Sex in the Cities. Volume 1. Amsterdam. Hans-Jürgen Döpp
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Название: Sex in the Cities. Volume 1. Amsterdam

Автор: Hans-Jürgen Döpp

Издательство: Confidential Concepts, Inc.

Жанр: Иностранные языки

Серия: Sex in the Cities

isbn: 978-1-78525-913-5, 978-1-78042-006-6

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ style="font-size:15px;">      The sections of quotations within this book – arranged in chronological order – feature many excerpts from works of erotic literature in which other erotic works are cited. They comprise a colourful medley of quotations from erotic literature of the 18th to the 20th centuries, listing references where erotic literature mentioned in erotic literature has special significance.

      This means that the author has in fact directed his research in the opposite way from the usual. When he was young he might have looked for erotic passages in books; now he is looking for literary passages, literary references, in erotic books.

      To me, the erotic as a literary phenomenon requires understanding in a particular way. The requirements of reality in literature and literary depiction meant that those subjects of imagination and fantasy that no longer fit in with such requirements were banished to their own realm – a realm in which literature might freely depict a life filled with sensuality.

      It is also a realm in which a reference to an erotic work may thus be an intellectual side-step taken with full consciousness, and outside all elements of sexuality, even in the midst of a description of a sexual exchange. This represents a heightened notion of the unrealisable: that which is possible in reality may still be surpassed by an imagined, fantastical unreality. Yet literary dreams – like daydreams – represent a form of wish fulfilment, taking on impossible forms and nonetheless blending with reality via our imaginations.

      Julian Mandel, early postcard of Kiki de Montparnasse, c. 1925. 14 × 9 cm.

      Lehnert & Landrock, Arabian female nude, c. 1910.

      Vintage sepia-toned matte gelatin silver print on structured paper, 24 × 18 cm.

      The Erotic as a Literary Phenomenon

      The relationship between the power of the imagination and the erotic is, then, the subject under examination in this book. What cultural conditions foster the development of the imagination as an individual area of a person’s psychology? What share does rationality – the ability to reason, central to the philosophy of enlightenment – have in the development of erotic imagination? What is the function of what is then imagined? Moreover, to what extent do the forces of acculturation to a mode of life in which the erotic remains unexpressed affect the powers of the imagination?

      1665/1666: Pierre de Bourdeille, seigneur de Brantôme, Lives of Fair and Gallant Ladies

      Another type of people has corrupted girls severely; those are their teachers who have to teach them in the liberal arts, and if they want to be bad they will be: anybody can imagine what type of comforts they are granted when they are teaching, alone in a chamber or when studying; anybody can think of the types of stories, fables, and histories they sometimes teach the girls to arouse their imagination and once they see this excitement and desire in these girls, how they know how to take advantage of the situation.

      I once knew a girl who came from a very good and prosperous family, I tell you, who came to ruin and made herself into a whore because her teacher told her the story, or actually fable, of Tiresias who, after having tried both sexes, was asked by Jupiter and Juno to settle the dispute of who enjoys the most pleasure when copulating, man or woman? He replied, contrary to Juno’s opinion, that this would be the woman.

      Juno was so upset about being told he was wrong that Juno blinded the poor judge, taking his eyesight. It is no wonder that this story tempted the girl because she had heard from other women how crazy men were about sex and that they enjoyed it so much but considering the judgement made by Tiresias, women can enjoy it even more and thus it should be tried, they say. Really, girls should be spared such lessons! Are there no others?

      Their teachers, however, are apt to say that they want to know everything and, since the girls are already studying, the passages and stories requiring an explanation (or those that are self-explanatory) have to be explained and told without skipping that page; and if they do skip the page, the girls will ask them why and if they answer that they skipped the page because it would corrupt the girls they are then so much more eager to learn about that passage, and they start pestering their teachers to such a degree that they have no choice but to explain it to them, because it is the nature of girls to want what is forbidden to them.

      How many female students were corrupted by reading these types of stories, as well as with those including Byblis, Caunus, and many others written in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, up to the book Ars Amandi, which he also wrote.

      In addition, there are many other risqué fables and lecherous speeches published here: French, Latin, as well as Greek, Italian, and Spanish. The Spanish saying goes: ‘Dear God, keep us from a horse that speaks and a girl that talks Latin’. God only knows if their teachers want to be bad and teach their pupils such types of lesson, how they can corrupt and dirty them so that even the most decent and chaste among them will fall.

      Is it not true that the holy Augustine was gripped by pity and pain when he read the fourth book of Aeneis, which contains the affairs and the death of Dido?

      I would like to have as many hundreds of coins as there have been girls, worldly as well as pious, who have become excited, dirtied, and lost their virginity when reading Amadis de Gaule. Anybody can see the damage Greek, Latin, and other books can cause when their teachers, these cunning and corrupted foxes, these miserable good-for-nothings with their secret chambers and cabinets in the midst of their laziness, comment on and interpret these types of stories.

      Fish as a mobile or pendant, with an erotic scene inside, c. 1930. China. Porcelain.

      Vincenzo Galdi, Female nude, c. 1900. Photograph, 16.4 × 22.5 cm.

      Franz von Bayros, lesbian scene, 1907.

      Illustration for Die Bonbonniere, by Choisy le Conin (Pseud. for Franz von Bayros), plate VII. Etching.

      John Collier, Lilith, 1889. Oil on canvas, 194 × 104 cm.

      Atkinson Art Gallery Collection, Southport.

      Ulysses: The Song of the Sirens

      “To be able to say anything and everything!” is Sade’s motto. But today the body can say nothing of itself. It is the subject and object of silence.

      According to Kamper, the margins of official histories over the last 500 years contain evidence of a secret battle being fought over the nature of society and morality. That battle has left the body out in the cold.

      “The opponents in that battle may be dimly identified as the body and the intellect in their separate and apparently opposed realities – the body as basis of power and mobility, the intellect as its tools, as the ruler of rationality, and currently as the ruler too (and the subduer and the denier) of the body. The body is therefore no longer perceived.”

      So, erotic imagination falls on the dark side of the history of civilisation. As the rationalisation process continues and rewrites history on its own behalf, an “underground” history develops which – suppressed and also liable to be rewritten – is perceived (when perceived at all) as the antithesis of enlightenment.

      “Humanity had to do some terrible things to itself,” СКАЧАТЬ