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Abstract
Prior research has found that asexual people may fantasise or participate in activities typically
paradoxical when an asexual person is conceptualised as someone who does not experience
sexual attraction or desire. This research aimed to explore how kinks and fetishes are
were recruited via the first author’s social media accounts and asexuality forums to take part
in an online qualitative survey. The data were thematically analysed and three themes were
developed. In “Am I asexual?”: (How) can you be a kinky ace?, we discuss the feelings of
doubt or distress that some participants reported in relation to what was seemingly sometimes
understood as the paradox between their self-identity as asexual and their exploration of
kinks and fetishes, and how this was negotiated by these participants. In the second theme,
Between me and me’ and make believe: Kinks and fetishes as solo and imaginary, we report
on how kinks, fetishes, and fantasies were often understood in a solitary context and as either
undesirable – or impossible – to live out. In the final theme of Kink as a sensual enhancement
in relationships, we highlight the ways in which participants positioned their kinks and
fetishes as an agent for intimacy. These findings expand our knowledge and understanding of
how asexual people negotiate kinks and fetishes and capture the complexities of asexual
identities beyond a lack of sexual attraction or desire, particularly in relation to the notion of
autochorissexualism.
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 2
Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people negotiate their experiences of kinks and
fetishes
Since the early 2000s, a thriving asexual (or ‘ace’) community has developed,
predominantly online through the 119,000+ members of the Asexual Visibility and Education
does not experience sexual attraction’ (Asexual Visibility and Education Network, 2019).
Over the past decade, there has been growing public awareness and curiosity around
(Storms, 1980), has recently gained mainstream exposure in social media and online news
articles (e.g., Gordon, 2015; Wallis, 2012). The heightened visibility of asexuality is
illustrated in how some celebrities and public figures have openly declared themselves as
asexual. These include glamour model and bodybuilder Jodie Marsh (Wareham, 2017),
musician Jake Coco (Coco, 2016), and television personality Caitlin Jenner (Shenton, 2015).
The growing recognition of asexuality is also reflected in how the lesbian, gay, bisexual,
trans, and queer initialism LGBTQ has been expanded to sometimes encompass asexual
identities (e.g., LGBTQA) (Canning, 2016). This ever-increasing coverage of asexuality has
also been mirrored in the academic literature, where asexual theory and research has gathered
considerable momentum in recent years (Carrigan, Gupta & Morrison, 2013; Mitchell, 2016).
sexualities and it is vital to further our knowledge and understandings of the complexities of
asexuality and asexual identities (Mitchell, 2016; Vares, 2018). One such complexity is in
how asexual people might negotiate their identities in relation to practices which have
sometimes been situated as sexual (Sloan, 2015). In this paper, we report findings from a
qualitative online survey which sought to explore how asexual people who identified
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 3
themselves as having a kink or fetish understood and negotiated these kinks and fetishes in
Despite the growth in academic interest, research with asexual people is relatively
new and many aspects of asexuality remain underexplored (Carrigan, 2011; Chasin, 2015;
Vares, 2018). Carrigan (2011) has argued that simplistic one-line definitions of asexuality do
not demonstrate the diversity of the asexual community. Therefore, academic representations
of asexuality, to date, may not fully capture the heterogeneity and diversity of asexual
individuals (Carrigan et al., 2013, Yule, Brotto & Gorzalka, 2017a). Further, broad
attraction should be present (Mitchell, 2016). This means that asexuality could arguably be
understood as defined on the basis of something missing, and therefore as a “deficit identity”
(Reynolds & Taylor, 2005; also see Scott, McDonnell & Dawson, 2016, for a discussion of
how asexuality can be understood as a ‘negatively defined identity’, based on what it is not).
