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Erotic literature

Erotic literature comprises fictional and factual stories and accounts of eros (passionate, romantic or sexual relationships) intended to arouse similar feelings in readers.[1] This contrasts erotica, which focuses more specifically on sexual feelings. Other common elements are satire and social criticism. Much erotic literature features erotic art, illustrating the text.

Although cultural disapproval of erotic literature has always existed, its circulation was not seen as a major problem before the invention of printing, as the costs of producing individual manuscripts limited distribution to a very small group of wealthy and literate readers. The invention of printing, in the 15th century, brought with it both a greater market and increasing restrictions, including censorship and legal restraints on publication on the grounds of obscenity.[2] Because of this, much of the production of this type of material became clandestine.[3]

Erotic verse edit

 
Sappho, the tenth Muse, fresco from Pompeii

Early periods edit

The oldest located love poem is Istanbul 2461,[4] an erotic monologue written by a female speaker directed to king Shu-Sin.[5][6]

In ancient Sumer, a whole cycle of poems revolved around the erotic lovemaking between the goddess Inanna and her consort Dumuzid the Shepherd.[7][8]

In the Hebrew Bible, the Song of Songs, found in the last section of the Tanakh, celebrates sexual love, giving "the voices of two lovers, praising each other, yearning for each other, proffering invitations to enjoy".[9]

Many erotic poems have survived from ancient Greece and Rome. The Greek poets Straton of Sardis and Sappho of Lesbos both wrote erotic lyric poems.[10] The poet Archilochus wrote numerous satirical poems filled with obscene and erotic imagery.[11] Erotic poems continued to be written in Hellenistic and Roman times by writers like Automedon (The Professional and Demetrius the Fortunate), Philodemus (Charito) and Marcus Argentarius. Notable Roman erotic poets included Catullus, Propertius, Tibullus, Ovid, Martial and Juvenal, and the anonymous Priapeia.[10] Some later Latin authors such as Joannes Secundus also wrote erotic verse.

Haft Peykar (Persian: هفت پیکر) also known as Bahramnameh (بهرام‌نامه, The Book of Bahram) is a romantic epic by the Persian poet Nizami Ganjavi written in 1197. This poem is a part of the Nizami's Khamsa. The original title Haft Peykar can be translated literally as "seven portraits" with the figurative meaning of "seven beauties." The poem is a masterpiece of erotic literature, but it is also a profoundly moralistic work.[12]

During the Renaissance period, many poems were not written for publication; instead, they were merely circulated in manuscript form among a relatively limited readership. This was the original method of circulation for the Sonnets of William Shakespeare, who also wrote the erotic poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece.[13]

The Perfumed Garden of Sensual Delight (Arabic: الروض العاطر في نزهة الخاطر) is a fifteenth-century Arabic sex manual and work of erotic literature by Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Nefzawi, also known simply as "Nefzawi". The book presents opinions on what qualities men and women should have to be attractive and gives advice on sexual technique, warnings about sexual health, and recipes to remedy sexual maladies. It gives lists of names for the penis and vulva, and has a section on the interpretation of dreams. Interspersed with these there are a number of stories which are intended to give context and amusement.

17th and 18th centuries edit

 
Portrait by Jacob Huysmans of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, a notorious author of erotic verse

In the 17th century, John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647–80) was notorious for obscene verses, many of which were published posthumously in compendiums of poetry by him and other "Restoration rakes" such as Sir Charles Sedley, Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, and George Etherege. Though many of the poems attributed to Rochester were actually by other authors, his reputation as a libertine was such that his name was used as a selling point by publishers of collections of erotic verse for centuries after. One poem definitely by him was "A Ramble in St. James's Park", in which the protagonist's quest for healthy exercise in the park uncovers instead "Bugg'ries, Rapes and Incest" on ground polluted by debauchery from the time when "Ancient Pict began to Whore". This poem was being censored from collections of Rochester's poetry as late as 1953, though, in line with the subsequent general change in attitudes to sexuality, it was dramatised as a scene in the film The Libertine about his life, based on an existing play.[14][15]

English collections of erotic verse by various hands include the Drollery collections of the 17th century; Pills to Purge Melancholy (1698–1720); the Roxburghe Ballads; Bishop Percy's Folio; The Musical Miscellany; National Ballad and Song: Merry Songs and Ballads Prior to the Year AD 1800 (1895–97) edited by J. S. Farmer; the three volume Poetica Erotica (1921) and its more obscene supplement the Immortalia (1927) both edited by T. R. Smith.[16] French collections include Les Muses gaillardes (1606) Le Cabinet satyrique (1618) and La Parnasse des poetes satyriques (1622).[17]

