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zompist
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Re: Random Thread

Post by zompist »

Ares Land wrote: Thu Jun 27, 2024 4:21 am
zompist wrote: Tue Jun 25, 2024 3:55 pm You'd need experts to give you a better answer, but my very rough estimate would be: in the 1940s in English, in the 1800s in French.

In both cases there were scandalous predecessors, often banned or hard to get, e.g. Ulysses (1922), Lady Chatterley's Lover (1929), Tropic of Cancer (1934); Les liaisons dangereuses (1782), Justine (1791). But within a generation or two you could have explicit sex in mainsteam novels.
Later than that for French literature, though earlier I think than English literature.
I don't remember anything really explicit in Les liaisons dangereuses, though the implications were enough to get it banned. Justine and the rest of sad is extremely explicit (and very disturbing!)
I looked a bit at my copy and it does seem that Les liaisons dangereuses isn't very explicit; on the other hand it has sex, which I think was avoided in English literature at the time. Plus, it's explicitly about sex rather than romance. (Given the purposeful irony that Valmont is undone precisely because unwanted romantic feelings intrude.)

I recall a story by Maupassant whose point, or joke, was that a simple man hears his wife having sex with another man and is surprised that she is making so much noise. I may be wrong, but I don't think aboveboard 19C English literature allowed that.
I'm not that familiar with medieval literature, but I'd mitigate your claim a little. It's definitely not puritan, and a lot more explicit than later works... but definitley not as graphic and open as we are.
Again, I'd just point to Chaucer, whose comic stories are pretty darn explicit. Or the Spanish La Celestina, or the stories described here.

Also, two nuances. One is that novels have grown more longwinded. A typical medieval story could be extended by adding episodes, but each one was fairly short. So Chaucer doesn't write about sex for pages on end, but that's (I believe) more the style of the times than prudery.

Another is that we can miss the racy parts because they're either hidden by allegory, or because the focus is on the preamble. C.S. Lewis wrote a book on The Allegory of Love, which was a whole genre exploring nobles' adultery (which is how love has to appear in a time of arranged marriage). These books might include, say, an extended story about picking a rose in a walled garden (cf. Le roman de la rose). Doesn't sound like sex, but that's exactly what the metaphor meant.

Similarly, what Laclos loves to write about is the seduction scene itself: how the seducer moves a woman from cold and resistant to submissive and/or passionate. This process goes on for pages, while the actual sex is described extremely briefly, as the woman "yielding." In intention at least, I think these passages are intended to be steamy and titillating, even if these emotions are mixed with revulsion at Valmont's character.
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Re: Random Thread

Post by malloc »

zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 6:44 pmAnother is that we can miss the racy parts because they're either hidden by allegory, or because the focus is on the preamble.
But hiding sex behind allegory sounds like quite the opposite of making it explicit and certainly indicates that society at the time frowned on overt sexuality.
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Post by keenir »

malloc wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 7:33 pm
zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 6:44 pmAnother is that we can miss the racy parts because they're either hidden by allegory, or because the focus is on the preamble.
But hiding sex behind allegory sounds like quite the opposite of making it explicit and certainly indicates that society at the time frowned on overt sexuality.
I'm going to hazard that, for people who were familiar with the references, similies, etc, those allegories were overt. Its more pragmatics...at least as i understand them, I believe it to be so.
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Re: Random Thread

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malloc wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 7:33 pm
zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 6:44 pmAnother is that we can miss the racy parts because they're either hidden by allegory, or because the focus is on the preamble.
But hiding sex behind allegory sounds like quite the opposite of making it explicit and certainly indicates that society at the time frowned on overt sexuality.
Have you ever read Animal Farm? Do you think that Orwell was afraid of talking about Soviet communism directly?

(I'll give you a hint: Orwell spent most of his time talking about Soviet communism directly.)
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Re: Random Thread

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zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 8:04 pmHave you ever read Animal Farm? Do you think that Orwell was afraid of talking about Soviet communism directly?

(I'll give you a hint: Orwell spent most of his time talking about Soviet communism directly.)
That presupposes that plenty of Mediæval literature described sexuality overtly rather than allegorically. Was that indeed the case?
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Post by Travis B. »

malloc wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 8:27 pm
zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 8:04 pmHave you ever read Animal Farm? Do you think that Orwell was afraid of talking about Soviet communism directly?

