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The Textbook Masturbator: A Renegotiated Discourse in Official Swedish Sex-Education Guidelines and Textbooks, circa 1945–2000

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 July 2023

Sara Backman Prytz*
Affiliation:
Department of Education, Uppsala University, Sweden
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Abstract

The educational mission of most western schools today includes the nurturing of children’s sexual upbringing, which many scholars see as a way of controlling their sexuality and forming them into “sexual citizens.” This article examines how official Swedish school guidelines and textbooks have mediated sexuality norms through education on masturbation. The professional discourse on masturbation started to change during the first half of the twentieth century, when masturbation shifted from being perceived as something harmful to something accepted as natural and harmless. This article focuses on a period following that shift in opinion: circa 1945-2000. The analysis shows that boys’ sexuality during this time received more attention than girls’, and a strong new norm about sex contributed to masturbation taking on less importance than heterosexual intercourse within a relationship. This article shows how state-controlled curricula have created norms about gender and sexuality, thus contributing to the development of a sexual citizenship.

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Article
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of History of Education Society.

Since the introduction of sexuality education in Western schools in the 20th century, the goal has largely been to solve problems, among which the more relevant are sexually transmitted diseases, abuse, unwanted pregnancies, immoral living, and a general ignorance about the body and health. In state-controlled curricula and learning materials, these problems have been addressed both explicitly and implicitly, through a clear formulation of what a desirable, school-controlled sexuality should look like. By imparting knowledge about how girls and boys should behave, both as young people and in their future adult lives, schools have thus helped mediate norms about gender and sexuality. Thus, the educational mission of the school has also included the nurturing of children’s sexual upbringing, which many scholars have viewed as a way to control their sexuality and develop them into “sexual citizens.”Footnote 1

Over time and multiple formulations, masturbation has been one of the most prominent issues related to children’s sexuality. Both medical and psychological research had paid great attention to the supposed harmful aspects of masturbation, such as blindness, fatigue, hysteria and mental illness, until around the 1930s and 1940s, when a discursive change resulted in experts generally no longer considering masturbation harmful. From the middle of the twentieth century on, we are therefore dealing with something that used to be seen as a significant problem regarding children and young people’s sexuality, but now, by professional consensus, is harmless. Apart from being harmless in the view of professionals, masturbation holds a special place as a sexual activity that is by its nature gender-neutral and disconnected from interpersonal relationships that are potentially gendered.

This article analyses discourse on masturbation in official guidelines and textbooks from Sweden to gain a gain a deepened understanding of the formulation of gendered and sexual norms in schools, norms devoid both of the interpersonal perspective and of the otherwise often prevalent perspective of risk. By analyzing how state-controlled schools approached masturbation in official documents aimed at teachers and students during the second half of the twentieth century, I highlight how schools historically have contributed to the shaping of students’ sexual citizenship. Sweden introduced sex education in public schools as early as 1942 and was also the first country in the world to introduce it as a compulsory subject in 1955. All schools in the country were expected to adhere to the same guidelines. In addition, Sweden also had a tradition of state-controlled teaching materials. These conditions thus provide excellent opportunities to examine a specific theme—in this case masturbation—in state schools, and explore how it may have changed over time.

Sex Education

Sex education, which has historically included teaching about masturbation, is and always has been a politically and emotionally charged school subject, in Sweden and elsewhere. Many conflicts have flared up, both regarding the introduction of the subject in schools in any form, and regarding its particular content. School curricula are political and ideological products, and by that also crucial for consolidating a specific discourse, as this article shows. By focusing on masturbation in textbooks, the following discussion shows how the changing sexual discourse during the latter part of the twentieth century took shape within a state-regulated school context and thus helped create a sexual framework to which maturing citizens could relate.

Sex education occupies a special position among school subjects, as the instruction concerns topics that are sensitive or even taboo. Jonathan Zimmerman describes how there have been—and still are—taboos around sex education globally. In most countries, four topics have been avoided: “abortion, contraception, homosexuality, and masturbation.”Footnote 2 But even though masturbation is a taboo subject in many countries, in recent history momentum has gained for its inclusion in sex education. Jeffrey Moran describes how early twentieth-century sex education in the United States distanced itself from masturbation, but not to the same extent as Victorian sex-education literature, in which masturbation was associated with mental illness and death.Footnote 3 Moran also shows that teaching materials during the more sexually liberal 1960s exhibited an updated perspective on masturbation. One particular sex-education program in Anaheim, California, dispelled the myth that masturbation was harmful, explaining that, “according to the best medical authorities,” any harm suffered by the person who engaged in the act was instead caused by anxiety or guilt triggered by incorrect information about masturbation.Footnote 4