A famous collection of four erotic poems, was published in England in 1763, called An Essay on Woman. This included the title piece, an obscene parody of Alexander Pope's "An Essay on Man"; "Veni Creator: or, The Maid's Prayer", which is original; the "Universal Prayer", an obscene parody of Pope's poem of the same name, and "The Dying Lover to his Prick", which parodies "A Dying Christian to his Soul" by Pope. These poems have been attributed to John Wilkes and/or Thomas Potter and receive the distinction of being the only works of erotic literature ever read out loud and in their entirety in the House of Lords—before being declared obscene and blasphemous by that body and the supposed author, Wilkes, declared an outlaw.[18]

Robert Burns worked to collect and preserve Scottish folk songs, sometimes revising, expanding, and adapting them. One of the better known of these collections is The Merry Muses of Caledonia (the title is not by Burns), a collection of bawdy lyrics that were popular in the music halls of Scotland as late as the 20th century.

19th century edit

 
Illustration by Maurice Ray for Pierre Louÿs's Aphrodite: mœurs antiques

One of the 19th century's foremost poets—Algernon Charles Swinburne—devoted much of his considerable talent to erotic verse, producing, inter alia, twelve eclogues on flagellation titled The Flogging Block "by Rufus Rodworthy, annotated by Barebum Birchingly";[19] more was published anonymously in The Whippingham Papers (c. 1888).[20] Another notorious anonymous 19th-century poem on the same subject is The Rodiad, ascribed (seemingly falsely and in jest[21]) to George Colman the Younger.[22] John Camden Hotten even wrote a pornographic comic opera, Lady Bumtickler's Revels, on the theme of flagellation in 1872.[23]

Pierre Louÿs helped found a literary review, La Conque in 1891,[24] where he proceeded to publish Astarte—an early collection of erotic verse already marked by his distinctive elegance and refinement of style. He followed up in 1894 with another erotic collection in 143 prose poems—Songs of Bilitis (Les Chansons de Bilitis), this time with strong lesbian themes.

20th century edit

Although D. H. Lawrence could be regarded as a writer of love poems, he usually dealt in the less romantic aspects of love such as sexual frustration or the sex act itself. Ezra Pound, in his Literary Essays, complained of Lawrence's interest in his own "disagreeable sensations" but praised him for his "low-life narrative". This is a reference to Lawrence's dialect poems akin to the Scots poems of Robert Burns, in which he reproduced the language and concerns of the people of Nottinghamshire from his youth. He called one collection of poems Pansies partly for the simple ephemeral nature of the verse but also a pun on the French word panser, to dress or bandage a wound. "The Noble Englishman" and "Don't Look at Me" were removed from the official edition of Pansies on the grounds of obscenity; Lawrence felt wounded by this.[citation needed]

From the age of 17, Gavin Ewart acquired a reputation for wit and accomplishment through such works as "Phallus in Wonderland" and "Poems and Songs", which appeared in 1939 and was his first collection. The intelligence and casually flamboyant virtuosity with which he framed his often humorous commentaries on human behaviour made his work invariably entertaining and interesting. The irreverent eroticism for which his poetry is noted resulted in W H Smith's banning of his "The Pleasures of the Flesh" (1966) from their shops.[citation needed]

Canadian poet John Glassco wrote Squire Hardman (1967), a long poem in heroic couplets, purporting to be a reprint of an 18th-century poem by George Colman the Younger, on the theme of flagellation.[25]

Italian Una Chi distinguished herself among other publications for coldly analytical prose and for the crudeness of the stories.

Erotic fiction edit

Erotic fiction is fiction that portrays sex or sexual themes, generally in a more literary or serious way than the fiction seen in pornographic magazines. It sometimes includes elements of satire or social criticism. Such works have frequently been banned by the government or religious authorities. Non-fictional works that portray sex or sexual themes may contain fictional elements. Calling an erotic book 'a memoir' is a literary device that is common in this genre. For reasons similar to those that make pseudonyms both commonplace and often deviously set up, the boundary between fiction and non-fiction is broad.