This focus on what is “lacking” has perhaps contributed to an overlooking of what is present
and fulfilling in the lives and relationships of asexual people. Additionally, it has been
highlighted that researchers need to move beyond scripts of sexual normality to further
understand asexuality (Przybylo, 2013). Asexual people may not feel sexual attraction, but
this does not preclude them from positively experiencing the desire to cuddle or have
(romantic or non-romantic) emotional connections and intimacy with another person (Brotto,
Knudson, Inskip, Rhodes & Erskine, 2010; Dawson, McDonnell & Scott, 2016; Scherrer,
2008). These types of factors challenge normative assumptions that attraction and
relationships inherently include sex and enable us to explore sensuality and a/sexuality in
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 4
asexual communities and noted in some psychological and sociological literature (e.g.,
Asexual Visibility and Education Network, 2015; Carrigan, 2011; Robbins, Low & Query,
2016; Scott et al., 2016; Yule, Brotto & Gorzalka, 2017b). The term asexual can therefore be
referred to as asexual spectrum identities (e.g., Carrigan, 2011; Pasquier, 2018; Robbins et
al., 2016). These include demisexual (the potential for sexual attraction to develop when an
emotional bond has formed; e.g., Asexuality Archive; Gupta, 2017; Yule et al., 2017b);
attraction, but is otherwise asexual; Asexuality Archive; Yule et al., 2017b); and identities
whereby romantic attraction is considered distinct from sexual attraction (e.g., aromantic; the
homoromantic, and panromantic, where someone enjoys some intimate behaviours such as
cuddling, but ‘probably not kissing’ with particular genders; Asexuality Archive; Asexual
Visibility and Education Network, 2015). The distinctions between these identities can be
attraction are considered part of a wider group of sexuality and gender spectrums. These
variations indicate that ‘asexual’ and ‘allosexual’ (defined by some to describe those who are
sexual, as in contrast to asexual; see Asexuality Archive; Asexual Visibility and Education
Network, 2016; Dawson et al., 2016) may not be as dichotomous as common definitions
seem to imply. These types of complexities indicate the variance and nuances of asexuality,
and suggest that some asexual people may incorporate sensual or even sexual activities into
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 5
Little research has explored the presence of intimate relationships or sensual or sexual
feelings and activities as part of asexual people’s lives (for exceptions see Brotto et al., 2010;
Dawson et al., 2016; Scherrer, 2008). Yet asexual spectrum identities indicate that desire,
sex, and sensual or sexual activities can be understood as on a spectrum rather than within a
and sex-repulsed (Carrigan., 2011). In a recent census of 9000+ asexual people conducted by
AVEN (2018), attitudes towards sex were primarily sex-repulsed (37%) or sex-indifferent
(26%), although many participants reported that their attitudes fluctuated or remained
uncertain. These terms may be used by asexual people because they potentially capture that
these relate to personal perspectives on sex rather than political or ideological ones
(Asexuality Archive; Haley-Banez, 2017). They also demonstrate that rigid boundaries
between sexual and allosexual may not apply and indicate that there are often nuanced grey
areas rather than distinct binaries in asexual definition and experience. Further, affection and
romance may (or may not) be highly valued by asexual people even though sex (may or) may
not feature in asexual people’s lives and relationships (Dawson et al., 2016; Scherrer, 2008).
Another area worthy of consideration when exploring asexuality and the complexities
investigations comparing masturbation rates and fantasy stimuli between asexual and
allosexual individuals (Yule, Brotto & Gorzalka, 2014; 2017a). Whilst asexual participants
participants who did masturbate, nearly half the women and three-quarters of the men
reported engaging in sexual fantasies when doing so (Yule et al., 2017a). Despite such
sexually arousing fantasies, these participants were keen to emphasise that their fantasies did
not involve other people, suggesting emotional or sensual stimuli rather than fantasies of
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 6
another person. The authors concluded that there was a disconnection between identity and
fantasy and that this reflected a diverse heterogeneity in asexual individuals. These findings
give a sense of how masturbation might be incorporated within some asexual people’s lives
and identities. What is less clear is how asexual people conceptualise and incorporate
Within academic sources, ‘kink’ refers to a range and variety of sexual activities
considered to be ‘outside the norm’ (Christina, 2011; Rehor, 2015), where “the norm” is
‘vanilla sex’ (sometimes described as dull conventional sex, usually involving genital
penetration; see Ribner; 2009). The term ‘kink’ can also be used in reference to BDSM, an
acronym used to encompass bondage and discipline, dominance and submission, sadism and
masochism, and various activities that involve the exchange of some form of power, pain or
sensory deprivation (Faccio, Casini & Cipolletta, 2014; Pillai-Friedman, Pollitt & Castaldo,
2015; Freeburg & McNaughton, 2017). Whilst BDSM activities may sometimes (and are
often assumed to) be located within a sexual context, BDSM practitioners have expressed
feelings of fulfilment via emotional and mental experiences (which may or may not be
experienced as sexual) rather than genital contact or orgasm being a requirement (Simula,
2019a). This suggests that being kinky does not necessarily equate to either being sexual per
The term ‘fetish’, however, is most commonly defined as ‘an object, body part, or
with “atypical” stimuli (Stockwell, Walker & Eshleman, 2010, p. 309; emphasis added). A
‘fetish’ could therefore be positioned as a specific sexual interest or trigger, whereas ‘kink’
could refer to non-vanilla activities. The overlap between the terms ‘kink’ and ‘fetish’ means
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 7
that the remainder of this paper will refer to them interchangeably. Following recent
mainstream interest in kink perhaps as a result of media representations in books and films
such as the Fifty Shades of Greyi franchise (James, 2011), kink research has been
predominantly focused on BDSM (Stiles & Clark, 2011; Hébert & Weaver, 2015). Other
aspects of kinks and fetishes have been relatively under-studied. One exception is research
which has explored niche kinks and fetishes such as pup-play (Wignall & McCormack,
2017), and adult-baby play (Hawkinson & Zamboni, 2014; Zamboni & Madero, 2018), where
adults experiment with roleplay and experience a pleasurable loss of responsibility as human
‘pups’ or babies.
