Benny Hill, Lisztomania, and the barmaid’s outfit

Benny Hill got his start at The Windmill Theatre, which “was infamous for its risqué dancing girls and nude tableaux but it was a tough crowd for comedians who would make up part of the show. Not too many patrons were there for the jokes. … Hill had a strange relationship with women. He was very confused about the accusations of sexism in the latter part of his career. … But society around him had moved on and an elderly man surrounded or chased by very scantily-clad women made for uncomfortable viewing.”

From the FAQ section at Science Cheerleader: “The Science Cheerleaders are professional cheerleaders pursuing science careers who playfully challenge stereotypes, turn everyone onto science by encouraging participation in citizen science activities, and inspire the 3-4 million U.S. cheerleaders to consider careers in science, technology, engineering and math.”

“Now, thanks to The Icelandic Phallological Museum, it is finally possible for individuals to undertake serious study into the field of phallology in an organized, scientific fashion. The Icelandic Phallological Museum contains a collection of more than two hundred and fifteen penises and penile parts belonging to almost all the land and sea mammals that can be found in Iceland.”

On Ken Russell’s Lisztomania (1975): “The girls tear and claw at Liszt, who whips a harp from out of nowhere [and] … inspires them to summon out his trouser snake with a sweet siren’s song. Their lilting calls yield totally unexpected results as Liszt’s member expands and expands, finally ending up at a length of about ten feet.” Liszt is played by Roger Daltrey, the Pope is played by Ringo Starr. Somehow, Wagner and Hitler also get into this movie. Here’s a frame that I copied from the previously linked Cine-Miscreant:

The Rhine maidens in "Lisztomania"

“After outlining Marcuse’s theory of the role of Eros in social life, I discuss two pornographic Web sites that combine eroticism and social critique. I argue that Marcuse’s work is valuable for its emphasis on the intersection of sex, technology, and capitalist economy, but that it needs to be supplemented by a focus on masculinity and the male body in Internet pornography.”

“Jacobs describes an experiment in which she and a group of her students went to a Starbucks coffeehouse in Shenzhen to search for sexually explicit media on the Internet. The aim was to see what they could access through mainland China’s Great Firewall. “We were there for 30 minutes and we found all this porn using an Internet connection in a public space.” Pornography has been officially banned in China since the foundation of the People’s Republic in 1949. …
Subcultures of user-generated or DIY pornography have evolved on the Internet as a result.”

From Dyan Elliott’s The Bride of Christ Goes to Hell: Metaphor and Embodiment in the Lives of Pious Women, 200-1500: “The impact of Bernardine spirituality among the early Beguine mystics provides the impetus for a sensual, embodied, and ultimately eroticized bride of Christ. The tendency to express this spirituality somatically perhaps culminates in the matrimonial embellishments of later pious widows such as Bridget of Sweden and Dorothea of Montau.”

Karmen MacKendrick: “It is hard to see how one might have an obligation to others to feel the bite and burn of a well-wielded whip …. It is just as hard to see how it makes sense to say that one could have the right, just for oneself, to be broken out of that self, slammed against the sturdy boundaries of the ego until they break. … This shattering, exteriorizing intensity is an otherness that arises from within the focus on the body and its pleasures. … We, at least since Leopold von Sacher-Masoch first eyed the Lives of the Martyrs … have been inspired by images of the saints: Teresa, unspeakably joyous as the cherub’s arrow pierces her entrails; … Sebastian, serene with his multiple arrow-piercings; Catherine stretched and broken on the wheel.”

"Monna Vanna" by Franz von Stuck

According to Anne Dufourmantelle, “Philosophical ideas, like sexual enjoyment, exceed our control and can only come to us unbidden. Both offer the illusion that we can escape time and mortality into the timelessness of thought or the ecstatic moment of the sexual encounter. In sex we try to overcome our separateness and to connect with someone else. Likewise, philosophy tries to grasp a hidden world order in which everything is connected. Most importantly, in sex, one encounters another body, another world outside one’s own, and this unseats and transforms.”

“Although neither Severin nor his creator [Sacher-Masoch] appears in David Ives’s wildly intelligent and sometimes frightening new play, “Venus in Fur” (at the Classic Stage Company), it helps to have some knowledge of the novel and its author …. This sexual roundelay about power and powerlessness, about the imagination butting up against so-called “reality,” is played out by two contemporary characters.” That review’s a couple of years old.