Erotic fiction has been credited in large part for the sexual awakening and liberation of women in the 20th and 21st centuries.[citation needed]

History of western erotic fiction edit

Ancient, medieval, and early modern periods edit

 
1757 Latin edition of the Dialogues of Luisa Sigea (first published c. 1660) by Nicholas Chorier
 
Title-page and frontispiece of The London Jilt; Or, the Politick Whore, London, 1683

The Satyricon of Petronius Arbiter (later made into a film by Fellini) is an ancient Roman novel, which has partially survived, narrating the misadventures of an impotent man named Encolpius, who has been cursed by the god Priapus. The novel is filled with bawdy and obscene episodes, including orgies, ritual sex, and other erotic incidents.[26] The discovery of several fragments of Lollianos's Phoenician Tale reveal that a genre of picaresque erotic novel also existed in ancient Greece.[27] Some of the ancient Greek romance novels, such as Daphnis and Chloe, also contain elements of sexual fantasy.[28]

From the medieval period, there is the Decameron (1353) by the Italian Giovanni Boccaccio (made into a film by Pasolini) which features tales of lechery by monks and the seduction of nuns from convents. This book was banned in many countries. Even five centuries after publication, copies were seized and destroyed by the authorities in the US and the UK. For instance, between 1954 and 1958 eight orders for destruction of the book were made by English magistrates.[29]

From the 15th century, another classic of Italian erotica is a series of bawdy folk tales called the Facetiae by Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini. The Tale of Two Lovers (Latin: Historia de duobus amantibus) written in 1444 was one of the bestselling books of the 15th century, even before its author, Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini, became Pope Pius II. It is one of the earliest examples of an epistolary novel, full of erotic imagery. The first printed edition was published by Ulrich Zel in Cologne between 1467 and 1470.[30]

The 16th century was notable for the Heptameron of Marguerite de Navarre (1558), inspired by Boccaccio's Decameron and the notorious I Modi which married erotic drawings, depicting postures assumed in sexual intercourse, by Giulio Romano, with obscene sonnets by Pietro Aretino.[31]

Aretino also wrote the celebrated whore dialogue Ragionamenti, in which the sex lives of wives, whores and nuns are compared and contrasted.[32][33] Later works in the same genre include La Retorica delle Puttane (The Whore's Rhetoric) (1642) by Ferrante Pallavicino;[34][35] L'Ecole des Filles (The school for girls) (1655), attributed to Michel Millot and Jean L'Ange.[36][37] and The Dialogues of Luisa Sigea (c. 1660) by Nicolas Chorier.[38][39] Such works typically concerned the sexual education of a naive younger woman by an experienced older woman and often included elements of philosophising, satire and anti-clericalism.[40] Donald Thomas has translated L'École des filles, as The School of Venus, (1972), described on its back cover as "both an uninhibited manual of sexual technique and an erotic masterpiece of the first order".[41][42] In his diary Samuel Pepys records reading and (in an often censored passage) masturbating over this work.[43] Chorier's Dialogues of Luisa Sigea goes a bit further than its predecessors in this genre and has the older female giving practical instruction of a lesbian nature to the younger woman plus recommending the spiritual and erotic benefits of a flogging from willing members of the holy orders.[44] This work was translated into many languages under various different titles, appearing in English as A Dialogue between a Married Woman and a Maid in various editions.[45] The School of Women first appeared as a work in Latin entitled Aloisiae Sigaeae, Toletanae, Satyra sotadica de arcanis Amoris et Veneris. This manuscript claimed that it was originally written in Spanish by Luisa Sigea de Velasco, an erudite poet and maid of honor at the court of Lisbon and was then translated into Latin by Jean or Johannes Meursius. The attribution to Sigea and Meursius was a lie; the true author was Nicolas Chorier.

A unique work of this time is Sodom, or the Quintessence of Debauchery (1684), a closet play by the notorious Restoration rake, John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester in which Bolloxinion, King of Sodom, authorises "that buggery may be used O'er all the land, so cunt be not abused", which order, though appealing to soldiery, has deleterious effects generally, leading the court physician to counsel: "Fuck women, and let Bugg'ry be no more".[46]

18th century edit

 
Scene from chapter eight of Fanny Hill

An early pioneer of the publication of erotic works in England was Edmund Curll (1675–1747), who published many of the Merryland books. These were an English genre of erotic fiction in which the female body (and sometimes the male) was described in terms of a landscape.[47] The earliest work in this genre seems to be Erotopolis: The Present State of Bettyland (1684) probably by Charles Cotton. This was included, in abbreviated form, in The Potent Ally: or Succours from Merryland (1741). Other works include A New Description of Merryland. Containing a Topographical, Geographical and Natural History of that Country (1740) by Thomas Stretzer, Merryland Displayed (1741) and set of maps entitled A Compleat Set of Charts of the Coasts of Merryland (1745). The last book in this genre appears to be a parody of Laurence Sterne's A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy (1768) entitled La Souriciere. The Mousetrap. A Facetious and Sentimental Excursion through part of Austrian Flanders and France (1794) by "Timothy Touchit".[47]

