According to Jackson Scott article, Conceptualizing Sexuality: From Kinsey to Queer and Beyond, all of the following are true, EXCEPT:
1) Sexuality as a social phenomenon emerged in the 1960s from social constructionist perspectives.
2) Sociological theorizing of sexuality prior to the 1960s focused on the social ordering of sexual relations and a few empirical studies of sexual behavior.
3) After the 1960s, sexuality was rarely questioned in sociology but instead, was treated largely as a given, something that could be regulated by social institutions and conventions, but was itself a pre-social fact.
4) The confluence of new ideas during the 1960s from the emergent feminist and gay movements in the West created a climate in which social theories of sexuality became politically significant.