Against Nature?

History

The exhibit contains pictures, animals and models of species known to engage in homosexuality, showing among other things southern right whales and giraffes engaged in same-sex pairing. The museum says one of its aims is to "help to de-mystify homosexuality among people... we hope to reject the all too well known argument that homosexual behaviour is a crime against nature." Most of the exhibition is based on the works of Bruce Bagemihl and Joan Roughgarden.

The exhibition was initiated by the Norwegian Archive, Library and Museum Authority (ABM) as part of their "Break" program, encouraging museums, libraries and archives to do research and exhibitions of controversial and taboo subjects. The exhibition is a direct answer to this challenge, and has received financial support from ABM. The exhibition ran from September 2006 to August 2007.

Reception

It was well received, including by the museum's regular visiting groups, mainly families.[1] The exhibit has been on show in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, Maastricht, Genova and in Stockholm (in the last as "Rainbow Animals"). The exhibition has been criticized by some philosophy scholars, who state that the exhibit misses the point of the original terminology attributed to homosexual activity as "against nature". Such activity was most properly said to be against nature because it was using the reproductive power for essentially un-reproductive acts.[2] Others criticize the conclusion that homosexuality in human society should be considered as natural and so acceptable, using the following argument: violence, including sexual violence, as well as cannibalism, exist among certain animal species, but it would be wrong to conclude that it should therefore be accepted in human society (an appeal to nature fallacy).

See also

  • Sexual orientation and biology

References

  1. Europe | Oslo gay animal show draws crowds. BBC News (2006-10-19). Retrieved on 2011-02-15.
  2. Skalko, John. "Is Sodomy Against Nature? A Thomistic Appraisal". The Heythrop Journal. 56: 759–768. doi:10.1111/heyj.12246.
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