The rise of the novel in 18th-century England provided a new medium for erotica. One of the most famous in this genre was Fanny Hill (1748) by John Cleland. This book set a standard in literary smut and was often adapted for the cinema in the 20th century. Peter Fryer suggests that Fanny Hill was a high point in British erotica, at least in the eighteenth century, in a way that mainstream literature around it had also reached a peak at that time, with writers like Defoe, Richardson and Fielding all having made important and lasting contributions to literature in its first half. After 1750, he suggests, when the Romantic period began, the quality of mainstream writing and of smut declined in tandem. Writes Fryer: "sex was driven out of the English novel in the latter half of the eighteenth century. The castration of imaginative English literature made the clandestine literature of sex the most poverty stricken and boring in Europe".[48]

 
Justine, or The Misfortunes of Virtue

French writers kept their stride. One genre, which vies in oddness with the English "Merryland" productions, was inspired by the newly translated Arabian Nights and involved the transformation of people into objects which were in propinquity with or employed in sexual relationships: such as sofas, dildos and even bidets. The climax of this trend is represented in French philosopher Diderot's Les Bijoux indiscrets (1747) in which a magic ring is employed to get women's vaginas to give an account of their intimate sexual histories.[49]

Other works of French erotica from this period include Thérèse Philosophe (1748) by Jean-Baptiste de Boyer, Marquis d'Argens which describes a girl's initiation into the secrets of both philosophy and sex;[50] The Lifted Curtain or Laura's Education, about a young girl's sexual initiation by her father, written by the French revolutionary politician Comte de Mirabeau; and Les Liaisons dangereuses (Dangerous Liaisons) by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, first published in 1782.

In the late 18th century, such works as Justine, or the Misfortunes of Virtue and 120 Days of Sodom by the Marquis de Sade were exemplars of the theme of sado-masochism and influenced later erotic accounts of sadism and masochism in fiction. De Sade (as did the later writer Sacher-Masoch) lent his name to the sexual acts which he describes in his work.

19th century edit

In the Victorian period, the quality of erotic fiction was much below that of the previous century—it was largely written by 'hacks'[citation needed]. Some works, however, borrowed from established literary models, such as Dickens. The period also featured a form of social stratification. Even in the throes of orgasm, the social distinctions between master and servant (including form of address) were scrupulously observed. Significant elements of sado-masochism were present in some examples, perhaps reflecting the influence of the English public school, where flagellation was routinely used as a punishment.[51] These clandestine works were often anonymous or written under a pseudonym, and sometimes undated, thus definite information about them often proves elusive.

English erotic novels from this period include The Lustful Turk (1828); The Romance of Lust (1873); The Convent School, or Early Experiences of A Young Flagellant (1876) by Rosa Coote [pseud.]; The Mysteries of Verbena House, or, Miss Bellasis Birched for Thieving (1882) by Etonensis [pseud.], actually by George Augustus Sala and James Campbell Reddie; The Autobiography of a Flea (1887); Venus in India (1889) by 'Captain Charles Devereaux';[52][53][54] Flossie, a Venus of Fifteen: By one who knew this Charming Goddess and worshipped at her shrine (1897).[55] A novel called Beatrice, once marketed as another classic of Victorian erotica from the pen of the ubiquitous "Anon", now appears to be a very clever 20th-century pastiche of Victorian pornography. It first appeared in 1982 and was written by one Gordon Grimley, a sometime managing director of Penthouse International.[56]

Clandestine erotic periodicals of this age include The Pearl, The Oyster and The Boudoir, collections of erotic tales, rhymes, songs and parodies published in London between 1879 and 1883.

 
Coverpage of a catalogue of books published by Charles Carrington (Paris, 1906)

The centre of the trade in such material in England at this period was Holywell Street, off the Strand, London. An important publisher of erotic material in the early 19th century was George Cannon (1789–1854), followed in mid-century by William Dugdale (1800–1868) and John Camden Hotten (1832–1873).[57]

An evaluation of 19th-century (pre-1885) and earlier underground erotica, from the author's own private archive, is provided by Victorian writer Henry Spencer Ashbee, using the pseudonym "Pisanus Fraxi", in his bibliographical trilogy Index Librorum Prohibitorum (1877), Centuria Librorum Absconditorum (1879) and Catena Librorum Tacendorum (1885). His plot summaries of the works he discusses in these privately printed volumes are themselves a contribution to the genre. Originally of very limited circulation, changing attitudes have led to his work now being widely available.[58][59]

Notable European works of erotica at this time were Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess (1833) by Frenchman Alfred de Musset and Venus in Furs (1870) by the Austrian author Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.[60][61] The latter erotic novella brought the attention of the world to the phenomenon of masochism, named after the author.