part in some asexual people’s lives (e.g., Scherrer, 2008; Yule et al., 2017a). However, there
has been minimal focus on exploring asexuality and BDSM (Simula, 2019b). To the best of
our knowledge only one study has explored these specific topics. Sloan (2015) interviewed
fifteen asexual individuals who participated in BDSM activities – acts which are typically
‘submissive’ roles that are present in BDSM, the asexual interviewees described the ability to
adapt BDSM practices into acts of pleasure built on trust, self-discipline and power, without
the need for sexual acts. The pleasure obtained from their BDSM interactions was solely
date, indicates that asexual people may pursue or enact their BDSM desires.
This study aimed to expand upon existing knowledge of asexual people who may
experience or enact desires which on the basis of conventional understandings have often
been broadly understood as ‘sexual’ (see Sloan, 2015). We did so by exploring their
experiences of kinks and fetishes and how these are negotiated within their asexual identities.
Understanding and conceptualising the experiences of asexual people who fantasise or enact
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 8
desires will contribute to an increased knowledge and understanding of the diversity within
asexual identities and move beyond monolithic notions of asexuality (Yule et al., 2017a).
Method
Participants
participants were women including 2 who selected trans women (n = 35), with the remaining
participants men including 3 who selected trans men (n = 8), as well as 3 agender and 2
genderfluid respondents. Most identified as White (n = 34), with a range of other racial/ethnic
identities (e.g., African-American, Asian, Hispanic). Participants were mainly from the U.S.A
(n = 25) with others from the U.K. and elsewhere. Other researchers have reported asexual
samples with similar demographic characteristics (e.g., mainly young White women
including some trans participants) and this may reflect the demographic profile of asexual
people, particularly those who participate in online asexual communities (e.g., Dawson et al.,
2016; Rothblum, Heimann & Carpenter, 2019; Sloan, 2015). Participants were asked to list
any other terms that you use to describe or identify your asexuality, if any (e.g., demi-
romantic, aromantic, Grey A, etc.). The most common terms were aromantic (n = 8);
polyromantic (1). We list these terms, and their age, alongside their quotations in the results
section. We provided a list of options for participants to report their relationship status and
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 9
Materials
questions, which allow participants to respond in their own words, and offer the potential for
in-depth and detailed answers (Terry & Braun, 2017). An online survey (via Qualtrics
software) was deemed appropriate given the predominance of online asexual communities
(Carrigan, 2011; Chasin, 2015). Online surveys also allow participants to experience a sense
of felt anonymity, which was important given the potentially sensitive and personal nature of
the topic (Terry & Braun, 2017). Eleven open-ended survey questions were developed based
on the authors’ interest in the topic and by drawing on the existing academic literature on
BDSM, kinks and fetishes and/or asexuality. The questions sought to explore participants’
understandings of their sexuality (e.g., Please describe your sexuality in your own words);
what constitutes a kink or fetish (e.g., What types of behaviours or fantasies would you
consider to be kinks or fetishes?); their own kinks and fetishes (e.g., Please outline a fantasy
that you are comfortable to share for our research purposes); and how kinks and fetishes
‘fit’ with their asexual identity (e.g., Do you feel that kinks and fetishes ‘fit’ with asexual
identities and if so in what ways?; How much awareness do you feel there is of kinks and
fetishes in online or offline asexual communities?). Participants were then invited to add any
other comments (Do you have any other comments, thoughts, or experiences that you have
not yet voiced and wish to share on the topic of asexuality and kinks and fetishes?). Ethics
was granted by the Faculty Research Ethics Committee at the University of the West of
England (UWE), Bristol. The survey was piloted with 6 asexual individuals to test out
whether the questions were clear and to provide an opportunity for participant feedback on
wording or other aspects (Terry & Braun, 2017). Minor design corrections were made to the
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 10
Participants were recruited via social media (e.g., Tumblr/Twitter) and asexuality
pages and forums (e.g., Facebook page of Asexual ACES), where permission of moderators
was sought to post calls for participants. On clicking the link, participants were presented
with an information sheet. This informed them in more detail about the topic and purpose of
protection; and sources of support should they need them. The first author disclosed their
recruitment calls and on the information sheet. A participant consent form was provided, and
participants were presented with the survey, followed by demographic questions to enable the
researchers to situate the sample. Participants were required to create a pseudonym to ensure
Analysis
this) due to the potential to identify common themes across the data to capture patterns of
meaning (Braun & Clarke, 2006). Critical realism has been said to treat the world as theory-
laden but not theory-determined and was chosen due to the appeal of legitimising
participants’ realities whilst acknowledging that these realities are informed by societal and
cultural influences (Fletcher, 2016; Sims-Schouten, Riley & Willig, 2007). Survey responses
were downloaded to Microsoft Excel and collated into a Microsoft Word document to enable
