Masters and Johnson Institute
38°38′19″N 90°15′47″W / 38.638719°N 90.263011°W / 38.638719; -90.263011
Virginia E. Johnson
The Masters and Johnson Institute (1964–1994) was the clinical and research foundation of sexologist duo Masters and Johnson. Located in Saint Louis, Missouri, the institute was established to study human sexuality with particular emphasis on the anatomy and physiology of human sexual response and the diagnosis and treatment of sexual dysfunctions.
Founded as the Reproductive Biology Research Foundation, the organization changed its name to the Masters and Johnson Institute in 1978; it closed in 1994.
History
After William H. Masters hired Virginia E. Johnson in 1957 as a research assistant on a project in human sexuality, they originally worked together in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Washington University in St. Louis, before continuing to create an independent research institution at 4910 Forest Park Avenue in the Central Medical Building in St. Louis in 1964, deliberately named the Reproductive Biology Research Foundation (rather than using the word "sex" in its title) to keep their work out of the limelight. The foundation did, in fact, conduct studies of conception, contraception, and infertility, although the major focus of its work was on advancing the scientific study of human sexuality.
Their work, which pioneered human sexuality as a science, was primarily conducted at this institute. They published books including Human Sexual Response (1966; OCLC 318151909) and Human Sexual Inadequacy (1970; OCLC 299881470).
Masters and Johnson married in 1971 and by 1978, at the urging of their board of directors, agreed to rename their foundation Masters & Johnson Institute believing that the institute's work might capitalize to a degree on their personal fame.
At the height of its operations, the institute included a multi-disciplinary staff of medical professionals (including specialists from the fields of obstetrics and gynecology, internal medicine and endocrinology, psychiatry, and nursing) as well as behavioral clinicians (including clinical psychologists, social workers, theologians, and pastoral counselors) and a dedicated biochemical and endocrine laboratory.
The institute conducted a wide range of workshop and seminar programs for health care professionals both in St. Louis and across the country and also ran a full-time training program for sex therapists. In addition to the research and educational work it conducted, and its world-renowned therapy program, the institute also spearheaded a drive during the 1970s to establish ethical guidelines for sex educators, therapists, and researchers.
The institute was closed when Masters retired in 1994.
Popular culture
The founders and their institute inspired the Showtime TV series Masters of Sex.
See also
External links
- v
- t
- e
- Abortion law
- Boys in the Sand
- Blue Movie
- Myra Breckinridge
- Deep Throat
- Divorce law by country
- Freedom of speech
- Freedom of the press
- Golden Age of Porn
- Loving v. Virginia
- Miller Test
- Obergefell v. Hodges
- "Porno chic"
- Pornography
- Pornography in the United States
- Swinging
- The Pill (1965)
- United States v. One Book Called Ulysses
- AIDS epidemic
- Kinsey Reports
- Masters and Johnson Institute
- Playboy
- Protests of 1968
- Stonewall riots
- Summer of Love
- Pat Califia
- Marilyn Chambers
- Aleister Crowley
- Gerard Damiano
- Betty Dodson
- Larry Flynt
- Sigmund Freud
- Ralph Ginzburg
- Al Goldstein
- Bob Guccione
- Terri Hall
- Fred Halsted
- Nina Hartley
- Hugh Hefner
- Magnus Hirschfeld
- David Hurles
- Virginia Johnson
- Alfred Kinsey
- Linda Lovelace
- Robert Mapplethorpe
- William Margold
- William Masters
- Radley Metzger
- Bettie Page
- Wilhelm Reich
- Marquis de Sade
- Margaret Sanger
- Annie Sprinkle
- Andy Warhol
- Ruth Westheimer
- Oscar Wilde
- 55th Street Playhouse
- Caldron (sex club)
- Catacombs (sex club)
- Club Baths
- The Factory
- Gay bathhouse
- LGBT culture
- Mineshaft (gay club)
- New Andy Warhol Garrick Theatre
- Plato's Retreat
- Sandstone retreat
- South of Market
- Counterculture of the 1960s
- Feminist views of pornography
- Freudo-Marxism
- Hippie
- Inside Deep Throat (2005 film)
- Kinsey (2004 film)
- LGBT
- Lust
- Lovelace (2013 film)
- Make Love, Not War: The Sexual Revolution: An Unfettered History (2001 book)
- The Notorious Bettie Page (2005 film)
- Peace movement
- Slut-shaming
- Whatever (1994 novel)