Toward the end of the 19th century, a more "cultured" form of erotica began to appear by poets such as Algernon Charles Swinburne, who pursued themes of paganism, lesbianism and sado-masochism in such works as Lesbia Brandon and in contributions to The Whippingham Papers (1888) edited by St George Stock, author of The Romance of Chastisement (1866). This was associated with the Decadent movement, in particular, with Aubrey Beardsley and the Yellow Book. But it was also to be found in France, amongst such writers as Pierre Louys, author of Les chansons de Bilitis (1894) (a celebration of lesbianism and sexual awakening).

Pioneering works of gay male erotica from this time were The Sins of the Cities of the Plain (1881),[62] which features the celebrated Victorian transvestite duo of Boulton and Park as characters,[63] and Teleny, or The Reverse of the Medal (1893).[64][65][66]

Two important publishers of erotic fiction at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th were Leonard Smithers (1861–1907)[64] and Charles Carrington (1867–1921),[67] both of whom were subject to legal injunctions from the British authorities in order to prohibit their trade in such material. Because of this legal harassment the latter conducted his business from Paris.[68] Erotic fiction published by Carrington at this period includes Raped on the Railway: a True Story of a Lady who was first ravished and then flagellated on the Scotch Express (1894)[69][70][71][72] and The Memoirs of Dolly Morton (1899) set on a slave-plantation in the Southern States of America.[73][74][75]

20th century edit

20th-century erotic fiction includes such classics of the genre as: Suburban Souls (1901), published by Carrington and possibly written by him also;[76] The Confessions of Nemesis Hunt (issued in three volumes 1902, 1903, 1906),[77] attributed to George Reginald Bacchus,[78][79] printed by Duringe of Paris for Leonard Smithers in London;[64] Josephine Mutzenbacher (1906) by Anon. (presumably Felix Salten); Sadopaideia (1907) by Anon. (possibly Algernon Charles Swinburne);[80] Les Mémoires d'un jeune Don Juan (1907) and the somewhat disturbing Les onze mille verges (1907) by Guillaume Apollinaire;[81] The Way of a Man with a Maid (1908)[82] and A Weekend Visit by Anon.; Pleasure Bound Afloat (1908), Pleasure Bound Ashore (1909) and Maudie (1909) by Anon. (probably George Reginald Bacchus), and My Lustful Adventures (1911) by the pseudonymous 'Ramrod'; Manuel de civilité pour les petites filles à l'usage des maisons d'éducation (1917) and Trois filles de leur mère (1926) by Pierre Louys;[83][84] Story of the Eye (1928) by Georges Bataille; Tropic of Cancer (1934) and Tropic of Capricorn (1938) by Henry Miller; The Story of O (1954) by Pauline Réage; Helen and Desire (1954) and Thongs (1955) by Alexander Trocchi; Ada, or Ardor (1969) by Vladimir Nabokov; Journal (1966), Delta of Venus (1978)[85] and Little Birds (1979) by Anaïs Nin[86] and The Bicycle Rider (1985) by Guy Davenport and Lila Says (1999) by an anonymous author.

A study found that the most popular of the Armed Services Editions paperbacks distributed to American soldiers during World War II "are novels that deal frankly with sexual relations (regardless of tone, literary merit and point of view, no matter whether the book is serious or humorous, romantically exciting or drably pedestrian)".[87]

Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita is usually described as an erotic novel, but in the view of some it is a literary drama with elements of eroticism.[citation needed] Like Nabokov's Lolita, Johannes Linnankoski's The Song of the Blood-Red Flower is also often described as erotic novel, only a little explicit and cleverly cloaked in gentler romance.[88]

Lolita and The Story of O were published by Olympia Press, a Paris-based publisher, launched in 1953 by Maurice Girodias as a rebadged version of the Obelisk Press he inherited from his father Jack Kahane. It published a mix of erotic fiction and avant-garde literary works. The Girls of Radcliff Hall is a roman à clef novel in the form of a lesbian girls' school story written in the 1930s by the British composer and bon-vivant Gerald Berners, the 14th Lord Berners, under the pseudonym "Adela Quebec", published and distributed privately in 1932.[89]

Another trend in the twentieth century was the rise of the lesbian pulp fiction. Works such as The Price of Salt (1952), Spring Fire (1952), Desert of the Heart (1964), and Patience and Sarah (1969) were only a few examples of this subgenre. Many of the authors were women themselves, such as Gale Wilhelm and Ann Bannon. Many gay men also enjoyed gay pulp fiction, which borrowed the same sexploitation format as the lesbian books.[90]