In Sweden, the political debate about children’s need for sex education emerged around the turn of the twentieth century. During this time, however, there was little mention of masturbation. The need to educate pupils about masturbation was rarely seen as an argument in the discussion about sex education in Sweden during the earlier years of debate.Footnote 5

The roots of sex education in Swedish state-controlled teaching go back to before it was made compulsory in 1955, with the Swedish National School Board publishing instructional guidelines for sex education as early as 1945.Footnote 6 Sweden has thus been ahead of the rest and is regarded as a pioneering, sexually liberal country in terms of sex education.Footnote 7 However, the actual instruction was far less extensive than its advocates had hoped.Footnote 8

By examining official guidelines and textbooks, this article contributes to the field of sex-education materials. As Lutz Sauerteig has stated, the lack of research on actual textbooks and other material is surprising in the field of sex education. Sauerteig has made his own contribution, however, with an important analysis of representations of pregnancy in textbooks. In West Germany, during the post-World War II period, many citizens saw a need to restore the country’s traditional Christian values in response to what was considered the destruction of those values during the war. Sauerteig also believes that this was a backlash against the rapid modernization of society, by those seeking a return to more conservative family values. This was evident in sex-education teaching materials produced during this period. Sauerteig shows how traditional conservative values emerged in books about pregnancy and childbirth, values in which the home or private realm is seen as the woman’s domain, while the public realm is the man’s domain. During the 1970s, this narrative changed and the teaching materials developed a greater focus on the medical, rather than the social, aspects of family formation. Sauerteig also shows how the woman’s body came into much sharper focus during the 1970s, and how previous taboos around women’s bodies and sexuality were broken down. Footnote 9

This is in line with a lot of other research on changed positions regarding women’s bodies, gender, and sexuality during the twentieth century. Another example in sex-education material that depicts a changing society is Susanne Gannon’s analysis of three sex-education picture books from 1967, 1973, and 2011, the most recent of which, she argues, features more progressive representations of women and families.Footnote 10 One researcher studying textbooks in the Nordic context is Kari Hernæs Nordberg.Footnote 11 In her analysis of Norwegian sex-education guidelines and textbooks from the 1950s, she shows how what she identifies as Christian sexual morals were stressed in the areas of both reproductive health and gendered relations. The male sexual drive was also more prominent in teaching materials during the period. One of Hernæs Nordberg’s main assertions is that state sex education was used as a dominant way of controlling youth sexuality: she underlines how, by depicting male sexuality as something stronger than female sexuality, the state also depicted it as harder to control. Hernæs Nordberg also shows how Norwegian school sex education tried to shape youth sexuality toward a stable family life. Since her analysis only consists of material from the 1950s, this study provides an important contribution to our knowledge about similar norms and possible changes over a longer period. Norway and Sweden have a similar history regarding the early introduction of state sex education, although Norway seems to have been more conservative than Sweden in some respects.Footnote 12

The History of Masturbation

The Western history of sexuality has often been characterized by great suspicion toward forms of sexual behavior that are disconnected from reproductive heterosexuality, such as homosexuality or oral sex. Many forms of sexual behavior have been condemned or even considered illegal over a long period of time. During the twentieth century, these perceptions were challenged, and a more progressive view of sexuality emerged, with support from the growing field of scientific study on sexuality.Footnote 13 Masturbation is another example of sexual behavior that has changed from being condemned to being accepted as a normal expression of sexuality in the Western world.

Masturbation was a subject for both medical and psychological research during the twentieth century, with a special focus on its effects on children and young people. Over time, insights into masturbation have thus shifted dramatically. During the nineteenth century and the earlier decades of the twentieth century, a common perception of masturbation was that it posed a significant risk, especially for the young.Footnote 14 This was also Freud’s opinion, a fact that helped to spread this misconception widely. Freud eventually changed his mind on masturbation, stating that perhaps it was not the cause of mental illness, but rather the other way around: a neurotic person was more prone to masturbating.Footnote 15 We can see this as an early shift in the perception of masturbation.

Following new medical and psychological insights, researchers eventually abandoned the idea that masturbation was risky. In the 1940s, most professionals agreed that it did not harm either children or adults. This was supported by the Kinsey Reports, as they were known, which showed how common masturbation actually was.Footnote 16 The professional shift on whether masturbation was causing harm came during the 1940s, providing a clear motivation for the starting point of this article. At this time, the medical and psychological literature agreed that masturbation was harmless, but popular belief in its risks remained deeply rooted.