Have you seen the article in the Atlantic about Jaroslav Flegr’s work, which links schizophrenia and car crashes to a brain parasite that we can get from cats? According to that article, male rats that have the parasite behave in more risky and even self-destructive ways and are more attractive to female rats than the more prudent males are. Well, now the folks at Improbable Research have linked to another of Flegr’s papers, which is called “Dominance, submissivity (and homosexuality) in general population. Testing of evolutionary hypothesis of sadomasochism by internet-trap-method,” (here’s the pdf of that paper).

Subcutaneous Penile Insertion of Domino Fragments by Incarcerated Males in Southwest United States Prisons: A Report of Three Cases: … In each case, an incarcerated Hispanic male or fellow inmate filed a domino into a unique shape for placement under the penile skin. Utilizing the tip of a ballpoint pen or a sharpened shard of plastic to create a puncture wound, each man inserted the domino fragment into the subcutaneous tissue of the penis. … Conclusions: Incarcerated males put themselves at risk for injury and infection when attempting penile enhancement with improvised equipment.” (via Improbable Research)

“The editors, who are also contributors to this book, begin by identifying themselves as “part of a generation of women currently entering the workforce as professors, researchers, lawyers, and other professionals who also worked during some part of our lives in the sex industry” (xi). “Flesh for Fantasy is devoted to destigmatizing the sex industry, illuminating the labor conditions of strippers, and revising the cultural connotations of exotic dance” (xxxii). It challenges the patronizing attitudes about sex work that have characterized most, but not all, feminist discussions until very recently.”

The distinction drew a line between sex and gender. Sex referred to the reproductive categories of male and female, and it was a useful biological concept, applicable to humans, nonhuman animals, and plants. Gender, on the other hand, indicates the socially constructed roles, behaviors, and traits of male and female. … The French philosopher Michel Foucault set the agenda when he lamented … that “the notion of sex made it possible to group together, in an artificial unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a causal principle.”"

“On the evening of May 29 [1912] at Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris the audience was scandalously titillated (or titillated scandalously) as they watched Nijinsky’s erotic pleasure dancing the lead to Claude Debussy’s Prélude à L’Après-Midi d’un Faune. The audience was captive to and captivated by the great exhibitionist in a dark brown and white costume designed by Léon Bakst and based on a Greek satyr … enthralled with his erection the size of a tree trunk.” Here’s Nijinsky about to scandalize Parisians by simulating masturbation with a nymph’s scarf:

Nijinsky as the Faun about to pounce on a nymph's scarf

Barmaid’s risqué outfits cause gender divide in Italian town: … The female mayor of the town has called the 34-year-old barmaid a threat to public order, because her miniskirts, high heels and skimpy tops are drawing male customers from up to 70 miles away, who clog up the nearby streets with their cars and park illegally.”

“A how-to guide for better masturbation that hangs in Skidmore College bathrooms is steaming up the campus in more ways than one. The [guide], published by the college’s Center for Sex and Gender Relations, encourages masturbation as “a great way to relieve some of the stress that comes with classes, finals and the never ending homework.” The poster shows a map of the body’s erotic zones and offers suggestions for heightening self-pleasure.”

David Barash on “The Evolutionary Mystery of Female Orgasm” Parts 1, 2, and 3.

Uncanny photo erotica by a Russian artist.

Here’s a kinky scene from the 1963 film of Jean Genet’s The Balcony. The cast included Peter Falk, Leonard Nimoy, and Shelley Winters. The actors in this scene are Ruby Dee and  Peter Brocco.

Topless duels, sauciness, & patriotic sex

Topless dueling

A German kids’ show gives tips on how to hide an erection (YouTube clip)

Dear John, “a magazine for men written by women

Chester Brown‘s graphic novel, Paying for It: “The book begins with a record of Brown’s slow disillusionment with the concept of romantic love, then follows his carefully planned and budgeted forays into the world of being a john.

“Prostitution 2.0: The Changing Face of Sex Work” (pdf)

On the history of “the tits tee”

A review of Sexual Injustice: Supreme Court Decisions from Griswold to Roe

Jean M. Auel, author of Clan of the Cave Bear, has a new book: “Sex turns out to be central to The Land of Painted Caves: ‘What does a Cro-Magnon woman do if she finds herself pregnant, but doesn’t know the cause? Was it because she bathed in a stream, ate certain foods or had relations with a man?’

