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'10 Authors Insider Tips
Cooking Up A Storey by Donna George Storey Have More Good Sex I Can Do Better ... Trying to Get the Feeling Plotting and Planning Character Profiles Discovery Draft Be Bad to Be Good E-Book Revolution Naked for Halloween Sex With Pilgrims FictionCraft by Louisa Burton The Music of Words The Balancing Act Your Fictional World Backstory & Foreshadowing The Fine Art of Submission by Shanna Germain Nailing the Query Letter Banish the Boring Bio Becoming a Market Master Become a Market Master, 2 Backstory & Foreshadowing Enticing An Editor, Part 1 Enticing An Editor, Part 2 Contracts, Money & More Serious about Smut by Vincent Diamond No More Horsing Around Short Stuff Selling Short Stories Editors' Pet Peeves Settings: Beyond Time & Place Beating Up Your Scenes Selling Your Books in Person Staying in the Saddle The Write Stuff by Ashley Lister Broken Rainbows Talk the Talk Equations 10 Commandments for Writing Plotting to Avoid Cover Story Rewriting '10 Smutters Lounge Ashley Lister Submits by Ashley Lister St Valentine's Day Renaming Body Parts Sex, Cigarettes & Erotic Fiction Between the Lines with Ashley Lister C. Sanchez-Garcia Emerald Kathleen Bradean Lucy Felthouse Neve Black PS Haven Tracey Shellito Tresart L. Sioux Cracking Foxy with Robert Buckley Plenty of Miles Left Don't Worry, Be Happy Fly the Unfriendly Skies Coffee Time Castrated Words Virtual vs. Actual Romance Bait The View from Gallows Hill Get All Worked Up with J.T. Benjamin The Fashion Industry The Same Old Same Old Writing Porn About the Closet ... About Spirituality Making Sense of Religion Worked Up About Monogamy What's Next All Worked Up About Nature Still All Worked Up... Sex Is All Metaphors by Jean Roberta Holiday Ghosts Love and Romance An "Interracial" Epic Trying to Make It Go Away Sexual Etiquette Sex and Children People Against Bad Things Virtual Acceptance His Cold Eyes, His Granite Jaw A Flash of Northern Light |
Sex Is All Metaphorsby Jean Roberta
I recently reviewed a book from Circlet Press titled Kneel to Me. Before I realized that it was a collection of erotic fantasy stories by Lauren P. Burka, I thought the title suggested a book of BDSM (bondage/discipline, etc.) etiquette, with chapters on how to show respect to a Dominant Person with whom one does not have a personal relationship, how to know whether verbal humiliation ("you miserable worm") is flirtation or a flat-out rejection, and how to approach a self-defined inferior for sex in a way which is Dominant but gracious. There are books like that, of course. The classic BDSM manual, Screw the Roses, Send Me the Thorns by Philip Miller and Molly Devon (Mystic Rose Press) includes much common-sense advice. Rules of etiquette are an essential element in the work of BDSM fiction writers who have created elaborate fantasy worlds in which consensual Dominance and submission are part of the social structure. In general, the roles in these worlds have roots in old social hierarchies such as the British peerage, including the Royal Family. And on that subject, woe betide the Commonwealth official who forgets, for example, that Her Majesty must have an umbrella held over her in the rain, and that no one, even during an outdoor walk, should ever turn his/her back on the royal presence. I witnessed a breech of this rule in a summer downpour when the Queen was on tour in the Canadian prairie town where I live, and the incident was shown over and over on the TV news. Despite the parallels between correct modes of behavior in the BDSM world and in the world of diplomacy, the importance of etiquette or manners is possibly the thing that most distinguishes BDSM sex from the more "vanilla" kinds. Although the use of tools such as whips and handcuffs often seems to be the most titillating topic when a pro Domme is interviewed on a TV talk show, a kinky context of roles and rituals is likely to seem more exotic than pain, as such, to anyone who thinks of sex as instinctive, inherently uncouth and below the level of human culture. Does anyone outside the BDSM world need a guidebook on sexual etiquette? At the risk of sounding rude, I say Hell, yes. As self-defined experts in etiquette are always pointing out, specific rules (about where to place a salad fork, for instance) are less important than the principles behind them. And the basic principle of etiquette is to allow social interaction to proceed with a minimum of discomfort for all. Consider the possible consequences of a lack of sexual etiquette. Ignoring a partner or designated victim who says "no" or "please don’t" while pushing one away can result in trauma, injury and legal charges. Groping someone else's date or mate can also result in regrettable outcomes. While the edgiest sexual fantasies are advertised as "transgressive" (meaning this is what all the cool kids get away with), the crucial difference between transgressing prudish conventions and transgressing common sense or human rights is rarely explained in a publisher's blurb. "Menage" erotica, in particular, raises questions about sexual etiquette which are only