poses a Darwinian paradox, as traits undermining propagation should be selected against over generations unless offset by indirect benefits, yet empirical data indicate no consistent compensatory mechanism sufficient to maintain observed prevalence rates of 2-5% for exclusive male homosexuality in human populations.[208][58] One prominent proposed resolution, kin selection theory, posits that genes promoting male homosexuality could persist if affected individuals enhance the survival and reproduction of genetic relatives, such as siblings or nephews, thereby indirectly propagating shared alleles. However, empirical tests have repeatedly failed to support this hypothesis; for instance, a study of 1,500 men found no evidence of heightened altruism or investment in kin among homosexual participants compared to heterosexual controls, contradicting the theory's predictions.[60][209] Similarly, cross-cultural analyses reveal that self-identified gay men do not exhibit elevated generosity toward family members in resource allocation tasks or caregiving roles, undermining claims of a "helper in the nest" effect.[210] Critics argue that kin selection requires implausibly high levels of indirect fitness benefits—often exceeding direct reproductive losses—which are not substantiated in longitudinal data tracking family outcomes. Alternative explanations, such as sexually antagonistic selection (where genes beneficial for female fertility are deleterious in males) or overdominance (heterozygote advantage), face analogous scrutiny for lacking robust genetic evidence tying specific alleles to both homosexuality and counterbalancing traits. Genome-wide association studies have identified variants linked to same-sex behavior, but these explain only a small fraction of variance (less than 10%) and do not resolve the fitness deficit, as carrier males still show reduced partnering and fertility rates.[61] In nonhuman species, exclusive male-male sexual preference is exceedingly rare, documented in fewer than 1,500 of over 8,000 bird and mammal species observed for such behaviors, and lifelong exclusivity appears limited to just two taxa, suggesting that persistent non-reproductive pairings are not evolutionarily stable without unique ecological pressures absent in humans.[211] These observations reinforce critiques that male same-sex practices, absent clear adaptive utility, represent a maladaptive deviation rather than a selected variant, challenging evolutionary models reliant on unverified balancing forces.[212]

Media and policy biases in representation

Mainstream media coverage of sexual practices between men often prioritizes narratives of acceptance and equality, systematically underemphasizing empirical health disparities linked to these behaviors. For example, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data from 2023 indicate that gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) represented the majority of reported cases for primary and secondary syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia in the United States, with syphilis rates among MSM remaining elevated despite a 13% decline in primary and secondary cases from the prior year.[213] [214] Yet, analyses of news media datasets spanning 2010–2020 reveal that portrayals of LGBT identities, including male same-sex practices, focus predominantly on social progress and discrimination, with limited integration of such epidemiological data into broader discussions.[215] This selective framing aligns with documented left-leaning ideological dominance in journalistic institutions, where critiques of behavioral risks are sidelined to avoid perceived stigmatization.[216] Public health policies exhibit similar representational biases, promoting inclusive frameworks that normalize male same-sex practices without proportionally addressing causal risk factors. For instance, CDC surveillance consistently highlights MSM as comprising approximately 70% of new HIV diagnoses annually, driven in part by the biomechanical vulnerabilities of receptive anal intercourse, which facilitate higher transmission efficiency compared to other sexual acts.[217] [218] However, policy documents and advocacy-driven guidelines, such as those from international bodies emphasizing anti-discrimination measures, attribute these disparities primarily to societal stigma rather than inherent practice-related hazards, a perspective reinforced by academia's prevailing progressive consensus.[219] [216] This approach marginalizes dissenting research on negative health outcomes, including elevated rates of mental health issues like depression and suicidality among those engaging in same-sex behaviors, as evidenced by cohort studies.[172] Such biases stem from systemic left-wing orientations in media and policy-making circles, where empirical scrutiny of causal mechanisms—such as tissue fragility in anal mucosa leading to microtears and pathogen entry—is subordinated to ideological imperatives of affirmation.[216] Coverage of STI surges, like the 2015 UK report of syphilis cases rising 46% and gonorrhea 32% among MSM, often appears in isolation without contextualizing long-term trends or policy implications for risk mitigation.[220] In contrast, conservative or independent analyses more readily incorporate these data to advocate balanced representation, highlighting how institutional reluctance to acknowledge practice-specific perils perpetuates uninformed public discourse and exacerbates preventable health burdens.[172]

References

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