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==Practice== ==Practice==
Mammary intercourse involves the male placing his ] penis in the female's ], then starting to rub or ] between her breasts, while the breasts are squeezed around the penile shaft, creating a tight area for stimulation.<ref name="Alex Comfort 1972 p. 67-9"/> In addition, the woman may move her breasts up and down against the penis for an additional stimulation. The act may be carried out face to face, or head to tail, with the woman recommended to be on top if she has smaller breasts.<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 69</ref> When performed as a non-penetrative sex act, the act is continued until the point of ] for the man. Mammary intercourse involves the male placing his ] penis in the female's ], then starting to rub or ] between her breasts, while the breasts are squeezed around the penile shaft, creating a tight area for stimulation.<ref name="Alex Comfort 1972 p. 67-9"/> In addition, the woman may move her breasts up and down against the penis for an additional stimulation. The act may be carried out face to face, or head to tail, with the woman recommended to be on top if she has smaller breasts.<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 69</ref> When performed as a non-penetrative sex act, the act is continued until the point of ] for the man.

The earliest known reference to mammary intercourse in literature comes from ]'s ''Secret History'' circa 550 AD, describing the empress ]:

{{quote|And though she flung wide three gates to the ambassadors of Cupid, she lamented that nature had not similarly unlocked the straits of her bosom, that she might there have contrived a further welcome to his emissaries.<ref>Procopius, '''' chapter 9, trans. Atwater.</ref>}}


Mammary intercourse is said by ] to produce mutual orgasm in women with sensitive breasts (what ] terms ''local orgasms of the breast''),<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 69 and p. 175</ref><ref>Margo Ananad, ''The Art of Sexual Ecstasy'' (1990) p. 309</ref> and it was one of the nine substitute exercises for ] sexual activities, as detailed in the ''Paradis Charnels'' of 1903.<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 176</ref> This act can be combined with ]. Mammary intercourse is said by ] to produce mutual orgasm in women with sensitive breasts (what ] terms ''local orgasms of the breast''),<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 69 and p. 175</ref><ref>Margo Ananad, ''The Art of Sexual Ecstasy'' (1990) p. 309</ref> and it was one of the nine substitute exercises for ] sexual activities, as detailed in the ''Paradis Charnels'' of 1903.<ref>Alex Comfort, ''The Joy of Sex'' (1972) p. 176</ref> This act can be combined with ].

Revision as of 06:24, 3 December 2018

An illustration of mammary intercourse

Mammary intercourse is a sex act, performed as either foreplay or as non-penetrative sex, that involves the stimulation of the male penis by the female breasts and vice versa.

Practice

Mammary intercourse involves the male placing his erect penis in the female's cleavage, then starting to rub or thrust between her breasts, while the breasts are squeezed around the penile shaft, creating a tight area for stimulation. In addition, the woman may move her breasts up and down against the penis for an additional stimulation. The act may be carried out face to face, or head to tail, with the woman recommended to be on top if she has smaller breasts. When performed as a non-penetrative sex act, the act is continued until the point of ejaculation for the man.

Mammary intercourse is said by Alex Comfort to produce mutual orgasm in women with sensitive breasts (what Margot Anand terms local orgasms of the breast), and it was one of the nine substitute exercises for penetrative sexual activities, as detailed in the Paradis Charnels of 1903. This act can be combined with fellatio.

Since mammary intercourse is a non-penetrative sex act, the risk of passing a sexually transmitted infection (STI) that requires direct contact between the mucous membranes and pre-ejaculate or semen is greatly reduced. HIV is among the infections that require such direct contact and is therefore very unlikely to be transmitted via mammary intercourse. A study of the condom usage habits of New Zealand's sex workers said that they offered various safe sex alternatives to vaginal sex to clients who refused to wear a condom. One sex worker said that mammary intercourse was one alternative used; mammary intercourse performed by a woman with large breasts felt to the client like penetrative vaginal sex.

Mammary intercourse has sometimes been considered a perversion. Freud, however, considered such extensions of sexual interest to fall within the range of the normal, unless marked out by exclusivity (i.e. the repudiation of all other forms of sexual contact).

Slang terms

Mammary intercourse is known as titty-fucking, titfuck, titjob or boob job in the United States, as well as tit wank or French fuck in the United Kingdom - the latter term dating back to the 1930s; while a more jocular equivalent is a trip down mammary lane.

The Japanese sex industry uses the term paizuri. Paizuri in the Japanese writing system is パイズリ with the first part パイ being from the word おっぱい (pronounced as oppai) which is a slang word for breast, and the second part ズリ being from the word 擦り (pronounced as zuri) which means "rub".

See also

References

  1. ^ Alex Comfort, The Joy of Sex (1972) p. 67-9
  2. Alex Comfort, The Joy of Sex (1972) p. 69
  3. Alex Comfort, The Joy of Sex (1972) p. 69 and p. 175
  4. Margo Ananad, The Art of Sexual Ecstasy (1990) p. 309
  5. Alex Comfort, The Joy of Sex (1972) p. 176
  6. Kelly, Jeffrey A. (October 1995). "Advances in HIV/AIDS education and prevention". Family Relations. 44 (4): 345–352. doi:10.2307/584989. ISSN 0197-6664. JSTOR 584989.
  7. Woods, 1996, in Davis, pages 125-127
  8. Clifford Allen, A Textbook of Psychosexual Disorders (1969) p. 200
  9. Sigmund Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 65 and p. 75
  10. Godson, page 96.
  11. M. S. Morton, The Lover's Tongue (2003) p. 187
  12. Bacarr, 2004, p. 150.
  13. Constantine, 1992, p. 110.

Further reading

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