more extensive and unaffected pleasure
Feb. 27th, 2011 06:07 pmWhy, when discussing eighteenth-nineteenth(twentieth-)century anti-novel rhetoric, does no one address the discursive parallels with injunctions against onanism/masturbation? (and does anyone know of a book that does? because I would totally read that book.)
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Date: 2011-02-27 11:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-27 11:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-27 11:44 pm (UTC)And don't forget Rev. Mr. Podsnap's concern about reading that might "bring a blush to the cheek of a young person" and Trollope's boast that he did not think any girl had lost any of her purity by reading his books--I mean, if you ask yourself just what they were worried about.
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Date: 2011-02-27 11:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 12:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 02:19 am (UTC)MUST READ. AT ONCE.
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Date: 2011-02-28 02:59 am (UTC)Well, sort of. I certainly think of her as a fangirl.
*ducks*
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Date: 2011-02-27 11:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 01:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 01:32 am (UTC)The Secret Vice: Masturbation in Victorian Fiction and Medical Culture, by Diane Mason
Colette Colligan
Victorian Studies
Vol. 52, No. 2 (Winter 2010), pp. 321-322
(article consists of 2 pages)
Published by: Indiana University Press
DOI: 10.2979/VIC.2010.52.2.321
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/VIC.2010.52.2.321
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Date: 2011-02-28 10:13 am (UTC)My review of this book was the one the journal editors went 'ooops - we lost it, please resend' about.
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Date: 2011-02-28 01:34 am (UTC)http://www.english.ucsb.edu/faculty/warner/courses/w00/engl30/StagingReaders.ecf.8.99.htm
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Date: 2011-02-28 01:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 01:37 am (UTC)http://www.powells.com/biblio/2-9781593761875-0
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Date: 2011-02-28 01:38 am (UTC)http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=9571
At a time when almost any victimless sexual practice has its public advocates and almost every sexual act is fit for the front page, the easiest, least harmful, and most universal one is embarrassing, discomforting, and genuinely radical when openly acknowledged. Masturbation may be the last taboo. But this is not a holdover from a more benighted age. The ancient world cared little about the subject; it was a backwater of Jewish and Christian teaching about sexuality. In fact, solitary sex as a serious moral issue can be dated with a precision rare in cultural history; Laqueur identifies it with the publication of the anonymous tract Onania in about 1722. Masturbation is a creation of the Enlightenment, of some of its most important figures, and of the most profound changes it unleashed. It is modern. It worried at first not conservatives, but progressives. It was the first truly democratic sexuality that could be of ethical interest for women as much as for men, for boys and girls as much as for their elders.
The book's range is vast. It begins with the prehistory of solitary sex in the Bible and ends with third-wave feminism, conceptual artists, and the Web. It explains how and why this humble and once obscure means of sexual gratification became the evil twin—or the perfect instance—of the great virtues of modern humanity and commercial society: individual moral autonomy and privacy, creativity and the imagination, abundance and desire.
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Date: 2011-02-28 02:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 03:10 am (UTC)As a medievalist I dispute this assertion!
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Date: 2011-02-28 03:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 10:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 09:02 am (UTC)He also manages to leave out the entire Victorian era, and I have a lot of other problems with that book, but will leave there as I have to go to work.
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Date: 2011-02-28 10:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-28 03:40 pm (UTC)Whereas anti-novel polemics (like the ones Austen riffed on wrt 'only a novel')were about women having their passions aroused. Although before they were important novels were usually written by women anyway, so it was women arousing passions in other women with male characters as surrogates and conduits (hi, cathexys!)