
Turns out feminism can be a
 huge turn-on. Or at least, a general equitable division of household 
labor is. A new study, which will be published in the Journal of Marriage and Family that
 couples who share chores — a behavior  considered "nontraditional" by 
many — have more sex. And really, what's better than lots of sex 
combined with equal rights?
Cornell University professor Sharon Sassler, one of the authors of the study, writes,
Contemporary couples who adhere to a more egalitarian division of labor are the only couples who have experienced an increase in sexual frequency compared to their counterparts of the past. Other groups – including those where the woman does the bulk of the housework – have experienced declines in sexual frequency.
This is important, especially because previous studies have suggested the exact opposite. In 2014, the New York Times Magazine their cover story about that concluded, "Both husbands and wives in couples with more traditional housework arrangements report higher sexual frequency."Comedian John Oliver recently gaps like this, critiquing the way the scientific studies are reported. Because, yes, many truths can exist at once, so it's possible to conduct two similar studies that have conflicting results. The full details of Sassler's study are yet to be published, so once we know the size of her sample group and method, we can better evaluate the meaning of her study.
Sassler's study  the results of previous studies. Jenny Anderson  for Quartz
 that they compared their study with older data from 1992 to 2006. The 
most recent study they found that "couples who reported sharing 
housework equally had sex 6.8 times per month, on average, or about once
 more per month than those where the woman does more 'routine 
housework." So maybe things are just evolving.
Furthermore, historian Stephanie Coontz  that
 the definition of "successful" heterosexual love has greatly evolved 
over the past 70 years. She says, "[Sassler's] study — and others — 
reflect more equalized power between men and women. In marriages of the 
1950s and 1960s, wives often reported having sex more often than they 
wanted because they were dependent on their husbands."
So, yay for feminism. Yay for sex. Yay.
 
 

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