400
700
900
Solitary Sex
Thomas W. Laqueur

Solitary Sex

Zone Books (Mar 01, 2003)
9781890951320
| Hardcover
501 pages | 160 x 234 mm | English
Value: $ 15.00
Dewey 306.77/2
LC Classification HQ447 .L36 2003
LC Control No. 2002028055

Genre

  • Non Fiction

Subject

  • Masturbation
  • Masturbation In Literature
  • Masturbation/ History
  • Sex

Plot

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 twinor the perfect instanceof the great virtues of modern humanity and commercial society: individual moral autonomy and privacy, creativity and the imagination, abundance and desire.

Personal

Location Non-Fiction Bookshelves
Read
Index 4824
Added Date Nov 30, 2020 09:05:53
Modified Date Nov 30, 2020 22:38:36

Value

Value $ 15.00