(I'll give you a hint: Orwell spent most of his time talking about Soviet communism directly.)
That presupposes that plenty of Mediæval literature described sexuality overtly rather than allegorically. Was that indeed the case?
Umm look at my example of Under der linden if you haven't already ─ while it doesn't explicitly depict the act of sex itself directly, it isn't far from it either. And it is very much medieval literature (it's written in MHG for that matter).
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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Re: Random Thread

Post by Darren »

As Chaucer said, c. 1400:

This Absolon gan wype his mouth ful drye:
Derk was the night as pich or as the cole,
And at the window out she putte hir hole,
And Absolon, him fil no bet ne wers,
But with his mouth he kiste hir naked ers,
Ful savourly, er he was war of this.

He's always talking about grabbing ladies by the "queynte" and "thakking her about the lendes". Although he doesn't actually talk about anyone having sex, they're too busy kissing each others' arses.
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Re: Random Thread

Post by zompist »

malloc wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 8:27 pm
zompist wrote: Sat Jun 29, 2024 8:04 pmHave you ever read Animal Farm? Do you think that Orwell was afraid of talking about Soviet communism directly?

(I'll give you a hint: Orwell spent most of his time talking about Soviet communism directly.)
That presupposes that plenty of Mediæval literature described sexuality overtly rather than allegorically. Was that indeed the case?
Jeez man, this time I even gave you a link.
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Thinking of getting onto ADHD meds in hopes of them making me more productive.
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Post by foxcatdog »

Ah yes the whole gamut of music "From Jazz to Classical" totally not the two genres most people would group as closest together.
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Post by Raphael »

So, is the question here whether literature in previous periods would state something as
More: show
"And then they had sex"
, or as
More: show
"And then he put his cock inside her"
? The latter sounds a lot more explicit than the former to me, and is more what I had in mind when I started this particular subdiscussion.
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One thing that has struck me over the years is the sheer invincibility of Trump in the face of numerous scandals and failures. Despite everything that has happened, he has scarcely become less popular than when he first ran for president. It often feels like Trump is uniquely immune to scandal, but how true is that really? What other politicians have faced a comparable degree of scandal and failure to Trump while maintaining incredible popularity?
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Post by keenir »

malloc wrote: Wed Jul 10, 2024 7:17 pm One thing that has struck me over the years is the sheer invincibility of Trump in the face of numerous scandals and failures. Despite everything that has happened, he has scarcely become less popular than when he first ran for president. It often feels like Trump is uniquely immune to scandal, but how true is that really? What other politicians have faced a comparable degree of scandal and failure to Trump while maintaining incredible popularity?
Hitler.

Probably the Kims of North Korea and the inventor and manager of Year Zero in Cambodia, whose name slipped from my mind.
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Re: Random Thread

Post by Ares Land »

malloc wrote: Wed Jul 10, 2024 7:17 pm One thing that has struck me over the years is the sheer invincibility of Trump in the face of numerous scandals and failures. Despite everything that has happened, he has scarcely become less popular than when he first ran for president. It often feels like Trump is uniquely immune to scandal, but how true is that really? What other politicians have faced a comparable degree of scandal and failure to Trump while maintaining incredible popularity?
Trump has around 40% favorable opinions, judging by fivethirtyeight; not a terribly high approval rating.

It's unusual but not that much: one example that comes to mind is Silvio Berlusconi.
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Post by Raphael »

You know these network plots/graphs/visualizations that people sometimes create that show how a lot of things - for instance, websites - are connected to each other?

Has anyone ever done that for non-fiction books that have praise from other non-fiction writers on the cover or at the start of the book?
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Most animals have sex entirely by instinct. When the right time of year rolls around, they seek out another of their kind and carry out whatever instinctive behaviors their mating entails. Human sexuality works nothing like this, however. Our sexual habits and even notions of what makes other humans sexually appealing are mostly learned. Suppose for the sake of argument, though, that you got two humans and raised them in complete isolation from any knowledge of sexuality. Would they discover sex on their own or would they simply remain ignorant of the concept?
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malloc wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:15 pm Most animals have sex entirely by instinct. When the right time of year rolls around, they seek out another of their kind and carry out whatever instinctive behaviors their mating entails. Human sexuality works nothing like this, however.
Why do you say that? I recommend reading something basic about animal behavior, like Lorenz's King Solomon's Ring. Animals are more like us than you think. What do you think "falling in love" is?
Suppose for the sake of argument, though, that you got two humans and raised them in complete isolation from any knowledge of sexuality. Would they discover sex on their own or would they simply remain ignorant of the concept?
Humans are unusually (but not uniquely) helpless at birth, so what you'd end up with is two dead babies and an investigation from the university's Review Board.

Can you raise people in near ignorance of how sex works? People have tried; not infrequently the kids get pregnant anyway.
Humans have instincts too, and they work pretty well.

I'd also note that in premodern times, 95% of the population, even if they had no high-quality porn, was very familiar with animal mating.
Our sexual habits and even notions of what makes other humans sexually appealing are mostly learned.
If I wanted to be cynical, I'd say that what's learned culturally is who not to be attracted to. And that learning can be pretty easily discarded in the right circumstances. (See: approximately every romance novel ever.)
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zompist wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:31 pmWhy do you say that? I recommend reading something basic about animal behavior, like Lorenz's King Solomon's Ring. Animals are more like us than you think. What do you think "falling in love" is?
Sure but solitary animals obviously lack culture or society simply by definition. They aren't learning about sexuality from others of their own kind, since they rarely even interact with them outside of mating or mothers rearing offspring in the case of mammals.
Can you raise people in near ignorance of how sex works? People have tried; not infrequently the kids get pregnant anyway.
Humans have instincts too, and they work pretty well.
Sounds like you answered my question then. Personally, I don't recall ever having an intuition for sex before learning about it overtly, but then again I am neurodivergent and hardly typical of how humans think.
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malloc wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:52 pm
Can you raise people in near ignorance of how sex works? People have tried; not infrequently the kids get pregnant anyway.
Humans have instincts too, and they work pretty well.
Sounds like you answered my question then. Personally, I don't recall ever having an intuition for sex before learning about it overtly, but then again I am neurodivergent and hardly typical of how humans think.
Well, I don't want to ask what experiences you've had. But without getting into the details, I'll share from my own experience that it's not that difficult. When you're with a willing someone of the appropriate sex, you both want certain things, you experiment, and there's a positive feedback loop.
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Post by keenir »

malloc wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:15 pm Most animals have sex entirely by instinct. When the right time of year rolls around, they seek out another of their kind and carry out whatever instinctive behaviors their mating entails. Human sexuality works nothing like this, however.
humans don't do sexual things on instinct? then what are "wet dreams"?
Our sexual habits and even notions of what makes other humans sexually appealing are mostly learned.
the born this way school of thought argues against that.
Suppose for the sake of argument, though, that you got two humans and raised them in complete isolation from any knowledge of sexuality. Would they discover sex on their own or would they simply remain ignorant of the concept?
Wasn't that a movie...The Blue Lagoon, was it? (it was referenced in...Airplane?)
malloc wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:52 pm
zompist wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 5:31 pmWhy do you say that? I recommend reading something basic about animal behavior, like Lorenz's King Solomon's Ring. Animals are more like us than you think. What do you think "falling in love" is?
Sure but solitary animals obviously lack culture or society simply by definition. They aren't learning about sexuality from others of their own kind, since they rarely even interact with them outside of mating or mothers rearing offspring in the case of mammals.
it turns out that, even animals we long thought were solitary - such as bull elephants - actually have societies of their own, even if they interact little with the matriarchal clans, the elder bulls still impart wisdom (about learned behaviors, about sex, about migration routes, etc) to the younger males.

heck, even the most solitary of primates, the orangutangs, still do learning - from the one who raises them, and from any they happen upon.
Can you raise people in near ignorance of how sex works? People have tried; not infrequently the kids get pregnant anyway.
Humans have instincts too, and they work pretty well.
Sounds like you answered my question then. Personally, I don't recall ever having an intuition for sex before learning about it overtly, but then again I am neurodivergent and hardly typical of how humans think.
ah, but if its the instinctive parts that are being discussed, thats less different even in us neurodivergents - we still have unconcious reactions & actions.
Last edited by keenir on Thu Jul 11, 2024 7:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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