Historically, many cultures have viewed female sexuality as being subordinate to
male sexuality, and as something to be controlled through restrictions on female behavior. Traditional cultural practices, such as enforced
modesty and
chastity, have tended to place restrictions principally on women, without imposing similar restrictions on men. According to
psychoanalytic literature, the "
Madonna–whore complex" is said to occur when a male desires sexual encounters only with women whom he sees as degraded (
whores) while he cannot desire sexually a respectable woman ("the Madonna"). This was first described by
Sigmund Freud. The interpretation of female sexuality is significantly different according to
C.G. Jung's psychological research. He explained the female libido as a precursor of cultural expression and personal creativity. He identified Freud's theories as the source of this significant misunderstanding, and theorized that the "rhythmic factor" is not merely a principle in the "nutritive phase" and later in sexuality, but that it is at the base of all emotional processes. Some controversial traditional cultural practices, such as
female genital mutilation (FGM), have been described as attempts at nullifying women's sexuality altogether. FGM continues to be practised in some parts of Africa and the Middle East, as well as in some
immigrant communities in Western countries, though it is widely outlawed. The procedure is typically carried out on young girls, before the age of 15. Methods employed to control female sexuality and behavior include the threat of death, such as
honor killings. The reason for such a killing may include refusing to enter an arranged marriage, being in a relationship that is disapproved by their relatives, having sex outside marriage, becoming the victim of rape, or dressing in ways which are deemed inappropriate. Another historical device used to control female sexual behavior was the
chastity belt, which is a locking item of clothing designed to prevent sexual intercourse. The belts were worn by women to protect their chastity, which included preventing
masturbation (such as by
fingering) or sexual access by unauthorized males. Prior to the
European colonization of North America,
Native American attitudes regarding female sexuality were generally open-minded, particularly for younger, un-married women. However, when Europeans arrived, more rigid views were enforced. These rigid views were especially restrictive for women, predominantly in
Puritan colonies. Following the European colonization of North America, there was the creation of the African American archetypes of the
Jezebel and
mammy. The Jezebel was characterized as a woman who was lewd, tempting and seductive. Mammies, also called Aunt Jemima, were maternal figures who were portrayed as content within the institution of slavery – always with a smile on her face as the white family took up her life and her entire world. These stereotyping frameworks not only justified slavery but also justified the rape and abuse of African American women as being sexually driven, sexual beings in the case of the Jezebel, or a being where sex and sexuality are the last things on a woman's mind because her world is taken up by the lives of her white masters in the case of the mammy. ==Modern studies==