The view that masturbation was harmful thus changed over time. There was a greater air of taboo around female masturbation, however.Footnote 17 The issue of women’s orgasm and masturbation was brought up in the Kinsey Reports, which stated that “among all types of sexual activity, masturbation is, however, the one in which the female most frequently reaches orgasm.”Footnote 18 The report also showed that masturbation was common among women. This, along with other types of medical and psychological research on women’s sexuality, was used by the feminist movement during the 1960s and ’70s as an argument for girls’ right to sex education about women’s genitals and their right to sexual pleasure. An example of this is the book Our Bodies, Ourselves, which highlighted the need for girls to be taught how to masturbate.Footnote 19

A similar discussion about women’s orgasm took place in Sweden during this time. Very little of the discussion in daily newspapers, however, was about the responsibility schools should have in educating girls and boys on how women reach orgasm. We can thus see that, although there was a growing social movement interested in discussing women’s sexuality, in valuing and affirming it along with women’s right to sexual pleasure, those discussions were not at all about schools’ responsibility on this particular issue. The women’s movement agreed that sex education could empower women and girls to take control over their own bodies—another example of a changing discourse about sexuality during the period I am investigating. In this article, I analyze the extent to which this was visible in official guidelines and school textbooks, with Sweden generally following the same pattern in the discursive change.Footnote 20 Sweden can be seen as a kind of progressive example of how teaching materials adopted the new discourse early on. Anne-Li Lindgren, for example, has observed that a 1954 school radio program described masturbation as something common and uncontroversial, and as something that both boys and girls did.Footnote 21

When it comes to female masturbation, one can clearly see how the masturbation-positive discourse spread, mainly during the latter decades of the twentieth century. Books, newspaper articles, and art that portrayed female masturbation in a positive way became widespread.Footnote 22 The marketing of sex aids for women also contributed to this masturbation-positive discourse.

The masturbation discourse was thus renegotiated in medical, psychological, and sexological contexts during the twentieth century, as well as in public contexts. However, how masturbation has been covered in education—especially for children—has not been addressed to any great extent. The case of masturbation as a sexual activity is also of particular interest as a distinct example of a discourse that changed over a fairly short period of time.

Previous research has revealed significant differences in how children’s, adolescents’, and adults’ masturbation has been perceived.Footnote 23 As a legacy of the earlier decades of the twentieth century and Freud’s ideas at that time, the opinion that young children’s masturbation was natural and harmless was widespread. Nevertheless, even after masturbation discourse changed, and the practice was no longer viewed as dangerous, adolescents who masturbated were considered at greater risk of falling into harmful habits. Young people were specifically considered being at risk of compulsive sexual behavior. However, by the later twentieth century, as previous research has shown, the risk of adult masturbation shifting from a healthy act to a compulsive one was rarely emphasized in the masturbation discourse.Footnote 24

It is crucial to analyze masturbation itself as an expression of sexuality. In this article, a guiding premise is that masturbation is a sexual behavior. It is a physical activity aimed at generating sexual pleasure. However, different cultures in different times have perceived it in different ways. In that respect, masturbation is thus socially situated, and representations of masturbation give us a clue about how the larger picture of sexuality has been painted. We know from extensive research that the socially changing aspects of sexuality can give us in-depth insights into our society and how people act and are perceived within it.

We can thus see that the discourse on masturbation changed during the second half of the twentieth century. Masturbation as a sexual activity was de-pathologized, and women’s sexuality and orgasm also received more attention. Identifying if and how this was expressed in Swedish teaching materials is the starting point for my analysis.

Analyzing Guidelines and Textbooks

After medical and psychological research established that masturbation is not associated with any risks, experts began to see it as a sexual activity with a special status. Unlike intercourse, oral sex, or petting, it carries no risk of sexually transmitted diseases, unwanted pregnancy, or abuse—problems that sex education has aimed to solve and that have been highlighted by previous research on sex ed. And, as I stated above, it is also a sexual activity that is not related to gendered relationships, because it is by definition a solitary activity.

In terms of masturbation, after the discursive change, no longer was risk associated with the activity and there was thus no problem left to solve. Therefore, it is especially interesting to study how official guidelines and teaching materials discussed masturbation in particular. What norms were mediated through the descriptions of this allegedly risk-free sexual activity?

The Swedish school system has a strong tradition of being centrally regulated and well documented, which provides a solid foundation for studying the history of its curricula. Its sex education program is no exception; however, it has not yet been particularly well studied. The Swedish National School Board published guidelines on sex education, which included lesson plans, and the Swedish state approval board for textbooks (Statens läroboksnämnd) oversaw the sex ed content of textbooks.

This study is based on two types of empirical material. The first is the official sex ed guidelines, the first set of which was published in 1945, with subsequent new guidelines released in 1952, 1956, 1977, and 1995.Footnote 25 In some of the examples I give here, I have also highlighted revisions to these manuals. We know that these materials influenced sex ed instruction because the teachers actively used the guidelines that the school board made available.