Asian erotic fiction edit

 
The title page from the first volume of a Ming dynasty edition of The Embroidered Couch, one of the most notorious and controversial erotic novels

Chinese literature has a rich catalogue of erotic novels that were published during the mid-Ming to early-Qing dynasties. Some well-known erotic novels with explicit sexuality during this period include Ruyijun zhuan (The Lord of Perfect Satisfaction), The Embroidered Couch, Su'e pian, Langshi, Chipozi zhuan, Zhulin yeshi, and The Carnal Prayer Mat. The critic Charles Stone has argued that pornographic technique is the "union of banality, obscenity, and repetition", and contains just the "rudiments" of plot, style, and characterization, while anything that is not sexually stimulating is avoided. If this is the case, he concluded, then The Lord of Perfect Satisfaction is the "fountainhead of Chinese erotica", but not pornography.[91] The novel Jin Ping Mei (or The Plum in the Golden Vase), written by an author who used only a pseudonym (as his real name is unknown), is generally regarded as the greatest of all Chinese erotic novels. Its literary status is unparalleled among erotic fiction and it has been described by critic Stephen Marche in the Los Angeles Review of Books as "one of the world's great novels, if not simply the greatest."[92]

There is also a tradition of erotic fiction in Japan. Some portion of this is doujinshi, or independent comics, which are often fan fiction. The sharebon (洒落本) was a pre-modern Japanese literary genre. Plots revolved around humor and entertainment at the pleasure quarters. It is a subgenre of gesaku.

Contemporary erotic fiction edit

In the 21st century, a number of female authors, including Alison Tyler, Rachel Kramer Bussel, and Carol Queen, rose to prominence. Mitzi Szereto is an editor and author who said she wants to see the term erotica removed from novels and anthologies that include depictions of sexual activities. Other authors celebrate the term but also question why literature featuring sexual activity should be considered outside literary fiction.

The debate was rekindled in 2012 by the release of the 50 Shades of Grey trilogy written by E. L. James. The success of her erotica for every woman, dubbed 'mommyporn', gave rise to satires like Fifty Shames of Earl Grey by 'Fanny Merkin' (real name Andrew Shaffer), a book of essays called Fifty Writers on Fifty Shades (ed. Lori Perkins) and editors of erotic imprints re-evaluating the content and presentation of the genre.[93]

One development in contemporary erotica is the knowledge that many women, and not just men, are aroused by it. This is regardless of whether it is traditional pornography or tailor-made women's erotica. Romantic novels are sometimes marketed as erotica—or vice versa—as "mainstream" romance in recent decades has begun to exhibit blatant (if poetic) descriptions of sex. Erotic romance is a relatively new genre of romance with an erotic theme and very explicit love scenes, but with a romance at the heart of the story. Erotic fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy fiction and utilizes erotica in a fantasy setting. These stories can essentially cover any of the other subgenres of fantasy, such as high fantasy, contemporary fantasy, or even historical fantasy. The extents of the genre to break existing conventions and limits in subject matter have managed to shock popular audiences, with genres such as monster erotica emerging with the ease of digital publishing.

Erotic fantasy fiction has similarities to romantic fantasy but is more explicit. Erotic fantasy can also be found in fan fiction, which uses plot elements and characters from popular fiction such as television, film, or novels. Erotic fan fiction may use characters from existing works in non-canon relationships, such as slash (homoerotic) fan fiction. Fan fiction and its Japanese counterpart, doujinshi, account for an enormous proportion of all erotica written today.[citation needed]

Internet erotic fiction edit

The Internet and digital revolution in erotic depiction has changed the forms of representing scenes of a sexual nature.

Erotica was present on the Internet from its earliest days, as seen from rec.arts.erotica on Usenet. This news group was a moderated forum for the exchange of erotic stories that predated the creation of the World Wide Web. Most of this migrated to the alt.* hierarchy forums by the 1990s, including alt.sex.stories. The vast majority of Internet erotica is written by amateurs for the enjoyment of the author and readers instead of for profit. The increased interactivity and anonymity allows casual or hobby writers the opportunity not only to author their own stories but also to share them with a world-wide audience. Many authors adopt colorful pseudonyms and can develop cult followings within their genre, although a small number use their real names. Among transgender or non-binary authors, it is a common practice to adopt a feminine or masculine alter-ego, although a writer may use their own given name.