A review of Secret Historian: The Life and Times of Samuel Steward, Professor, Tattoo Artist, and Sexual Renegade, who wrote gay erotica under the name Phil Andros

A. Chee on sex in the writing of Jame Salter

Source

Diana Athill‘s old stories about happy-go-lucky quickies: “For Athill’s characters are innocent opportunists, finding sexual encounters where they can and for the most part enjoying them in the moment at face value.

[Angela] Carter gets away with shamelessly exploiting sci-fi B-movie conventions for serious aesthetic and ideological purposes. In some of her other works Carter uses structurally primitive kinds of narrative (the fairy tale, pornography) in much the same way: she taps into their basic structural and mythological power as a way of roiling the waters of the unconscious … then proceeds, by means of hyperbole, irony, structural reversals, and the layered development of character, to give those obvious stories thematic complexity and density.”

Keeping the British End Upa re-issue of a book on those saucy 60′s & 70′s British sex comedies, which featured such memorable actresses as Sue Longhurst and Sally Faulkner. Faulkner later appeared in the lesbo vampire movie Vampyres.

Sally Faulkner in Confessions of a Driving Instructor

On 1970′s pornographer, Al Goldstein

Benjamin Franklin on why older women are preferable: “Because the Sin is less. The debauching a Virgin may be her Ruin, and make her for Life unhappy.

Franklin also features in One Nation Under Sex, a new book by Larry Flynt and David Eisenbach, according to which “Ben Franklin helped save the American Revolution by seducing French women, Dolley Madison slept around, …. Abe Lincoln liked to share beds with men … and Eleanor Roosevelt’s lesbian affairs helped her become a crusader for equal rights.

Franklin attended meetings of the Hellfire Club in England, where he met John Wilkes, an English radical who inspired the American revolutionaries, who “loved books, booze, sex and freedom,” and who co-wrote the porn poem, An Essay on Women

Taking Virginia editor James Jackson Kilpatrick’s publication of The Smut Peddlers in 1960 as a starting point, this article shows how southern segregationists used the battle against pornography to build a constitutional coalition determined to prevent the Supreme Court from wresting further power from the states, this time under the rubric of upholding morality – itself a front for undermining civil rights.

Oral sex puts men at risk for oral cancer

Academic sex scandals, from the dominatrix English professor at the University of New Mexico to a squirting demo at Northwestern to the strippers in the class at La Salle University to the emeritus professor of surgery who recommended giving semen to women on Valentine’s day instead of chocolate (and whose off-color humor triggered a major overreaction)

If beautiful people have more daughters, and if physical attractiveness is heritable, then it follows that, over time, women become physically more attractive than men.

XXX lit

Here once again is Susie Bright’s list of the 25 sexiest novels, and here’s a 2009 list of some classics

Here’s a list from 2009 of literary sex links

A complaint about today’s sexless novels

It’s enough to make one pine for the old days (Updike, Bukowski, Mailer): “Dirty Old (Literary) Men: The Top 10 of Writing’s Filthiest Pervert Geniuses

Speaking of Mailer: “How Norman Mailer Came This Close to Making a Million-Dollar Porn

Lisa Raines Foster in the 1983 version of Fanny Hill, a version that had lots of nudity:

And don’t forget Roger Longrigg, who wrote The Passion Flower Hotel under the pen-name Rosalind Erskine. His book “tells the story of Bryant House, an exclusive private girls’ school whose sixth-formers find themselves unable to meet boys or learn about sex. Over at Longcombe school for boys, the equivalent problem exists. … The girls set up a brothel in the school basement with a menu of categories and prices.”

Iris Owens, under the pen-name Harriet Daimler, wrote Darling.

The Erotic Bibliophile

Carry on sauciness

Veruschka and pet

Veruschka (aka Vera Gottliebe Anna Gräfin von Lehndorff-Steinort), whose father Heinrich Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort, was killed in 1944 due to his participation in the July 20 Plot to take Hitler’s life.