The guidelines were detailed and gave a clear indication of the content that the school authorities wished teachers to convey, which consisted primarily of two aspects of sex education: (1) adult sexual life and reproduction, and (2) issues connected to adolescence and the lives of young schoolchildren. A biological perspective dominated both aspects.

The other material I used to analyze representations of masturbation is textbooks. Among the textbooks I selected, it is difficult to determine the extent to which different books have been used in Swedish schools. Sweden’s state approval board for textbooks published lists of approved books, but it is not possible to obtain information about how widespread they actually were in schools. In order to settle on a representative sample, I consulted a catalog of textbooks compiled at the library of the Teachers Training College in Uppsala, Sweden. Uppsala University had one of the largest teacher education programs in Sweden during the twentieth century and has incorporated textbooks from across the entire century into its library. These textbooks were thus used by student teachers during the twentieth century and can serve as representative examples. The collection consists of around 250 textbooks, categorized as “natural science” and published during the period 1945-2000.Footnote 26 I combed through this collection, looking for textbooks that covered sex education, and specifically masturbation. A total of twenty-eight books met these criteria and were selected for analysis.

I have chosen 1945-2000 as my period of study because that is the time span in which the official guidelines were published, extending to five years after the last published guideline. This is a period that in many ways saw major changes in terms of sexuality—and especially women’s. Swedish women gained access to contraception and free abortion, which provided the basis for what has come to be known as the “sexual revolution.” In addition, Sweden declassified homosexuality as an illness in 1979. The period thus entailed extensive social changes regarding views on women’s sexuality, reproductive health, and, at least on paper, a more tolerant approach to homosexuals.

Despite these advances, Swedish sex education did not change much during the period. Making it compulsory did not involve any major changes in the actual teaching. The structure of the subject and the teaching remained fairly similar throughout the second half of the twentieth century. The sex-liberal wave in Sweden thus had little impact on sex education, although there have been those who sought to emphasize its more radical aspects. One of the few changes that did take place during the period is that the guidelines began to acknowledge that even teenagers had a sex life: sex was not only for adults in a monogamous heterosexual relationship.

The Masturbator: Age and Gender

To identify the sexual norms set out in the official guidelines and textbooks, I begin my analysis on the basis of the described identity of the masturbator. Is it implied that masturbating is a sexual activity more common among men and boys than women and girls, or is it explicitly stated? Is masturbation described as occurring at specific ages? Is there a pattern, and does it change over time?

In the earliest set of guidelines, published in 1945, masturbation is included in a suggested lesson plan for year six, with a special focus on boys’ masturbation.Footnote 27 However, a passage on bad habits among pupils does emphasize that masturbation is not as unusual among girls as one might think, and a footnote states that girls can also stimulate their genitals for sexual pleasure, either intentionally or unintentionally (omedvetet) by, for example, cycling .Footnote 28 I should emphasize that I have not seen any examples of boys’ masturbation being described as unintentional. Unintentional masturbation seems to be something specific to girls—which could also be a sign of how a male norm drives representations of masturbation. Unlike boys, girls in these representations seem to be so disconnected from the act that they are not even aware of what they are doing.

In the 1956 revision of the guidelines, the emphasis on female masturbation is stronger. Here, female masturbation is even highlighted in the lesson plan—where we read that both boys and girls masturbate.Footnote 29

The 1977 guidelines present a definition of masturbation that makes it seem as though it were specific to sexually mature individuals.Footnote 30 This stands in contrast to representations elsewhere stating that self-satisfaction occurs at all ages, even in infancy. But these guidelines make a qualification: “It is uncertain whether orgasm can be induced at a very early age.”Footnote 31 We can observe this statement in dialogue with the previously mentioned definition, where orgasm is described as part of masturbation. It is interesting that the connection between masturbation and orgasm is emphasized in these guidelines to such an extent that one needs to address the question whether small children can even have an orgasm. Thus, in this version of the guidelines, there seems to be a kind of “orgasm norm” that defines, or at least relates to, masturbation.

In their discussion about who masturbates, the 1977 guidelines also state that masturbation is most common during puberty and adolescence, because “the sexual drive is strong” during this period. But, the section, continues, “the opportunities in our culture to reach orgasm through intercourse are limited.”Footnote 32 This sheds light on a new norm linked to the masturbator: celibacy. The absence of an active sex life is directly linked to the need for masturbation. This is an example of how these guidelines have contributed to the socialization of procreative behavior. The masturbator was a person who could not get sexual satisfaction in the most desirable way—through intercourse. I will return to this topic below.