Student erotica edit

 
Portrayal of Erotica at the library of Congress

In the 21st century, a new literary genre of student published journals at American universities was started.[94] The following is a partial list of publications:

Other accounts edit

Writings of prostitutes edit

 
Harris's List of Covent Garden Ladies

Prostitution was the focus of much of the earliest erotic works. The term pornography is derived from the Greek pornographos meaning "writer about prostitutes", originally denoting descriptions of the lives and manners of prostitutes and their customers in Ancient Greece. According to Athenaeus in The Deipnosophists these constituted a considerable genre, with many lubricious treatises, stories and dramas on the subject.[106] A surviving example of this genre is Lucian of Samosata's Dialogues of the Courtesans.[107]

Accounts of prostitution have continued as a major part of the genre of erotic literature. In the 18th century, directories of prostitutes and their services, such as Harris's List of Covent Garden Ladies (1757–1795), provided both entertainment and instruction.

In the 19th century, the sensational journalism of W. T. Stead's The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon (1885) about the procuring of underage girls into the brothels of Victorian London provided a stimulus for the erotic imagination. Stead's account was widely translated and the revelation of "padded rooms for the purpose of stifling the cries of the tortured victims of lust and brutality" and the symbolic figure of "The Minotaur of London" confirmed European observers worst imaginings about "Le Sadisme anglais" and inspired erotic writers to write of similar scenes set in London or involving sadistic English gentlemen. Such writers include D'Annunzio in Il Piacere, Paul-Jean Toulet in Monsieur de Paur (1898), Octave Mirbeau in Jardin des Supplices (1899) and Jean Lorrain in Monsieur de Phocas (1901).[108]

Well-known recent works in this genre are The Happy Hooker: My Own Story (1971) by the Dutch madame Xaviera Hollander and The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl (2005) by Belle de Jour.

Erotic memoirs edit

 
Medallion portrait of Casanova, engraving by Berka, used as frontispiece for Icosameron (1788)

Erotic memoirs include Casanova's Histoire de ma vie, from the 18th century. Notable English works of this genre from the 19th century include The Ups and Downs of Life (1867) by Edward Sellon and My Secret Life by "Walter". Edward Sellon was a writer, translator and illustrator of erotic literature who wrote erotica for the pornographic publisher William Dugdale, including such works as The New Epicurean (1865).[109] The true identity of "Walter" is unknown. Ian Gibson, in The Erotomaniac speculates that My Secret Life was actually written by Henry Spencer Ashbee and therefore it is possible that "Walter" is a fiction.

A famous German erotic work of this time, published in two parts in 1868 and 1875 entitled Pauline the Prima Donna purports to be the memoirs of the opera singer Wilhelmine Schröder-Devrient. Various discrepancies with known facts of the singer's life, however, have led many to doubt the veracity of this book and the erotic adventures contained in the second volume, at least, appear to be implausible. These include the author indulging in lesbian sadomasochism, group sex, sodomy, bestiality, scatology, necrophilia, prostitution, and vampirism all before she had reached the age of 27.[110] 20th-century contributions to the genre include Frank Harris's My Life and Loves (1922–27) and the convicted Austrian sex criminal Edith Cadivec's Confessions and Experiences and its sequel Eros, the Meaning of My Life (published together 1930-1).[111] A 21st-century example is One Hundred Strokes of the Brush Before Bed (2004) by Melissa Panarello.

Sex manuals edit

Sex manuals are among the oldest forms of erotic literature. Three brief fragments of a sex manual written in the fourth century BC that is attributed to Philaenis of Samos have survived. Modern scholars generally regard it as a work of parody probably written by a man, and this was most likely Athenian sophist Polycrates.[112][113] Other examples of the genre from the classical world include the lost works of Elephantis[114] and Ovid's Ars Amatoria. The Indian Kama Sutra is one of the world's best-known works of this type. The Ananga Ranga, a 12th-century collection of Indian erotic works, is a lesser known one. The Perfumed Garden for the Soul's Recreation, a 16th-century Arabic work by Sheikh Nefzaoui, is also well-known and is often reprinted and translated. There is anecdotal evidence that, as late as the mid-20th century, sex therapists and other physicians prescribed erotic literature as treatment for erectile dysfunction.[citation needed]

The ancient Chinese versions of the sex manual include the texts that contain the Taoist sexual practices. These include books that show illustrations of the ideal sexual behavior because sex in this religion is not considered taboo but a manifestation of the concept of the yin and yang,[115] wherein the male and female engage in an act of "joining of energy" or "joining of essences". The belief is that proper sexual practice is key to achieving good health. The manuals included the Ishinpo text,[116] which is a medical document that also included sections devoted to sexual hygiene and sexual manuals of the Tang and Han dynasties.

