The buttocks (often called butt, buns, bum, booty, ass or arse) are rounded portions of the anatomy located on the posterior of the pelvic region of the apes and humans.
Some baboons and all gibbons, though otherwise fur-covered, have characteristic naked callosities on their buttocks.
In Ancient astrology, various parts of the body were associated with signs of the zodiac- e.g. the buttocks to the Balance.
Exposure of the buttocks in non-intimate situations may cause feelings of shame, embarrassment or humiliation — which may, however, excite exhibitionists and voyeurs.
Willfully exposing one's own bare buttocks as a protest, a provocation or for fun is called mooning. Mooning someone is generally considered an act of and for the young, but some adults — especially intoxicated — have been known to practice mooning as well.
On the other hand having one's bare buttocks exposed by another unexpectedly and in public, sometimes called a "depantsing", is usually a source of humiliation.
A wedgie is pulling someone's undergarments or swimming trunks up through their 'crack' to be hauled over the top of the victim's pants, sometimes partially baring the victim's buttocks. An atomic wedgie is pulling the undergarments or swimming trunks up over the victim's head.
An adult (or adolescent) forced to expose or take punishment on their buttocks may seem reduced to the status of a child in cultures where public nudity below the waist and/or spanking is common only for (young) children.
It is no coincidence that the English verb to spank is the only one specifically meant for physical discipline of a specific part of the body, and various other languages have terms specifically referring to spanking; in many punitive traditions, the buttocks are the preferential target for painful lessons, from educational to judicial, as offering them for punishment (especially divested) adds a psychological dose of embarrassment to the pain, which can be meted out with less risk of longterm corporal harm then elsewhere. Thus in various cultural traditions expressions like "A black man's ears are in his buttocks" (e.g. in Uganda) or "seat of learning" clearly refer to the preferential paining of the posterior in a submissively bend and exposed position. Many comedians, writers and others rely on the buttocks in these ways as a source of amusement, camaraderie and fun.
Quite commonly phrases use the buttocks as metonym (more precisely, synecdoche) for a whole person, but generally with a negative connotation. For example, terminating an employee may be described as "firing his ass". One might say "move your ass" as an exhortation to greater haste or urgency. Expressed as a function of punishment, defeat or assault becomes "kicking one's ass". Such phrases also may suggest a person's characteristics, e.g. difficult people are termed "hard asses". People deemed excessively puritanical or frugal may be termed "tight asses".
Certain physical dispositions of the buttocks -- particularly size -- are sometimes identified, controversially, as a racial characteristic (see race). The most famous intersection of racism and buttocks may be the case of Saartjie Baartman, the so-called Hottentot Venus.
Emphasis on one part or another of the body, especially the female body, tends to shift with generations. The 1880s were well-known for the fashion trend called the bustle, which provided even the skinniest woman with seemingly huge buttocks. Like long underwear with its flap, this clothing style was acknowledged in popular media for generations afterward. The popularity of this fashion is shown in this famous Georges Seurat painting in the two women to the far left and right.
Later, the cleavage of the buttocks could be exposed by some women as fashion dictated trousers be worn lower.
Early in the 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz, Uncle Henry is holding the gate open for Miss Gulch, and at a seemingly appropriate time he lets it go, and it swats the disagreeable old lady in the rear...emphasized by a musical "thunk" on the soundtrack's underscore.
There is a scene in the 1942 movie Yankee Doodle Dandy in which Cohan's father wishes to punish his disobedient son. He can't hit him anywhere that would show, or that would otherwise impact the family's vaudeville act. The frustrated father finally says, "Here's one place with no talent!" He turns young George over his knee and begins spanking, as flour (left over from a stunt in the preceding stage show) flies up and emphasizes the apparent impact of the blows.
The comic character Ado Annie in the 1955 movie musical Oklahoma finds herself on the receiving end of this subject at least twice. First, she mentions something (not quite getting the point) about having been compared to a Persian cat, because they both "have soft, round tails". Then, during the song The Farmer and the Cowman, she makes a funny comment, and Aunt Eller swats her on the bottom.
The 1956 horror film The Bad Seed has a fairly silly postscript ending in which the mother spanks her naughty child, for having murdered several people during the course of the film's plot.