The 1977 guidelines also present specific statistics on young people. As part of extensive research and in preparation for writing the new guidelines, a state commission conducted a survey of young people’s sexual habits, including on masturbation. The guidelines highlight the survey’s finding that masturbation was practiced by 90 percent of teenage boys and 60-70 percent of girls, respectively.Footnote 33 There is no further discussion beyond the presentation of these figures.

Although there are no direct references to it, the same study seems to form the statistical basis of young people’s activity in the 1995 guidelines, with figures that are largely the same: 90 percent of boys and 60 percent of girls report having masturbated.Footnote 34 It is worth noting that the range of 60-70 percent for girls drops to 60 percent in this later version, which we could interpret as the author implying that girls have less extensive masturbation habits than do boys. The accompanying text develops precisely this point. It expresses the belief that girls and women encounter more stigma regarding female sexuality, and that this could be a reason why they masturbate less. However, the guidelines demonstrate a bias against female sexuality, with one particular passage describing how boys’ sexuality is “more disconnected, as an independent skill” than girls’.Footnote 35 The guidelines further state that girls’ views on sex are more closely linked to relationships, and that—according to interviews—women find it meaningless to masturbate because, for them, sexuality is synonymous with a relationship. Here we see the inverse of the previously mentioned logical assumption about masturbation: in the 1977 guidelines, celibacy was a reason to masturbate, whereas according to the 1995 guidelines, for girls, the absence of a relationship is a reason not to masturbate.

Moving on to the textbooks, almost every one reviewed in this study not only describes the habit of masturbation but also identifies who the masturbator is, with a special focus on age. This is the case, for example, in one of the earlier textbooks in this study, Säg som det är, magistern! (Tell It Like It Is, Teacher!), from 1954, in which the section on masturbation takes the form of a lesson.Footnote 36 The teacher does not use the word “masturbation,” but simply discusses boys and girls touching their genitals. (This instance stands as an exception because most other books use the word.) This book was intended for children ages 9-12; thus, it is possible to interpret the text as a way of giving the children a description of masturbation that was not directly linked to their sexual instincts—an approach that was more or less reserved for adolescents, as shown in other textbooks.

This disinclination to relate masturbation to sexuality can be found in another textbook targeting younger children, Du och jag och livet (You and me and life), a textbook for ages 7-9.Footnote 37 In this book, the author begins by directly addresses children, “When you were little, you learned to recognize many things around you. You also learned to recognize your body.”Footnote 38 The text continues with a description of how we are allowed to touch our own bodies, and how it sometimes feels good. Masturbation is represented as “playing with your privates” (leka med stjärten), de-emphasizing any possible sexual motive.

Another example of a book concerning pre-adolescent children and their habits is Så kom du till (Where You Came From), published in 1961 by legendary Swedish sex educator Elise Ottesen-Jensen.Footnote 39 This book also describes masturbation as a non-sexual activity when it is performed by younger children. Ottesen-Jensen’s main focus in the section concerning masturbation is on younger children; it describes how young children are guided by their curiosity in experiencing their bodies.Footnote 40

Two other textbooks cover the masturbation habits of younger children, in this case preschool children. The first of these, Individ, samhälle och sexualliv (Individual, Society and Sexual Life), from 1956, states that it is especially common for children aged 4-6 to masturbate.Footnote 41 The same ages appear in a textbook from 1963, Biologi: människokroppen (Biology: The Human Body), which states that children aged 4-6 are prone to masturbate.Footnote 42 Furthermore, it stands as an exception to the other texts in that it does make the correlation between young children and sexuality, since it describes masturbation as a way of reaching sexual satisfaction, emphasizing that younger children experience “certain feelings of pleasure” when touching themselves.Footnote 43 Representations of younger, pre-adolescent children as masturbators are otherwise rare, and seem to disappear over time—even though several books from the 1970s onward discuss masturbation as something done by “many” or even “everyone” (and at all ages), although not specifically younger children.Footnote 44

Most textbooks, however, seem to connect the practice of masturbation to adolescent children—that is, their actual readers. This is most evident in the earlier textbooks, although the phenomenon occurs in textbooks throughout the period analyzed.Footnote 45 Most textbooks do not address their readers directly, but the continually recurring descriptions of adolescents as masturbators indicate that they must have had their readers in mind. A 1965 textbook, Sexualundervisning för mellanstadiet (Sex Education for Middle School), follows a distinct pattern:

The body is affected by hormones; the girl starts to develop into a woman and the boy into a man. This change is called sexual maturation or puberty. Now the sexual interest is also awakening, the so-called sex drive. It is common for girls and boys of this age to satisfy their sex drive by touching their genitals. It’s called masturbating. It’s completely natural and entirely harmless.Footnote 46

