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The Pleasure's All Mine

A History of Perverse Sex

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Handcuffs, paddles, whips—the words alone are enough to make a person blush. Even by our society's standards, the practice of things like BDSM is still very hush-hush, considered deviant sexual behavior that must be kept hidden. But the narrow view of what is thought of as "normal" sex—a vanilla act performed by one man and one woman—is more and more contested these days. And as Julie Peakman reveals, normal never really existed; for everyone, different kinds of sex have always offered myriad pleasures, and almost all sexual behaviors have traveled between acceptance and proscription. The Pleasure's All Mine examines two millennia of letters, diaries, court records, erotic books, medical texts, and more to explore the gamut of "deviant" sexual activity.
Delving into the specialized cultures of pain, necrophilia, and bestiality and the social world of plushies, furries, and life-size sex dolls, Peakman considers the changing attitudes toward these, as well as masturbation, "golden showers," sadomasochism, homosexuals, transvestites, and transsexuals. She follows the history of each behavior through its original reception to its interpretation by sexologists and how it is viewed today, showing how previously acceptable behaviors now provoke social outrage, or vice versa. In addition, she questions why people have been and remain intolerant of other people's sexual preferences.
The first comprehensive history of sexual perversion and packed with both color and black and white images, The Pleasure's All Mine is a fascinating and sometimes shocking look at the evolution of our views on sex.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 19, 2013
      Throughout history, sexual norms have shifted drastically: an act that is seen as deviant at one time may be widely accepted at another. Peakman (A Cultural History of Sexuality) argues that sexual acts have not changed much through the ages, but the cultural response to them has. Today, discussions about sexual preferences are still taboo in many parts of the world, and many opinions are still colored by society’s long-held beliefs. One example is masturbation, seen as healthy in Ancient Rome and Greece and as a sin under the Catholic Church. Peakman offers a history of many sexual acts that have been perceived as perverse, including homosexuality, bestiality, sadomasochism, necrophilia, incest, and pedophilia. This is a history for the general reader, primarily covering Western thought; it’s also a wonderful reference source for sexual studies and research. Though it occasionally lacks details, the work does succeed in providing a nice overview. Peakman asks readers to think about how society dictates their own opinions, and her work helps pave the way for more open discussions of sexuality in the future. 68 color plates, 112 halftones.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2013

      For those with an erudite interest in debauchery, this latest from author, historian, and sex scholar Peakman (Lascivious Bodies: A Sexual History of the Eighteenth Century) is just the ticket. Along with the expected whips, handcuffs, and nipple clamps, readers will explore a gamut of alternative sexual predilections ranging from paraphilic infantilism (adult baby syndrome) to acrotomophilia (eroticization of amputees). Historical accounts include those of accused zoophile Thomas Hogg, prosecuted for fathering a piglet; the legend of a ninth-century pope, presumed male until she went into labor; and the lurid tale of a 1930s radiologist who fell in love with a corpse and slept with it for years, using wax, piano wire, and perfume oils to keep the body intact. Peakman's broad overview is stunning, sweeping, and very carefully nonjudgmental. She recounts the history of each so-called perversion from its earliest recorded occurrence through the present, showing how the shifting mores of society color our views on this endlessly fascinating subject. VERDICT Exhaustively researched and packed with startling images, this work is a fact-filled, entertaining read for sex history neophytes and scholars alike.--Jeanne Bogino, New Lebanon Lib., NY

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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