dealt with honestly in the more serious scenarios. Polyamory, as the lifestyle of people who can love more than one other person at a time, has been shown to require absolute honesty and hard emotional work. Swinging could be described as calorie-reduced polyamory: a temporary break from a one-to-one relationship. Cheating is a whole other can of worms, no matter who tries to justify it. Anyone who was raised on nineteenth-century novels of adultery (Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina) knows that deceiving a spouse was one of the best ways to wreck one's life in times of yore. News flash: it still is. Check out the latest celebrity scandal to see how this works. Much misery in a sexual context can be analyzed as a result of someone's lack of manners. Consider, if you will, my experience of "sexual freedom" in high school, at the end of the transgressive (or "swinging") 1960s. Somehow I acquired a boyfriend in an innovative Fine Arts program for creative or at least unconventional students. The program enabled me to love school. At first, I was also willing to love the boyfriend - but he already had a posse. He hung out with the dope crowd, a group of weekend hippies who spent their spare time in altered states of consciousness. They seemed to have access to a smorgasbord of illegal substances. When Boyfriend brought me with him to hang out with the posse, he never introduced me, and they made no effort to get to know me. When I awkwardly tried to join their conversations (which, as I remember, mostly consisted of "I mean, like, you know?"), I was usually treated to a stare (Who are you and why are you here?) and a change of subject. Well okay, I thought. They have a reason to be suspicious of anyone who could possibly be a narc or a snitch. But how does anyone join this crowd? I must confess I remained "straight" (a dope virgin) only by default. I didn't know how to ask the owners of illegal dope to share their stash, and they didn't offer. The prospect of finding a dope dealer and a way to pay for my own dope terrified me. As a geeky wallflower-type (winner of a national student writing award in my last year in high school), I knew that formal education was likely to be my best route to long-term survival. I didn't think I would do well in prison or on the street. When I repeatedly asked Boyfriend to introduce me to his friends (i.e. persuade them to accept me), he always told me that his crowd didn't believe in introductions. According to him, manners (the rules of Emily Post) were stupidly bourgeois. Apparently, so was I. The longer the Fine Arts "heads" thought they knew me, the more my "straight" image seemed to harden. Nothing helped, even though I used my solitude to make hallucinogenic drawings in the Art Nouveau Revival style that was currently popular in rock posters, album covers, and “underground” magazines. Even the stream of draft dodgers from the U.S. who stayed briefly in my family home didn't add coolness to my public image. Boyfriend increasingly left me at home when he spent time with his friends. Sex with Boyfriend, under these conditions, was better than celibacy but less than mind-blowing. Our breakup, at about the time of our graduation, surprised no one. In retrospect, my introduction to the Counterculture was mild. Since then, various other "alternative" communities have arisen among adults (and some of the culture eventually sifts down to the high school level), presumably to promote freedom, pleasure and enlightenment. Sex is usually a major focus of non-mainstream culture, and its members usually ridicule conventional etiquette along with conventional morality. In the long run, "alternative" culture seems absolutely necessary to the evolution of the mainstream. In the short run, someone always gets hurt. Consider some of the experiences I had in the local GLBT (gay/lesbian/bi/trans) community as a single woman in the 1980s. At that time, the "gay" bar was the only reliable place to meet potential dates, and they were likely to be drunk. Remember the movie Looking for Mr. Goodbar? At the time it first appeared in 1977, it was widely seen as a cautionary tale about what could happen to a heterosexual woman trolling the bars for male studs - such reckless behavior could get a girl killed! However, I had to rethink my assumption of safety when a friend-of-a-friend in the bar staggered into my orbit, grabbed me for a flirtatious good-night kiss and wrestled me onto the nearest sofa. Our amused mutual friend told me the assailant was a security guard, and predicted that I couldn't escape her hold until she let me. Her mouth was so firmly pressed to mine that I couldn't make a sound. The audience intended to watch, not to intervene. Desperation breeds inspiration. I was able to fend off a woman who seemed to have three times my strength by relaxing just long enough to win her trust, then pushing her off me with all the force I could muster. This move worked, but then she seemed offended by my pushiness, and I actually tried to resolve the situation by explaining myself to her. As in most discussions of male violence with men, I felt