This quote is particularly representative of textbooks with a focus on the adolescent masturbating. It seems to follow a chain of events that is lacking in textbooks focusing on children, adults, or people of all ages. Puberty starts, the sex drive increases (or appears), and this triggers an interest in exploring one’s own body. The same narrative occurs in several textbooks over the period investigated. In the 1974 textbook Biologi (Biology), the increased sex drive during puberty leads to an increased interest in the genitals, thus leading to young people “trying different ways to relieve their sex drive.”Footnote 47 Furthermore, this book states that it is most common to masturbate on one’s own, or with “friends of the same sex”—making a special exception to the otherwise prevailing consensus in textbooks from all periods that masturbating is something one does by oneself. As an example of a same-sex sexuality activity appearing in a text that noticeably does not address homosexuality, mutual masturbation is here an exception to behavior that would otherwise be categorized based on one’s sexual orientation. My main point regarding this specific quote, however, is that it follows a common pattern in its representation of masturbation and the masturbator. Even in later textbooks, this is the most common pattern, as in Biologi 2 from 1988, where it is described even more distinctly.Footnote 48 As a result of increasing sexual maturity, the interest in sex and sexuality also increases, which leads to “exploring your own genitals.” The text continues: “For almost all boys and for a lot of girls, this exploration develops into masturbation.”Footnote 49 In this text, it is clear that exploring one’s genitals alone does not constitute masturbation. To constitute masturbation, the exploration must lead to orgasm.Footnote 50

In conclusion, throughout the period, both official guidelines and textbooks emphasize masturbation as an activity for younger boys and girls who are not yet involved in a sexual relationship. This emphasis is of course a nod to the implied readership, since the textbooks were written for schoolchildren. But it is also an expression of the renegotiated masturbation discourse within the society at large. The previous discourse, aiming to control children’s sexuality, had emphasized how harmful masturbation was, specifically for younger people. When the discourse changed, the need to control the sexual activities of boys and girls persisted. By describing masturbation as an activity primarily for adolescents, the official guidelines and textbooks contributed to the establishment of an approved ideal sexuality.

This becomes more apparent when we juxtapose discussions about the age of the masturbator with those about gender. During the entire period of study, boys are described as more prone to masturbating than girls, in the official guidelines as well as in the textbooks. Although examples where masturbation is mentioned as a sexual activity for “both boys and girls” do recur throughout the period, it is still more associated with male sexuality. Footnote 51 Textbooks from the earlier decades of this study commonly stress that “almost all men and a large number of women” masturbate, indicating that this is a sexual activity that is less common among women.Footnote 52 This notion recurs even during the latter years of the period.Footnote 53

The sexual revolution and the focus on women’s sexuality and orgasm, which was part of the public debate during the late 1960s and ’70s, had little impact on guidelines or textbooks. In both, women and girls were still described as less sexual beings than men and boys. The new discourse asserted that masturbation was an expression of the young male sex drive and that the young female sex drive was—or should be—less prominent. In that respect, the guidelines conveyed the notion that female sexuality had more restrictive rules; hence, the renegotiated discourse sought to control girls to a greater extent than boys.

Reasons to Masturbate

I have already touched upon the question of the motives for masturbation, but should also mention that the earliest guidelines, from 1945, featured little discussion on the topic. Then, masturbation was simply mentioned as a “bad habit” (ovana), especially among young people.Footnote 54 By the time of the revised version in 1952, this “bad habit” had become just a “habit” (vana).Footnote 55 However, I should also emphasize that these guidelines did portray masturbation as a problem in certain contexts. Under the heading “Advice and instructions regarding the treatment of students with bad habits in the sexual area: Measures by the school after sexual abuse of pupils,”Footnote 56 masturbation receives special mention via the phrase “epidemics of masturbation.”Footnote 57 How these epidemics unfold is not explained; the only thing we are told is that they occur when groups of pupils somehow let masturbation get out of hand. One guess is that the actual problem may have been related to masturbation in groups, since this is described as a problem in other literature during the period.Footnote 58 This epidemic, however, is described as a matter of unwanted behavior that needs to be corrected by adults.

In the 1977 guidelines, as previously mentioned, the absence of sexual partners and the lack of opportunities for adolescent boys to ejaculate as part of intercourse are mentioned as motives for masturbation.Footnote 59 The guidelines elaborate: “Even in adulthood, self-satisfaction is common as a temporary or permanent substitute for intercourse.”Footnote 60 However, “self-satisfaction” is not always positive, according to this guide, which clarifies that masturbation as a substitute for intercourse can feel positive, but, “used as a surrogate for a desired but hindered human contact, it can lead to feelings of emptiness and loneliness.”Footnote 61 This is a clear example of a strong intercourse norm: masturbation is problematized in relation to intercourse; intercourse is the norm and masturbation is the substitute. The guidelines thus contribute to the socialization of procreative behavior.

