Asexual Spectrum

Does not experience sexual attraction toward others.

Definition

Does not experience sexual attraction toward others. May still experience romantic, emotional, aesthetic, and sensual attraction.

Flag

Asexual Spectrum pride flag with its characteristic coloured stripes.

Etymology

Greek a- (without) + sexual. First defined as a natural human orientation by Emma Trosse (1897). Modern community term established through AVEN (2001).

History

  • 1897 - Emma Trosse gives the first definition of asexuality as a natural variation in Ein Weib?
  • 1948 - Kinsey's "X" category acknowledges those with no socio-sexual contacts or reactions
  • 1997 - Zoe O'Reilly publishes "My Life as an Amoeba" online; coins the "amoeba" nickname
  • 2001 - David Jay founds AVEN (Asexual Visibility and Education Network) at asexuality.org
  • 2004 - First major mainstream media coverage; Anthony Bogaert's academic research estimates ~1% of the population is asexual
  • 2010 - Asexual pride flag created through AVEN community vote
  • 2014 - DSM-5 specifies asexual people should not be diagnosed with sexual dysfunction disorders

Common myths

  • "Asexual people are broken or haven't met the right person." Asexuality is an orientation, not a problem to be fixed.
  • "Asexual people just have a low sex drive." Asexuality is about the direction of attraction (toward no one), not the intensity of a drive.
  • "Asexuality is caused by trauma." Most asexual people have not experienced trauma and have typical hormone levels.

Notable people

  • David Jay (1982–) - Founder of AVEN; first major public asexual activist
  • Angela Chen - Author of Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex (2020)
  • Yasmin Benoit (1998–) - British model; launched #ThisIsHowAceFeels campaign

See also

Sources & further reading