In 1966 Yoko Ono made a roughly 90 minutes long experimental film No. 4, colloquially known as Bottoms which consists of nothing more than footage of human buttocks, in motion while the person walks on a turntable.
At one point in the 1971 James Bond adventure Diamonds Are Forever, Bond (Sean Connery) stashes a computer tape into the back of Jill St. John's bikini bottom, whispering "Your problems are all behind you now." Later, the villain (Charles Gray) notices this object and says, "We're showing a bit more cheek than usual, aren't we, Miss Case?" before roughing her up for her treachery.
By the 1970s, television was also becoming more liberal. There was an episode of The Bob Newhart Show in which it came out that Bob's secretary, Carol, had once gotten a tattoo on her behind, which she was now looking to have removed. Bob seemed to sympathize, and then commented with a slight smirk, "We don't want you to be the 'butt' of any jokes!"
In an episode of One Day at a Time, Annie (Bonnie Franklin) was having a dialogue with herself in the mirror. Considering her possible future as a big-hipped grandmother, she sighs "Nanny Annie with the great big fanny!"
In an infamous episode of The Newlywed Game from 1977, host Bob Eubanks asked the husbands, "What's the most unusual place you've made love?" In the next segment, one wife who was asked that question came back with, "Is it in the ass?" The incident itself was long thought to be an urban legend, but it actually did happen, as revealed on a "Game Show Bloopers" TV special in 2002. (See www.snopes.com.)
In a nighttime talk show, Lee Marvin happened to mention that he had received a Purple Heart during World War II, and the host made the mistake (?) of asking him where he was shot: "In the ass!" It being late at night, and merely truthful and not lascivious, the line was not bleeped.
The 1984 mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap contained the song "Big Bottom" featuring the lyric Big bottom, big bottom, Talk about bum cakes, my girl's got 'em, Big bottom drive me out of my mind, How could I leave this behind?
In the 1985 movie Pee Wee's Big Adventure, star Paul Reubens ("Pee Wee Herman") responds to someone who says, "Yes, but..." with the comment "Everyone I know has a big 'but'!"
In the 1994 movie Forrest Gump, the title character has just received a medal from President Lyndon Johnson, who makes the mistake of asking Forrest where he was shot: "In the but—tocks, sir!" He then turns around and drops his pants to show LBJ exactly where his wound is.
The 1999 film Entrapment was both lambasted and praised as an excuse to show a closeup image of Catherine Zeta-Jones raising her rear end. The diva's buttocks are, according to one reviewer, the "the true star of the film." See the film's main article for more information on this scene.
Martial Arts Movie Star Jean Claude Van Damme has appeared nude in various movies, giving his naked behind considerable celluloid exposure. This has appealed to a broad variety of his fanbase and has even become something of a trademark. Many nudity reviewers have declared JCVD to have the "best butt in cinema." This was parodied in an episode of Friends when he remarked "I can crack a walnut with my butt."
Several songs have been released, especially in the hip hop and R&B genres, which glorify this body part. Examples include:
Well before the hip-hop era, there was the disco era, with the controversial (at the time) number called "Shake Your Booty", by K.C. and the Sunshine Band.
The 1978 Queen single "Fat Bottomed Girls" glorifies big bottoms, and the paired single "Bicycle Race" mentions them in passing in the line "Fat bottomed girls will be riding today, so look out for those beauties, oh yeah."
Agnetha Fältskog of ABBA was famous in the late 1970s for her spandex pants and having 'The Sexiest Bottom in Europe' as the press described it. When she asked if this was true, her rejoinder was "How can I answer that? I don't know, I haven't seen it."
In the last part of the 20th century, this body part has really "come out of the closet" and become a frequent popular culture topic, as with the famous entertainer Jennifer Lopez, whose shapely rear is as often-discussed as Dolly Parton's "bosoms" were at the height of her career.
Gesäss | Cul | Aasch | Gesäß | Nalga | Pugo | Fesse | Natiche | עכוז | Hënner | Sėdmenys | Bil | 尻 | Rumpeball | Okolica pośladkowa | Nádegas | Ягодицы | Pakarat | Stjärt | 臀部
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