The motives for masturbating are described in fairly general terms in the 1995 guidelines, which state that it can be a way to handle one’s own desires.Footnote 62 Deviating from previous guidelines, however, is the assertion that, this time around, group masturbation has an explicit role, with the author motivating and explaining this phenomenon. The guidelines state:

Group masturbation among boys before and during puberty has an exploratory character, comparing bodily functions and development. This is a confirmation of identity and also shows that, although these actions may be secret in relation to others, it is a matter of relatively little shame between the boys, even if the situation itself can be perceived as tense.Footnote 63

This focus on boys’ sexual exploration introduces a new norm regarding masturbation. An act that was previously described as purely negative (an “epidemic”) and something that needs to be curbed has now been elevated to a way of confirming boys’ identities and a way for them to compare physical development. A similar discussion on girls’ sexuality does not exist in the 1995 guidelines.

We can thus see the mediation of strong gender and age norms in the guidelines over the period of study. Masturbation is primarily described, directly or indirectly, as an act for boys in their teens or older. In the 1977 guidelines, we also see a hierarchical order in terms of sexual activity, with intercourse deemed superior to masturbation. The same hierarchy appears in the 1995 guidelines, but mainly as a justification for girls’ lower sex drive regarding masturbation.

Although masturbation went from being described as a “bad habit” to just “habit” in the official guidelines, there were exceptions in the textbooks. One of the textbooks in this study, Folke Borg and C. W. Herlitz’s Vår Kropp (Our Body), is an interesting example of how intertwined the guidelines and textbooks were. Borg was a headmaster, and Herlitz was chair of the Swedish National School Board’s school hygiene department. Accordingly, he had been involved in producing the first guidelines on sex education. In Vår Kropp, we can find the exact same wording as in the earliest guidelines. As late as 1963, in the sixth edition of the book, masturbation was still being described as a “bad habit,”Footnote 64 and it was also described as such in a 1959 textbook by two other authors.Footnote 65

The intercourse norm described above was prominent in the textbooks, and is a key example of how procreative behavior is socialized. In their discussion about reasons to masturbate, authors most commonly highlighted it as a substitute for intercourse, or as a way for young people to get to know their bodies while waiting to start a sexual relationship with another person. As some authors returned to the subject in other books over the decades, we can see the recurrence of a specific phrase: “[Masturbation is] especially common during puberty before the sex drive can be satisfied through more regular intercourse.”Footnote 66 This norm thus existed in teaching materials even before the guidelines in 1977, but can be said to have been further confirmed when it was included in the guidelines. As early as the 1950s, an active sex life between two adults was described as the ideal, and masturbation was the substitute:

In adults, self-satisfaction occurs quite often and can be considered an emergency solution, when there is no other way to [achieve] sexual ejaculation. When two spouses, who are used to regular sexual intercourse, are separated due to illness, travel, or other reasons, masturbation can become a surrogate for intercourse. The same applies to death, divorce, etc.Footnote 67

This textbook continues with an example from the animal world, which describes how masturbation occurs among animals as a substitute for mating. Masturbation is thus defined as a sexual activity that is mainly for those who do not have a partner with whom to have a regular sex life, an assumption that is restated in several textbooks.Footnote 68 This also shows from the outset that masturbation was given a position subordinate to that of sexual intercourse between two adults in a relationship.

In many of the textbooks, it is also clear that masturbation serves as a step for young people on the way toward the ultimate goal: to become a sexually active adult in a relationship. This is clearly expressed, for example, in a book from 1958: “Self-satisfaction can be said to be a developmental stage on the road to a full-fledged sex life.”Footnote 69 The argument goes even deeper in another book, published in 1960:

As a rule, young people are not emotionally mature enough to start a sexual relationship. Nor should they become parents so early. They cannot yet support a family or take on the responsibility of raising children. It is therefore natural that they satisfy their sexual needs through masturbation.Footnote 70

This quote clearly shows a strong association between masturbation and adolescence, based on the assumption that other ways of satisfying sexual urges are not desirable for young people. The excerpt also assumes that young people have sexual needs and that these should be met. Masturbation thus becomes something that takes place in anticipation of the ideal sex life: the romantic relationship, which in this example is also synonymous with becoming a parent.

When analyzing the official guidelines and textbooks’ descriptions of the motives for masturbating, it becomes clear that, to a very large extent, the renegotiated discourse emphasizes sex in a heterosexual relationship as the ideal—a strong example of the socialization of procreative sexual behavior.

