Top, bottom, switch#Top
{{Short description|Roles in BDSM practices}}
{{confuse|Top, bottom and versatile}}
{{more citations needed|date=August 2024}}
File:CSD 2006 Cologne BDSM 17.jpg couples, with the femme tops sitting on male bottoms who are kneeling, leashed and in handcuffs, at 2006 Cologne Pride, Germany.]]The terms top, bottom, and switch are used to describe an individual's role during a sexual act. They may more broadly denote a psychological, social, or sexual identity, or indicate one's usual preference.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iVUhAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT111|title=A Critical Inquiry into Queer Utopias|isbn=978-1137311979|publisher=Springer|last=Jones|first=Angela|date=2013|pages=111–112}} Terms top and bottom refer to active and passive roles, not to who is physically on top in a particular sexual act.{{Cite web |title=Dominant Honorifics in BDSM |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-bdsm-facts/dominant-honorifics |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}}{{Cite web |title=Submissive Honorifics in BDSM |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-bdsm-facts/submissive-honorifics |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}} A switch is someone who can act as both a top and bottom. Older terms of "active", "passive", and "versatile" are still often used, especially in the context of gay sex.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MS8bAAAAYAAJ|title=Safe, Sane and Consensual: Contemporary Perspectives on Sadomasochism|isbn=978-0230517745|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|last1=Langdridge|first1=Darren|last2=Richards|first2= C.|last3=John Barker|first3=Meg|date=2007|page=140}}
Top
In BDSM, top can mean either a dominant partner in BDSM play or a partner who applies stimulation to another, and who may or may not be dominant.
Topping from the bottom refers to a person simultaneously adopting the role of bottom and dom. An example would be a gay man who prefers to be penetrated (a bottom) yet is the one who 'runs the show.' The bottom decides when, how, and for how long the top will penetrate him, and the top goes along with the bottom's desires. The bottom is not the one doing the penetrating yet he is certainly not being submissive either. He's the dom and the penetrating top is the submissive one in the dynamic.
A service top is a person who applies sensation or control to a bottom, but does so at the bottom's explicit instructions.
Bottom
File:Submissive BDSM - Inspection pose.jpg in "Inspection" pose - used in some forms of D/s dynamics.]]
Bottom can mean either a submissive partner in sexual play, or a partner who receives stimulation from another who may or may not be submissive.
A bottom in BDSM does not have to be the submissive; for example, a female dominant may command her bottom to penetrate her.
Switch
A switch is someone who participates in BDSM activities sometimes as a top and other times as a bottom or sometimes as a dominant and other times as a submissive.{{Cite web |title=Switches and Switching in Kink & BDSM |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-bdsm-facts/switches |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}} This is sometimes referred to as being versatile.
Dominant and submissive
{{details|Dominance and submission}}
Those who take the superior position in dominance and submission scenes and relationships are called dominants, doms, or dommes (feminine), while those who take the subordinate position are called submissives or subs. A top filling the dominant role is not necessarily a dominant, and vice versa, and a bottom is not necessarily submissive. Other labels may be used depending on the individual or the relationship.
The main difference between a dominant and a top is that the dominant exhibits control within a power exchange dynamic, while a top exhibits control within a scene. A top may or may not be a dominant.{{Cite web |title=Dominant Honorifics in BDSM |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-bdsm-facts/dominant-honorifics |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}}
File:Folsom Bondage (cropped).jpg.]]
The main difference between a submissive and a bottom is that a submissive cedes power in a power exchange dynamic. A bottom may or may not be a submissive, as power exchange does not have to be a component of their kinky play.{{Cite web |title=Submissive Honorifics in BDSM |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-bdsm-facts/submissive-honorifics |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}}
Many distinguish top/bottom from dominant/submissive by seeing top/bottom as an expression of physical power, while dominant/submissive is an expression of psychological power. In both types of relationships - top/bottom and dominant/submissive - consent, negotiations, and mutual respect and support for one another are keys to healthy dynamics.
Beginning in the 1970s, in some American contexts, people would identify their interests by wearing a set of keys on the side of their belt or a color-coded handkerchief in their rear pockets.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VnwSEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT54|title=Sadomasochism and the BDSM Community in the United States: Kinky People Unite|isbn=978-1000346077|publisher=Routledge|last1=Stein|first1=Stephen K.|date=2021|page=54}} This practice, called flagging, began in the gay male subculture.{{Cite web |title=Sadism & Masochism |url=https://kynk101.com/kink-handbook/sadism-masochism |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=KYNK 101 |language=en-US}}
See also
{{Portal|Human sexuality}}
References
{{Reflist|2}}
Further reading
- Dossie Easton, Janet W. Hardy. The New Topping Book. Greenery Press, 2003. {{ISBN|1-890159-36-0}}.
- Person, Ethel S. / Terestman, Nettie / Myers, Wayne A. / Goldberg, Eugene L. / Salvadori, Carol: Gender differences in sexual behaviors and fantasies in a college population, 1989, erschienen in: Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, Bd. 15, Nr. 3, 1989, P. 187–198
- Janus, Samuel S. / Janus, Cynthia L., 1993 The Janus Report on Sexual Behavior, Wiley, New York
- Charles Moser, in Journal of Social Work and Human Sexuality 1988, (7;1, P.43–56)
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