Eroticism and Containment

Eroticism and Containment

Author: Carol Siegel

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 1994-12

Total Pages: 348

ISBN-13: 9780814779996

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Sexual confessions on television talk shows. Gender and medical discourse in colonial India. River Phoenix in My Own Private Idaho. White women in a German colony. Henry James' thwarted love. What do these seemingly diverse subjects have in common? All address, in different ways, social and cultural attempts to contain eroticism by delineating the perimeters of genders. They scrutinize the political investments in the construction of gender in such disparate locations as contemporary Hollywood, Renaissance England, colonial India and Africa, and in modern and contemporary homosexual discourse communities and in Freud's sessions with Dora. But whether the gendering of the subject follows the dictates of conservative politics or the radical agenda of a marginalized interest, the essays reveal the erotic overflow—the flood—that cannot be contained within any one gender identity. In examining how the erotic escapes containment, this work discloses problems inherent in the intersections of gender and desire. [ go to the Genders website ]


Causality and Containment in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Fiction

Causality and Containment in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Fiction

Author: Keith McMahon

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 1988

Total Pages: 176

ISBN-13: 9789004085459

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A number of features characterize late Ming vernacular fiction as part of the general cultural expansion of that period. These features centrally include the exposition of sexual transgression and the function of containment, by which is meant the ideology of the control of desires. The late Ming writers are studiously devoted to illustrating minute, obscene, or erotic details that belief the decorum of the orthodox surface. However, this subversiveness of detail decreases in intensity from the late Ming to the early Qing, when values of containment are reinvoked. Related topics are: the theme of causality and its role in the story's mapping of the logic of adultery; adultery as an emblem of the woman's escape from containment and the use of the narrative topos of the gap in the wall as a locus of sexual transgression.


Sexuality and Containment, Ling Mengchu's Erotic Stories

Sexuality and Containment, Ling Mengchu's Erotic Stories

Author: Lenny Lingyi Hu

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This thesis is a cultural study of a group of stories about illicit sex in the short story collections 'Pai'an jinqi' and ' Erke pai'an jingqi', both of which were written by the late Ming writer Ling Mengchu (1580-1644). The whole thesis consists of two parts: introduction and translation. The translation includes four erotic stories selected from these two collections and these four stories have never been rendered into English before (though some of them have French and German versions). The introduction, instead of a potpourri of rudimentary generalizations about the author and his works, is a monograph mainly focussed on a paradox of these stories, i.e., the tension between the presentation of sexual pleasure and its containment for a moral purpose. To give a convincing explanation to this tension, the thesis examines the context--the life of the author and the society in which he lived as much as it analyses the text--the aspects of sexuality and the repressive mechanisms the author imposed on his erotic descriptions. In so doing, it tries to demonstrate the eroticism in the way that may help understand not only how the principle of pleasure is related to the economic base of the late Ming but also how, owing to the functioning of the state ideology, it is morally contained, contrary to what has been assumed by some Western scholars (e.g. Foucault) that "pleasure is not considered in relation to an absolute law of the permitted and the forbidden, nor by reference to a criterion of utility, but first and foremost in relation to itself." And it is the conclusion of this thesis that these stories about illicit sex, erotic as they are, are actually mildly explicit in terms of sexual description, belonging, in its three-tier typological schema (i.e., the schema that divides late Ming erotic fiction into three basic kinds: lust, lust-love and lust-sex) of the late Ming erotica, to the category of "lust."


Perversion

Perversion

Author: Prof. Lisa Downing

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-04-24

Total Pages: 380

ISBN-13: 0429917236

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Perversion - its ubiquity in infantile life and its persistence in the psychical and sexual lives of some adults - was a central element of Freud's lifelong work. The problem of perversion has since been revisited by many psychoanalytic schools with the result that Freud's original view of perversion has been replaced by numerous - often contradictory - perspectives on its aetiology, development and treatment. The concept of perversion has also been significant for the disciplines of cultural studies and gender and queer theory, which have explored the creative and dissident powers of perversion, while expressing a suspicion of its operation as a pathological category. This bi-partite collection offers a series of perspectives on perversion by a range of psychoanalytic practitioners and theorists (edited by Dany Nobus), and a selection of papers by scholars who work with, or critique, psychoanalytic theories of perversion (edited by Lisa Downing). It stages a serious dialogue between psychoanalysis and its commentators on the controversial issue of non-normative sexuality.


Homeward Bound

Homeward Bound

Author: Elaine Tyler May

Publisher: Basic Books

Published: 2008-09-23

Total Pages: 322

ISBN-13: 0786723467

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In the 1950s, the term "containment" referred to the foreign policy-driven containment of Communism and atomic proliferation. Yet in Homeward Bound May demonstrates that there was also a domestic version of containment where the "sphere of influence" was the home. Within its walls, potentially dangerous social forces might be tamed, securing the fulfilling life to which postwar women and men aspired. Homeward Bound tells the story of domestic containment - how it emerged, how it affected the lives of those who tried to conform to it, and how it unraveled in the wake of the Vietnam era's assault on Cold War culture, when unwed mothers, feminists, and "secular humanists" became the new "enemy." This revised and updated edition includes the latest information on race, the culture wars, and current cultural and political controversies of the post-Cold War era.


A New Kind of Containment

A New Kind of Containment

Author: Carmen R. Lugo-Lugo

Publisher: Rodopi

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 223

ISBN-13: 9042025239

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This book addresses "containment" as it relates to interlocking discourses around the "War on Terror" as a global effort and its link to race and sexuality within the United States. The project emerged from the recognition that the events of 11 September 2001, prompted new efforts at containment with both domestic and international implications. Philosophy of Peace (POP), in conjunction with Concerned Philosophers for Peace, explores socio-political and ethical perspectives on modern warfare, peacemaking, and conflict resolution, including the many forms of domestic and global violence, such as sexism, racism, and classism.


Shame, the Church and the Regulation of Female Sexuality

Shame, the Church and the Regulation of Female Sexuality

Author: Miryam Clough

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-07-14

Total Pages: 299

ISBN-13: 1351850504

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Shame strikes at the heart of human individuals rupturing relationships, extinguishing joy and, at times, provoking conflict and violence. This book explores the idea that shame has historically been, and continues to be, used by an oftentimes patriarchal Christian Church as a mechanism to control and regulate female sexuality and to displace men’s ambivalence about sex. Using a study of Ireland’s Magdalen laundries as a historical example, contemporary feminist theological and theoretical scholarship are utilised to examine why the Church as an institution has routinely colluded with the shaming of individuals, and moreover why women are consistently and overtly shamed on account of, and indeed take the blame for, sex. In addition, the text asks whether the avoidance of shame is in fact functional in men’s efforts to adhere to patriarchal gender norms and religious ideals, and whether women end up paying the price for the maintenance of this system. This book is a fresh take on the issue of shame and gender in the context of religious belief and practice. As such it will be of significant interest to academics in the fields of Religious Studies, but also History, Psychology and Gender Studies.