ease of coding. Both authors repeatedly read the data to gain familiarisation with the
responses and noted points of interest. An inductive (or bottom-up) approach was taken
whereby codes were generated directly from the data rather than aiming to find particular
codes based on pre-existing concepts. However, the researchers’ existing knowledge will
have inevitably shaped the coding process. The dataset was organised into both semantic
codes that reflected the language used by the participants and latent codes which moved
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 11
beyond surface meanings. The codes were collated into an early version of candidate themes,
with the help of thematic maps. The early theme ideas were initially led by the first author
before both authors met to collaboratively discuss coding, the development of existing theme
ideas, and further analysis. Theme definitions were developed alongside participant quotes to
‘test out’ themes, ensure they were coherent, and assess how well they mapped onto the
original data. The candidate themes were further reviewed by both authors who discussed the
central organising concept of each theme and checked that they were distinct with no overlap
between them. This led to some changes in the content and structure before the final names of
themes were decided upon. Findings were presented at a conference before additional minor
adjustments during the writing of the analytic report (Braun & Clarke, 2006; Terry, Hayfield,
The first author is a self-identifying asexual who actively engages with online and
offline asexuality communities. His role as a researcher overlapped with his personal interest
and classified him as, in some ways, an ‘insider’ (Hayfield & Huxley, 2015). However, given
the diversity of asexual identities, the range of asexual communities in existence (e.g., ACE
Tumblr; AVEN; Reddit), and his other demographics (e.g., age; gender; non-disabled; race
and ethnicity), he may be an outsider as much as an insider, The second author identifies as
bisexual and has a keen academic interest in sexualities research. In this sense, she could be
considered a (perhaps somewhat knowledgeable) ‘outsider’ to the topic. The first author’s
position as (broadly) an insider may have given him an advantageous position during design
and recruitment, and enabled particular insights into the data based on his own asexual
identity, which may have been unobtainable to outsiders (Hayfield & Huxley, 2015; Perry,
Thurston & Green, 2004). However, McDonald (2013) has argued that ‘matching’ the
their experiences, and there is no guarantee that the first author’s own distinct experiences as
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 12
an asexual person would be shared by participants (also see Bridges, 2001; Hayfield &
Huxley, 2015). In relation to BDSM, kink, and fetish communities, both researchers were
‘outsiders’. This has implications particularly in relation to being ethically and culturally
sensitive when asking questions, analysing data, and reporting results. It may have meant that
our reading of the data was limited by being outsiders, and our ‘noticings’ and interpretations
may be different from those who are members of BDSM, kink, and fetish communities. We
informed ourselves about these topics, aimed to ask open questions, and were particularly
careful to be respectful of our participants in our analysis (Hayfield & Huxley, 2015).
Results
Three themes were developed from the data; (1) “Am I asexual?”: (How) can you be
a kinky ace? (feelings of doubt or distress relating to the process of self-identity when
exploring sexuality and kinks and fetishes), (2) ‘Between me and me’ and make believe:
Kinks and fetishes as solo and imaginary (reports of kinks, fetishes and fantasies as solitary
and as undesirable – or impossible – to live out) and (3) Kink as a sensual enhancement in
having kinks, fetishes, or fantasies in general, during a time when they had identified as
asexual:
Does this [my kink identity] mean I’m not asexual? Does it make me any
people can’t relate to feeling sexual and sexual people can’t relate to being
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 13
I first began believing I was ace before getting into a relationship with
anyone. I was then confused when I felt sexual attraction for someone and
even more confused when I liked [a] specific fantasy. It feels hard and
like there’s no one else out there who is like me and like I don’t fit in. It
These quotations show how a sense of dissonance can arise for those who identify as asexual
and then (seemingly paradoxically) found themselves feeling sexual attraction within the
context of kink (although in Ken’s extract the sexual feeling is implied rather than explicitly
stated). The adoption of asexual spectrum identities may have been what helped these
participants make sense of the lack of fit between asexuality and their sexual feelings and
fantasies. However, even though participants had made sense of any apparent conflict for
themselves, others were reported to not understand them. This lack of understanding or
validation of their identities seemingly creates a sense of isolation and leaves them feeling
that they have nowhere to belong. While researchers have noted that some asexual people
may feel excluded from the wider sexualised society (e.g., Rothblum et al., 2019), these
narratives give a sense (while not explicitly stated) of feeling alienated and excluded from
both sexual (kink) communities and asexual communities. The complexities of identifying
with asexual alongside kink highlights the limitations of broad or umbrella definitions of
‘asexual’. Any sexual fantasy or feeling seemingly serves to invalidate one’s identity if
asexuality is defined within rigid parameters (Carrigan, 2015). For Ken, negotiating a kink
identity and as a spectrum of varying sexual and romantic feelings. These feelings were
voiced by several participants with regard to other people’s lack of understanding of what it
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 14
Other participants had found solutions to negotiate their identities and position their kink
within an inclusive narrative around asexuality, such as Ashlyn, who described themselves as
a sex-repulsed aromantic:
For a long time I didn’t know what getting ‘turned on’ was and if what I
was experiencing counted. As I got older and more into mildly kinky things,
I got more confused about how I could be ace but “into” that, but I’ve since
Ashlyn’s ability to carve a space for both fantasy and asexuality to co-exist harmoniously
required a conceptualisation that fantasies and sexual attraction are separate constructs. This
positioning of identity as complex and multi-faceted has been identified previously elsewhere
in a different way, when AVEN users described how the separation of romantic and sexual
(Scherrer, 2008). These types of distinction provide the potential to permit asexual people to
conceptualise BDSM and kink activities (sometimes viewed as ‘sexual’ but not always
viewed in this way by those who practice BDSM and kink) as not necessarily sexual. For
some then, feelings of pleasure arose through affection, escapism or power. These attractions
and fantasies can be meaningfully incorporated into people’s identities in a way which allows
for an ongoing affiliation with an asexual identity. This mirrors the previous research with
asexual BDSM practitioners, who highlighted how BDSM activities can be navigated in a
way that can bring pleasure without sexual contact (Sloan, 2015) or through ‘games’ or
intense experiences (Faccio et al., 2014). One participant in our research summarised this
concept:
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 15
and fantasies are entirely separate in the mind of an asexual: if they deem it
'sexual' actions whilst still avoiding those sexual elements. For example, I
For Missy, the answer to the question ‘am I asexual?’ would appear to be a defiant ‘yes’,
despite having a kink that could be construed as ‘sexual’. Accepting their feelings did not
discount asexual identity allowed Missy to satisfactorily negotiate asexuality and kink.
Approaching kink in this way allowed some participants to experience and negotiate kink
harmoniously alongside their asexual spectrum identities, sometimes enhancing their feelings
of inclusion in the ace community, although this integration and sense of inclusion was not
‘Between me and me’ and make believe: Kinks and fetishes as solo and imaginary
One of the most common themes in the data was the notion that their fantasies were
totally solitary and private, with no involvement from anyone else. One participant described
I have no instinctive urge to engage in any sexual activities with others and
not real, people are the centre of the idea. (ItWasn’tMe, 28, aromantic)
This response demonstrated a stimulation and arousal devoid from physical stimuli. The
notion that ‘real life’ sex was considered less interesting than how it was imagined was
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 16
shared by Olivia, who described their cyberpunk and dystopian kinks as ‘impossible, rather
than realistic’:
I have met other asexuals on [a fetish website] and we agree that kink is
more interesting than sex. I am not aware of any asexuals who have real-
life kinks and fetish play, but I do know they exist. (Olivia, 22, aromantic)
These participants positioned their fantasies as separate from, but a potential gateway into,
kink – without the need to necessarily live these out for themselves, despite reporting that
other asexual people had experienced their fantasies in ‘real life’. With no boundaries to the
imagination, the roles these asexual individuals played in their own fantasies had no limits, as
My sexual fantasies involve fantasy or sci-fi. Things that don’t truly exist in
my world. Vampires, werewolves, elfs [sic], dragons, etc. Like many people
I believe, I just wish I could escape into the world of Make-Believe that we
like to watch and read as humans, like books and TV shows […] Who
For Crescent Moon, the concept of ‘make-believe’ creatures and environments held the key
to safe and enjoyable fantasies. The idea of experiencing the impossible was considered both
thrilling and tantalizing. Such fantasies have previously been reported by some asexual
people on AVEN (2005), though described with a clear detachment of self from the activities
identity-less attraction or the lack of one’s identity during fantasies. Despite being a recently
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 17
I’m sure as a researcher you are aware of autochorissexuality, that is, the
lack of oneself in one’s fantasies. I fall squarely into that. “I” take on roles,
other personas, occasionally those from television shows and such and
Whilst this response linked to autochorissexualism, Olivia described going further than being
‘identity-less’ and instead shifting their identity freely within a fantasy by playing a variety of
roles. Frequently these roles were totally detached from their asexual identity, taking a third-
I like to read comics which play into specific settings or kinks. Mostly
public sex, such as on a train, when the ones participating in sex are being
seen or afraid of being seen. [...] I don’t really fantasise about me. My
fantasies are a bit like porn, seeing other people without being aware of
Despite Thranduil’s response sounding almost voyeuristic, there was a detachment from their
sense of self in relation to their fantasy, and every part of the scenario was purely fictional.
individual’s unique desires and fantasies, which were either undesirable – or impossible – to
experience in real-life. This disconnection between fantasy and reality has been previously
identified in asexual literature, primarily by the work of Yule et al. (2017a) in their study of
sexual fantasy and masturbation amongst asexual individuals. Results suggested that while
asexual people were less likely to have sexual fantasies, those that did were less likely than
allosexual fantasists to involve other people in their fantasies. Whilst the subject of those who
did not fantasise about other people was not clarified, it is possible such participants would
identify with autochorissexualism. Therefore, as the participants in the current study and that
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 18
Whilst ‘sex’ (commonly understood as sexual contact and coitus) could be assumed to be
unappealing to many asexual people, previous research indicates that some asexual people
allosexual partner and for the benefit of relationships) (Brotto et al., 2010; Dawson et al.,
2016; Miller, 2011). In this study, some participants located engaging in kink in potentially
individuals in a way that sexual activities or penetration alone were not understood to
provide. Typically, these participants described BDSM as the subject of these activities:
considered a typical part of the sexual experience. […] I have always been
interested and pushed for mild BDSM. My husband had never experienced
goes beyond sexual pleasure. There is something to be said for the trust it
takes to give yourself up to someone else’s whims and being tied up.
Dottie positioned the pleasure derived from these intimate experiences of kink as ‘beyond
sexual’; instead it was understood to enhance relationship bonds through trust and power.
This was akin to how BDSM practitioners frame their activities as an exploratory experience
for both body and mind in a way not always achievable in ‘vanilla’ sex (Simula, 2019a;
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 19
Turley, 2016). Other participants engaged in intimate activities that utilised dominance and
Another kink [my partner and I] have is kitten/owner kink. (It’s important,
especially in this situation to clarify that this isn’t some kind of sexual
attraction towards animals, just some aspects we may associate with that
animal. For example, cats are cute, often spoiled and playful. Also,
someone may find people wearing cat ears attractive. There’s some obvious
power dynamics that people involved in this kink like, one party takes care
of and the other is being taken care of.) There’s both a sexual and a non-
Kitten-play is a roleplaying activity that has recently become popular on the gay scene
(Wignall & McCormack, 2017). Elune’s final line in the extract above mirrored the views of
many gay and bisexual ‘pups’; pup-play can have a sexual element for some but can equally
be non-sexual (Wignall & McCormack, 2017). The dyadic elements create an additional
Temperature, smell, texture, lighting, sound, etc. They all play a part in
candle light, ambient music, earthy incense, the softness of skin against skin
and becoming deeply intimate through the sharing of breath and eye
union rather than being reduced to some base-level, animalistic act. […]
It's about love and connection, bonding on a deeper level. (Illuminess, 35,
demisexual)
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 20
This participant described their fantasy as a complex, multi-sensory experience, with its own
mise-en-scène. This demonstrated the depth and value some of these participants placed on
intimate, sensual activities, regardless of whether they were considered sexual. Connecting
and bonding with another person (sometimes physically and) emotionally was viewed as
highly desirable, a narrative previously reported in research with asexual and allosexual
participants (Dawson et al., 2016; Simula, 2019a). Whilst these desires may mirror
demisexuality (Yule et al., 2017b), whereby there is the potential for sexual attraction to
develop within the context of emotional intimacy, not all participants who discussed kink in
these ways necessarily identified themselves as affiliated with this term. Despite this,
participants described situations where their desire to enhance intimacy with kink was a
In the past I have tried to convince partners to do a little light bondage with
when all they wanted was plain old sex. […] I mostly involve a little light
role play. I'm a curious person, and my partner is open to new things so it's
likely I'll continue to increase the degree to which we involve new toys or
Danielle seeks to add sensual enhancement to her relationship, but her partners are reported
with BDSM demonstrated the difficulties of negotiating kink into an intimate dyadic
relationship where one party’s expectations and desires revolve around ‘vanilla’ sex. For
Danielle, and some other BDSM practitioners, ‘plain old sex’ was not (all of) what she
wanted in her relationship. The desire to experiment potentially had no limits and was utilised
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Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 21
to quench curiosity and create non-conventional forms of intimacy (Stiles & Clark, 2011;
Sloan, 2015). The implication here is that if she were to participate in ‘plain old sex’ then she
Being unable to offer such an exchange seemingly created a challenge for Danielle and her
partners to satisfactorily fulfil each other’s desires. Perhaps due to this lack of understanding
from ‘vanilla’-seeking partners, some participants felt an affinity to the BDSM community:
way that the 'mainstream' communities often are not. BDSM is often less
consensual manner. It's a huge matter of trust, which I find very admirable.
As EunYang describes, BDSM and kink, when enacted with others, requires a mutual
understanding of boundaries and an emphasis on dyadic trust. This union between asexual
and BDSM communities allowed a space to express certain forms of intimacy through
interaction with others without the need for sexual acts (Sloan, 2015). As the participants in
this study who engaged in intimate activities demonstrated, kink can be used in relationships
environment.
Discussion
This qualitative study aimed to explore how asexual people who identified themselves as
having a kink or fetish conceptualised, experienced, and negotiated these in relation to their
asexual identity. The themes outlined above describe three different ways in which an asexual
identity was understood and negotiated by these participants. For some, there was dissonance
21
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 22
created doubts and difficulties in managing their seemingly sensual (and perhaps sexual) self
while occupying an asexual identity. For some of these participants, it seemed that their
asexual identity had not always coincided easily alongside their kinks and fantasies, hence
this sense of a lack of congruence between asexuality and kink and fantasies seemingly
created a sense of not being ‘asexual enough’. They reported that this initially caused them
confusion and distress, which for some may have been somewhat resolved through the
demisexual, may represent their attempts at a potential solution to alleviate what may be an
apparent paradox between asexual identities and affiliation with kink and BDSM
attraction, including by some participants). However, we noted that it was often difficult to
ascertain whether participants were writing of their past or the present in their responses –
and none explicitly indicated that their spectrum identities were a result of negotiating their
identities in this way. Others were able to identify as asexual regardless of any kink or fetish
they may possess, as the constructs of fantasy and reality were perceived as mutually
exclusive and therefore sensual and sexual activities would not be desired in real-life and did
not disrupt the validity of their asexual identity. Finally, some participants described how
their kinks could be used as a sensual (rather than sexual) enhancement in their relationships.
The results of the current study demonstrated some of the diversities and complexities of
asexual identities and how participants navigated these. These findings also contribute to
broader understandings of asexuality and kinks and fetishes, adding to previous findings in
asexuality studies and gaining an insight of the experiences of asexual people that goes
22
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 23
Whilst asexual literature (and sexuality research in general) makes note of romantic
and demi identities within the LGBTQ community, the depth and breadth of such identities
and their meanings are rarely explored beyond descriptive terms. Of the 48 participants who
took part in this study, only four indicated that they identified exclusively as ‘asexual’ (see
Table 1). The majority of the remaining 44 instead identified within a romantic or greysexual
spectrum (AVEN, 2015). The findings of this study therefore offer insights into the
experiences of asexual people who identify with an asexual spectrum identity, but not those
who identify exclusively with an asexual identity. That said, the umbrella term of ‘asexual’
can be viewed as ‘a common point of identification rather than constituting a shared identity
per se’ (Carrigan, 2011, p. 467), suggesting that with such a range of asexual spectrum
identities emerging from the community (Asexual Visibility and Education Network, 2015),
exclusively ‘asexual’ people could be a challenge to recruit and may not be representative of
These findings reiterate not only that asexual people have varied experiences
involving BDSM, kinks, and fetishes (Sloan, 2015; Yule et al., 2017a), but that their
knowledge of asexuality and sensuality is developed and self-aware. It was clear this research
topic was of interest to, and resonated with, many members of asexual communities. The ease
of recruiting may have been aided by the first author declaring their insider status (Hayfield
& Huxley, 2015). However, others have noted the enthusiasm that asexual people have when
asked to participate in research (see Dawson et al., 2016). Due to the unprecedented amount
of interest in the topic, it was decided not to distribute the survey to any further online
communities (such as AVEN) as it would have been unethical to advertise once enough data
had been collected for the purposes of this study. Nonetheless, participants’ demographic
characteristics were similar to those of studies conducted using both AVEN and other sources
(Dawson et al., 2016). It may be that recruiting online provides a specific picture of asexual
23
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 24
lives and identities and that these findings would not meaningful transfer to participants who
were less involved in online asexual communities, or less willing to participate in research,
An online survey was an effective way in which to recruit participants and collect data
and responses from participants were detailed and in-depth (see Terry & Braun, 2017). This
may also be linked to the benefits of insider research where the first author’s disclosure of
their insider status may have made participants feel that the researcher was trustworthy and in
turn were willing to openly disclose their experiences (Bridges, 2001; Hayfield & Huxley,
2015; Perry et al., 2004). However, both researchers were situated as outsiders from our
participants in relation to their kinks and fetishes. While this did not seem to serve as a
notably apparent disadvantage, it did mean that our knowledge on this topic was based on
self-education rather than lived experience. It is possible that our outsider perspective meant
that we noticed aspects of the data which an insider could have taken for granted, or that we
may have overlooked aspects of the data which might have been noticed by an insider
academic interest (Carrigan, 2011; Chasin, 2015; Vares, 2018). Further research which
Visibility and Education Network, 2015) beyond the topics explored in this research could
offer additional insights into the lived experiences of asexual people (Yule et al., 2017b). In
light of the current study, it would appear that there are additional nuances and sub-identities
24
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 25
2012). Whilst members of the asexual community have assimilated the term
‘autochorissexual’ within the asexual spectrum (Asexual Science, 2014; Asexuality Archive),
only a handful of researchers have acknowledged or explored the term (Brotto & Yule, 2017;
Zamboni & Madero, 2018), highlighting a gap in our knowledge of the diverse spectrum of
the asexual spectrum could help the community become viewed as a diverse range of
individuals rather than a singular archetypal person who ‘lacks sexual desire or attraction’.
