Female promiscuity
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- | '''Female infidelity''' is the unfaithfulness of the female partner in a [[sexual relationship]]. It has been the object of literature since ''[[The Loves of the Gods]]'', ''[[1001 Nights]]'', where it is the center of the frame tale and the [[antifeminist literature of the Middle Ages]]. A cheated husband is commonly called a [[cuckold]] because he is at risk of raising another male's offspring. | + | '''Female infidelity''' is the unfaithfulness of the female partner in a [[sexual relationship]]. It has been the object of literature since ''[[The Loves of the Gods]]'' of Greek mythology. In the ''[[1001 Nights]]'', '''female infidelity''' is at the center of the frame tale and the trope is often mentioned in [[antifeminist literature of the Middle Ages]]. |
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+ | A cheated husband is commonly called a [[cuckold]] because he is at risk of raising another male's offspring. | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 14:37, 30 March 2013
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Female infidelity is the unfaithfulness of the female partner in a sexual relationship. It has been the object of literature since The Loves of the Gods of Greek mythology. In the 1001 Nights, female infidelity is at the center of the frame tale and the trope is often mentioned in antifeminist literature of the Middle Ages.
A cheated husband is commonly called a cuckold because he is at risk of raising another male's offspring.
See also
- Casta est, quam nemo rogavit
- Female promiscuity
- Female sexuality
- Infidelity
- Cuckold
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In fiction
- The Unfaithful Wife by Claude Chabrol.
- The Adulterous Woman by Albert Camus.
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