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.
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