Conclusions

Sex education in Sweden has often been described as progressive. On the basis of this study’s results, however, we can see that mediated norms about gender and sexuality have nevertheless been stable over time, and that they conform to patriarchal social structures. In this respect, the findings of this article can provide an example of the inflexibility of education in comparison to the women’s emancipation movement. Conservative aspects of sex education, identified by previous research as dominant during the mid-twentieth century in Nordic society, appear to have remained consistent across the entire second half of the century.Footnote 71 It is also worth noting that the increasing interest in women’s sexuality identified by authors such as Sauerteig is not visible in the present study.Footnote 72

As previous research has shown, the discourse on masturbation changed dramatically during the twentieth century. It shifted from being perceived as something harmful for both children and adults to being accepted by the medical and psychiatric profession as natural and harmless. This study analyzed official school guidelines and textbooks from Swedish schools that were published during the later period, after masturbation discourse was redefined. My analysis has shown how Swedish schools related to the new discourse through their teaching materials, and how textbook discussions of masturbation served as an aspect of mediated norms about sexuality. We can thus conclude that state-controlled guidelines and textbooks aimed to play a crucial role in young people’s socialization into a state-approved sexuality.

A clear finding of the analysis is that boys were portrayed as sexual beings to a greater extent than girls, even though girls’ masturbation also had a prominent place in the material. Guidelines and textbooks stated that both girls and boys masturbated, but they also repeatedly stressed that it was more common for boys to do so, often supporting that assertion with statistics. However, it must also be emphasized that the most common description in the textbooks of the masturbator’s identity was gender-neutral. While it was more common for boys to be described as sexual, that does not mean that girls were described as asexual. The descriptions thus recognized girls’ sexuality, but in those that ranked the prevalence of masturbation by gender, it was always boys’ masturbation habits that appeared more frequently in textbook discussions. We can understand this larger focus as a product of the established masturbation discourse.

Furthermore, both guidelines and textbooks contributed to the socialization of procreative behavior, as made especially evident by what the materials presented as motives for masturbation. A distinct intercourse norm recurred throughout the period. In the descriptions, masturbation was often for those who have either not yet started an active heterosexual sex life (i.e. young people without a partner), or adults (i.e. the sexually mature) who could not have an active sex life because of a partner’s absence, be it temporary or permanent.

Masturbation, according to the established late-twentieth century norm, was thus the act of a person who had reached sexual maturity and was thus able to have intercourse with a person of the opposite sex; and often, it was a substitute for intercourse. This established a hierarchy in which intercourse was superior to masturbation, and, in some cases, masturbation even served as a way for young people to be socialized into an intercourse norm, by learning about their own sexual needs in order to later use this knowledge in their sexual relationships. We can also understand this perspective as a form of distancing from the masturbation of children and young people, even though the latter was consistently acknowledged: because the intercourse norm was so prominent, by comparison, the child’s masturbation was devalued. This is another way the state controlled the child’s sexual needs.

It is also worth highlighting that throughout the period there was a kind of dialogue with the previous discourse. There was a recurring priority in both the guidelines and the textbooks to emphasize that earlier generations thought masturbation was dangerous. Pointing out that now one knows better about masturbation and explicitly distancing that perception from previous ones is a clear way of validating the new discourse. By rejecting the views of previous decades on masturbation as harmful, the guidelines and textbooks sought to ensure their own professional legitimacy.

Both teaching materials and guidelines were consistent in establishing the new discourse on masturbation as not harmful throughout the period. However, the sexual-liberal changes highlighted by previous research, in which women’s sexuality and masturbation have a greater position during both the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the late twentieth century, were not visible in the material I analyzed in the present study.

In conclusion, we can see that official Swedish guidelines and teaching materials throughout the period mediated norms about sexuality, with boys’ sexuality receiving more attention than girls’, and with a strong intercourse norm contributing to a hierarchy in which masturbation was less important than heterosexual intercourse. This is of particular interest since masturbation per se is a sexual activity that is separated from gendered relationships. From a broader perspective, these guidelines and materials have revealed how state-controlled curricula created norms about gender and sexuality, and thereby contributed to the education and development of a sexual citizenship.

Sara Backman Prytz is a historian of education and an assistant professor at Uppsala University, Sweden. This article is a part of a research project entitled “Swedish Sex Education 1882-2014: Norms about Sexuality in Educational History Research,” funded by the Swedish Research Council (DNR: 2018-05311). She would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments.

Disclosure statement

The author reports no potential conflict of interest.

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71 Nordberg, ”Sex Education in the 1950s.”

72 Sauerteig, “Representations of Pregnancy and Childbirth in (West) German Sex Education Books, 1900s-1970s.”