Iwan Bloch, “father of sexology”

In 1776 and 1777 five living electric eels exhibited in London became a sensational spectacle that appealed to anatomists, electricians and connoisseurs of erotica. … Some participants even grasped the eels firmly in their hands and felt the ‘electric stroke’ of the eel in addition to observing the spark. In their observation of the electric eel some of these spectators transposed the vivid electric spark from the sphere of electricians and anatomists into that of satirical and erotic literature. Here the erotic electric eel proliferated in the literature …. The story of the electric eel in Georgian culture charts the creation of the electric spark and stroke as objects of observation and encounter, their exhibitionary context, and finally their divergent meanings as the electric eel became erotically charged for a metropolitan masculine elite.

The second part of the book, and chapter 3 specifically, deals more intimately with the importance of Venetian writer Pietro Aretino and the relationship between Elizabethan England and Italy. The fourth chapter examines “the anxieties about effeminacy and the italiante that surface in the highly charged polemic between Thomas Nashe and Gabriel Harvey.” Focusing on Nashe’s erotic narrative poem, “Choice of Valentines” (c. 1592), Moulton discusses Nashe’s respect for Aretino as a model for his own writing practices.

The bawdy politic in Stuart England, 1660-1714: Political Pornography and Prostitution by Melissa Mowry — “Mowry widely consults and deftly engages with literary and historical scholarship on her subject, and her original research encompasses previously overlooked satires, including such broadsides as The Prentices Answer to the Poor-Whores Petition and The Poor Whores Complaint to the Apprentices of London, as well as archival legal documents related to the Bawdy House Riots and to prostitution in London.

Veruschka

Sarah Toulalan’s Imagining Sex rewrites a variety of current scholarly assumptions concerning seventeenth-century pornography literature in England. These varied assumptions include: the beliefs that seventeenth-century “pornography” did not exist, that it contained little aesthetic value compared to “erotica” or “literature,” and that it did similar things as modern pornography.

Reading sex in the eighteenth century: bodies and gender in English erotic culture

The scientized movements for sexual control born of nineteenth century anxieties concerning changing conceptions of class, race and gender spiraled into dark applications …. Intentionally or not, pornographers in the United States helped undermine the paired movements of purist authoritarianism represented by Anthony Comstock and William J. Robinson before either reached its brutal apotheosis.

Saucy stories: Pornography, sexology and the marketing of sexual knowledge in Britain, c. 1918-70

The very first Carry On film – Sergeant – came out 50 years ago this August and its appearance spawned a series of 30 over the next two decades. I decided to put in an idea to make a documentary marking the golden anniversary – not the sort that had been made many times before, focusing on the saucy lines and, at times, the desperately sad story of the troupe of actors who became such familiar faces to us all.

It is commonplace to observe that pornography drives the development of media technologies. Examples abound, from the mania for capturing naked bodies that led Charles Baudelaire to complain in 1859 that photography had been coopted, to the story of how American pornographers in 1976 decided that JVCs VHS would dethrone Sonys Beta videotape format. [However,] of the hundreds of stag films made before 1965, only five were shot in sound, and only four were shot in color. Although the whole point of a hard-core genre would seem to be graphic realism, stags clung to primitive technology.

Before the Green Door: “This is the first of a two-part article exploring how hard-core porn evolved through the efforts of Jim and Artie Mitchell and other pioneers, with some help from San Francisco s vibrant counterculture.

There is widespread concern that deviant sexual fantasies promote corresponding behaviors. The authors investigated whether that concern is valid in nonoffender samples. … The association between pornography use and deviant sexual behavior held only for participants high in psychopathy.

Increased use of an online educational archive of photographic dermatology case materials indicated unexpected pornography-seeking behavior and misuse. … Of all referrals, 14.3% originated from nonmedical (pornography/fetish) Web sites. … CONCLUSION: Online photographic dermatology archives are vulnerable to misuse. Monitoring and intervention are necessary to preserve their availability and integrity.

This article examines two internet websites — Nerve, a magazine devoted to `smart smut’, and SuicideGirls, an `altporn’ site where softcore sexual display is a major component of a participatory taste culture. … [T]he article investigates how some new forms of pornography are developing to construct sexual display as a form of recreation, self-presentation and community building.

Some scholars have suggested that new media technologies are opening up spaces for the sexual emancipation of … marginalized groups. These ‘DIY’ web cultures would facilitate … more authentic, representations of gender and sexuality than conventionally available in mainstream pornography. This study examines these propositions by analyzing a sample of 100 user-generated ‘amateur’ videos on YouPorn, an adult video-sharing website.

Here’s a clip about Peter Beard’s great photos of Veruschka: