Sexuality & Modernity- Victorian Sexuality

Sexuality & Modernity- Victorian Sexuality

Masturbation or what was termed the "solitary vice" or "onanism" emerged as a veritable epidemic, especially amongst children. This forms the core around which the modern child becomes engulfed in what might termed the sexualisation of modern society. A medical and moral campaign was waged around the sexuality of children. Parents, educators, doctors were all alerted to hunt out any traces of child sexuality through a myriad of surveillance techniques and upon discovery subject to a seemingly inexhaustible array of corrective measures. One nineteenth century doctor invented a device which administered electric shocks to a sleeping boy’s penis upon erection.

Seminal Losses

As a rule, with a healthy young man, night losses are accompanied by amorous dreams, together with the physical sensations characteristic of an orgasm, with the result that he wakes up.

If, however, a young man has these losses repeatedly, such a weakening of the sexual function may result that he will eventually have them without any dreams, or voluptuous sensations and without waking up. In such a case they are unmistakably pathological, and may be followed by daytime losses occurring on the occasion of the least sexual excitement, or even with-out any provoking cause whatever, and without any consciousness of them. In some cases any mental excitement or unusual mental effort is sufficient to induce them. You may understand that when they occur in the daytime it is usually because the sexual organs have become very seriously weakened. Under such circumstances there is little or no sensation. One may be so weakened in this respect that the touch of a woman’s clothing, or even conversation with her, will cause an emission.

via Seminal Losses.

Hands down! The best darn book on masturbation – Journal of Sex Research

a reviewer wrote:

The Big Book of Masturbation from Angst to Zeal, by Martha Cornog. San Francisco: Down There Press, 2003, 335 pages. Paper, $22.00.

The Big Book of Masturbation from Angst to Zeal is an interesting, informative, and highly readable text that will be enjoyed by professionals and the general public alike. The entire book is excellent, yet there are several chapters that make this book a must-have for all who are interested in the subject. I will highlight them below.

more at Hands down! The best darn book on masturbation – Journal of Sex Research – Find Articles at BNET

note: opinions are those of the reviewer

Masturbation: The History of the Great Terror

a review of Masturbation- The History of the Great Terror

… Only in the eighteenth century, with the anonymous publication of Onania, did masturbation become a medical, rather than a moral, failing. This work gave the practice symptoms, a progression, and a terrifying prognosis and then hawked a cure as did most quack medical pamphlets of the day. (The authors do a good job of proving the quackery of the pamphlet and of the writer’s science.) The popularity of Onania sparked ever-expanding editions and imitations; anti-masturbation ideas permeated society, and Enlightenment writers such as Voltaire and Rousseau further popularized the terrifying consequences of the act. Even the great doctors of the eighteenth century like Tissot began to see masturbation as causal in illness and proceeded to treat it as a real and deadly ailment. Trips to the brothel and/or early marriage became necessary to help boys avoid the terrifying consequences of masturbation that included gonorrhea, exhaustion, enervation, and death. Stengers and Van Neck provide fascinating accounts of the ways that early misreadings of the Bible provided anti-masturbatory moralists with evidence and the ways that faulty scientific methods served to confirm medical fears.

By the nineteenth century, masturbation supposedly robbed youth of their vital energies, debilitated the body, caused insanity, and eventually led to death. Because masturbation had such dreadful consequences, educators, doctors, and parents needed to terrify and sometimes torture children for their own good. Remedies included providing gruesome illustrations, lectures, and exhortations and proceeded from the psychological to the physical including tying children’s hands down at night, maintaining careful regimens of exercise, bland food, and exhaustion, and providing constant supervision. In cases where the child continued to masturbate, brutalities like clitoridectomy, penis piercing, and spiked penis sheaths became warranted. …

Masturbation: 100 years ago and now

a review of a classic text on masturbation

Masturbation- 100 years ago and now – Journal of Sex Research – Find Articles at BNET

… Stekel was a part of the Vienna psychoanalytic circle organized by Sigmund Freud, and Stekel participated in the original discussion the group had on onanism in 1910. This first discussion lasted for three evenings and contained so much disagreement that they dared not publish their proceedings. The group returned to the subject two years later and, although they agreed that masturbation was representative of the conflict between instinct and repression, they also agreed that the topic was quite inexhaustible.

Almost alone among the psychoanalytic group, Stekel argued that, if masturbation was entirely suppressed, the number of sexual misdeeds would increase to an immeasurable extent. He held that all sorts of forbidden yearnings that might have led to rape or pederasty found a healthy outlet in masturbation. In Stekel’s view, masturbation was entirely harmless or even benign, a position with which Freud disagreed. …

The decloseting of masturbation?

a review of three books on masturbation The decloseting of masturbation- – Journal of Sex Research – Find Articles at BNET

The Joy of Self-Pleasuring: Why Feel Guilty About Feeling Good? By Edward L. Rowan. Amherst, NY: Prometheus, 2000, 226 pages. Paper, $19.00.

Masturbation as Means of Achieving Sexual Health. Edited by Walter O. Bockting and Eli Coleman. New York: Haworth, 2002, 147 pages. Paper, $17.95.

Masturbation: The History of a Great Terror. By Jean Stengers and Anne Van Neck (Translated from the French by Kathryn A. Hoffmann). New York: Palgrave, 2001, 239 pages. Hardcover, $24.95.

Concerning Specific Forms of Masturbation

Concerning Specific Forms of Masturbation – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A book by Wilhelm Reich

The way people masturbate indicative of sexual potency

Reich’s work with patients at the clinic was often related to problems of diminished sexual potency, or impotence. He therefore decided to look closer at such factors as (1) where do they masturbate? (2) when do they masturbate? (3) with what materials do they masturbate? (4) with what fantasies do they masturbate? (5) how often do they masturbate? (6) in what bodily posture do they masturbate, and is that posture related to any childhood event or events? and (7) with what furniture do they masturbate, and what associations does the act have with that furniture?

From surveying these aspects Reich wanted to separate out healthy forms of masturbation from unhealthy ones.

[edit]Four categories of male masturbation
  1. Against the sheet or an improvised vulva (shirt, pillow, etc.), lying face down, and without the assistance of the hands, thrusting the pelvis rhythmically.
  2. Using the hands, lying on the side or in a bathtub, by far the most common form.
  3. Lying on the back using only the hands.
  4. In front of a mirror; while reading rape scenes (a very frequent occurrence, Reich remarked); on the toilet; in public parks (although hidden behind bushes); mutual masturbation with friends etc.