Broadening our knowledge and awareness of the breadth and depth of asexual identities
could also offer insight into the best ways to support asexual people who may experience
confusion or shame in experiencing arousal or attraction in atypical ways and help to disrupt
that further research into the ways in which asexual people feel a sense of inclusion/exclusion
within asexual and LGBTQA+ communities would be worthy of exploration. Given previous
findings which show that asexual identities may not be ‘master identities’ (Scott et al., 2016),
it would also be useful to recruit participants from diverse demographic groups (e.g., gender,
race and ethnicity, disability, class, and so on), in order to consider the complexities of
asexual people’s lives and experiences through a lens of intersectionality. For example, some
activists and researchers have noted that online communities have often consisted of mainly
White participants. Future research should focus on why this might be and explore the
intersections of race and sexuality. This is a particularly important area given reports of Black
asexual people feeling dismissed by AVEN members while searching for other Black
members, and when they come out to peers (see Cerankowski, 2016; Gupta, 2018). Future
inquiry could also add to the research (e.g., Sloan, 2015) which has recruited from within
BDSM and kink communities (potentially including both asexual and sexual participants), in
order to consider how asexuality is understood within such spaces. Such studies could offer
25
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 26
insight into how those who are allosexual experience engaging in BDSM, kink, and fetishes
Finally, our results have implications for those working in educational and
professional practice. Although asexual participants have reported that their asexuality was a
non-issue during school, others told of how they felt isolated and lonely (Rothblum et al.,
2019). School curricula could do more to include age-appropriate education so that young
people can become knowledgeable about a range of identities, including asexuality and
asexual sub-identities, to bring about wider understanding and acceptance. The application of
the knowledge these findings bring could also be useful in therapeutic and clinical settings.
Previous researchers have identified that some counsellors, therapists and sexuality
professionals are open-minded and keen to help their clients navigate their sexual identity
(Foster & Scherrer, 2014; Pillai-Friedman et al., 2015). However, specialised training would
help educate professionals about the diverse range of asexual identities that they may
encounter. With this knowledge, the concept of a ‘kinky ace’ may become better understood
which, in turn, could mean stronger support could be offered for asexual clients.
Conclusion
This study suggests that some asexual people have diverse knowledge of kinks and
fantasy, and may embrace their desires, incorporating them into their identity and
relationships. Future research should be utilised to expand our awareness and understanding
of the nuances within specific asexual identities, and people’s experiences of them, in turn
helping increase knowledge within and outside the community. This study offers a unique
qualitative data, providing a narrative to the complex identities of asexual individuals with
kinks and fetishes. It also offers professionals the opportunity to expand their knowledge of
26
Running Head: ‘Can I be a kinky ace?’: How asexual people 27
the asexual community and in turn support ‘kinky aces’ negotiate and understand their
identity.
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i
Despite the success of the Fifty Shades of Grey novels and films, BDSM practitioners have expressed concerns
over the representations and portrayal of dominant / submissive relationships and BDSM activities within these
(e.g., Steel, 2015).
ii
Homoromantic refers to experiencing romantic (but not sexual) feelings towards people of the same gender
(Colborne, 2018).
iii
Biromantic refers to experiencing romantic (but not sexual) attraction to more than one gender (Colborne,
2018).
iv
Panromantic refers to experiencing romantic (but not sexual) attraction to others, and this attraction is not
limited by gender or sex (Yule et al., 2017b).
v
Dottie described themselves as aromantic in the demographic questionnaire and as demisexual when asked
about additional terms to describe identity.
35