unheard. During the conversation, I foolishly let slip that I was a graduate student at the university. The next day, a frowning secretary in the office of the English Department summoned me to the telephone to hear my assailant's rambling, gushy offer of a date. She still sounded drunk, and the endearments she lavished on me could be heard by everyone around me. At the time, lesbianism still seemed as unthinkable to most inhabitants of my town as it apparently was to Queen Victoria (for whom, in fact, the town was named). I could feel my hope of a safe, clean, academic future slipping away. I hung up after telling her never to call me again, but I was afraid the harm was already done. Do I need to point out that this kind of behavior is unacceptable anywhere? The twelve-step explanation that every addictive substance is a kind of demon that possesses the innocent user doesn't change a thing. Luckily, the English Department turned out to be a more liberal environment than the Fine Arts program in my old high school, and it has been my home-away-from-home for many years now. I now have enough of a social life not to seek new friends in the bar. I still wonder about the safety of newcomers to the community. Lest you should think that substance abuse, rather than a lack of manners as such, is the subject of this sermon, I could give other instances of uncouth behavior in the cultural margins: new acquaintances who strike up a conversation about (say) the latest earthquake/tidal wave in a major world city, then abruptly ask "My place or yours?" (apparently using "the earth moved" as a sexual hint). And "friends" who sneer about one's sex life behind one's back. Not all this bad behavior is fuelled by booze, weed, hash, acid or crystal meth, and it wouldn't necessarily stop if all these items magically disappeared. Sexual etiquette, like safe bondage, seems to be a topic that always needs to be addressed, again—and not only in marriage-preparation classes hosted by churches. Jean Roberta
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Copyright © 1996 and on, Erotica Readers Association, Inc. |
'10 Book Reviews
Anthologies Apocalypse Sex Review by Ashley Lister Bare Souls Review by Ashley Lister Best Women's Erotica 2010 Review by Jean Roberta can’t help the way that i feel Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...C. Sanchez-Garcia Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...M Christian Review by Kathleen Bradean Coming Together...Remittance Girl Review by Kathleen Bradean Erotic Brits Review by Lisabet Sarai Fairy Tale Lust Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a God's Kiss Review by Kristina Wright Like a Sacred Desire Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a Veil Review by Lisabet Sarai Making the Hook-Up Review by Ashley Lister Orgasmic Review by Kristina Wright Peep Show Review by Kristina Wright Please, Ma'am Review by Ashley Lister Spark My Moment Review by Ashley Lister Three In One Blow Review by Shanna Germain Unleashed Review by Ashley Lister Erotic Novels Backstage Passes Review by Kathleen Bradean Dommemoir Review by Ashley Lister Fire in the Blood Review by Jean Roberta Freak Parade Review by Jean Roberta I Came Up Stairs Review by Jean Roberta Marianne! A Journey... Review by Lisabet Sarai The Marketplace Review by Lisabet Sarai The Memorial Garden Review by Lisabet Sarai On Demand Review by Ashley Lister Once Bitten Review by Shanna Germain Rock My Socks Off Review by Ashley Lister The Tower and the Tears Review by Lynne Connolly Sensual Romance Coin Operated Review by Lynne Connolly Control Review by Lynne Connolly I Spy a Wicked Sin Review by Harriet Klausner Libertine's Kiss Review by Lynne Connolly The Master & the Muses Review by Lynne Connolly Naked Review by Lynne Connolly Rampant Review by Lynne Connolly Sinful Review by Lynne Connolly Tangled Web (MM Romance) Review by Vincent Diamond Tucker's Sin Review by Lynne Connolly Victor Review by Harriet Klausner Gay Erotica Best Gay Erotica '10 Review by Vincent Diamond Best Gay Romance 2010 Review by Vincent Diamond Biker Boys Review by Jay Lygon Necessary Madness Review by Kathleen Bradean Personal Demons Review by Lisabet Sarai The Royal Treatment Review by Kathleen Bradean Silver Foxes Review by Vincent Diamond Sodomy! Review by Jay Lygon Special Forces Review by Vincent Diamond A Sticky End Review by Jean Roberta Wired Hard 4 Review by Lisabet Sarai Lesbian Erotica Best Lesbian Roamnce 2010 Review by Jean Roberta Fast Girls Review by Ashley Lister Girl Crush Review by Jean Roberta Sometimes She Lets Me Review by Jean Roberta Non-Fiction Best Sex Writing 2010 Review by Ashley Lister A Brief History of Nakedness Review by Rob Hardy Condom Nation Review by Rob Hardy Dictionary of Semenyms Review by Donna G Storey Doctor of Love Review by Rob Hardy Florida’s Purge of Gay & Lesbian... Review by Rob Hardy John Holmes Review by Rob Hardy How Sex Works Review by Rob Hardy The Orgasm Answer Guide Review by Rob Hardy Screening Sex Review by Rob Hardy Sex at Dawn Review by Rob Hardy Whip Smart Review by Rob Hardy |
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