Qigong manuals include warming a wet towel and covering penis for a few minutes, then rubbing one direction away from base of penis hundreds of times daily, similar to qigong. Squeezing sphincter while semi-erect or fully erect dozens of times daily, particularly a few hours before intercourse will help delay orgasm or enhance non-ejaculatory pleasure. The Universal Tao system was developed by Mantak Chia to teach Taoist meditative and exercise techniques to balance the body and increase and refine one's vital energy, or qi. Front and back channel, the back channel is where the perineum is located between anus and scrotum moving up the tailbone to the crown, the front channel is moving down the front of your body down the midline. Breathing up the back channel and then breathing out from the front channel down to and from the abdomen moves chi. Many practices combined help chi to be transformed into spiritual energy or shen.

Not all sex manuals were produced to arouse or inform readers about sexual acts. Some were created as a form of satire or social criticism, as in the case of a mock-sex manual produced in the early sixteenth century by Pietro Aretino. It was in response to the clerical censorship of the nude engravings of the Roman artists Marcantonio Raimondi.[117] This was released in cheap wood, with a corresponding sonnet serving as the voice of the characters.

Legal status edit

Early legislation edit

To 1857 edit

 
Cover of an undated American edition of Fanny Hill, c. 1910

Erotic or pornographic works have often been prosecuted, censored and destroyed by the authorities on grounds of obscenity.[2] In Medieval England, erotic or pornographic publications were the concern of the ecclesiastical courts. After the Reformation the jurisdiction of these courts declined in favour of the Crown which licensed every printed book. Prosecutions of books for their erotic content alone were rare and works which attacked the church or state gave much more concern to the authorities than erotica or 'obscene libel' as it was then known. For instance the Licensing Act 1662 was aimed generally at "heretical, seditious, schismatical or offensive books of pamphlets" rather than just erotica per se. Even this Licensing Act was allowed to lapse in 1695 and no attempt made to renew it.

The first conviction for obscenity in England occurred in 1727, when Edmund Curll was fined for the publication of Venus in the Cloister or The Nun in her Smock under the common law offence of disturbing the King's peace. This set a legal precedent for other convictions.[118] The publication of other books by Curll, however, considered seditious and blasphemous, such as The Memoirs of John Ker, apparently most offended the authorities. Prosecutions of erotica later in the 18th century were rare and were most often taken because of the admixture of seditious and blasphemous material with the porn.

1857–1959 edit

 
Erotic literature going up in smoke and its distributors being put in jail, courtesy of Anthony Comstock's New York Society for the Suppression of Vice

It was the Obscene Publications Act 1857 which made the sale of obscene material a statutory offense, giving the courts power to seize and destroy offending material. The origins of the act itself were in a trial for the sale of pornography presided over by the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Campbell, at the same time as a debate in the House of Lords over a bill aiming to restrict the sale of poisons. Campbell was taken by the analogy between the two situations, famously referring to the London pornography trade as "a sale of poison more deadly than prussic acid, strychnine or arsenic",[119] and proposed a bill to restrict the sale of pornography; giving statutory powers of destruction would allow for a much more effective degree of prosecution. The bill was controversial at the time, receiving strong opposition from both Houses of Parliament. It was passed on the assurance by the Lord Chief Justice that it was "intended to apply exclusively to works written for the single purpose of corrupting the morals of youth and of a nature calculated to shock the common feelings of decency in any well-regulated mind." The House of Commons successfully amended it so as not to apply to Scotland, on the grounds that Scottish common law was sufficiently stringent.

The Act provided for the seizure and destruction of any material deemed to be obscene, and held for sale or distribution, following information being laid before a "court of summary jurisdiction" (magistrates' court). The Act required that following evidence of a common-law offence being committed – for example, on the report of a plain-clothes policeman who had successfully purchased the material – the court could issue a warrant for the premises to be searched and the material seized. The proprietor then would be called upon to attend court and give reason why the material should not be destroyed. Critically, the Act did not define "obscene", leaving this to the will of the courts.

While the Act itself did not change, the scope of the work affected by it did. In 1868 Sir Alexander Cockburn, Campbell's successor as Lord Chief Justice, held in an appeal that the test of obscenity was "whether the tendency of the matter charged as obscenity is to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences and into whose hands a publication of this sort may fall." This was clearly a major change from Campbell's opinion only ten years before – the test now being the effect on someone open to corruption who obtained a copy, not whether the material was intended to corrupt or offend.

Cockburn's declaration remained in force for several decades, and most of the high profile seizures under the Act relied on this interpretation. Known as the Hicklin test no cognisance was taken of the literary merit of a book or on the extent of the offending text within the book in question. The widened scope of the original legislation led to the subsequent notorious targeting of now acknowledged classics of world literature by such authors as Zola, James Joyce and D.H. Lawrence plus medical textbooks by such as Havelock Ellis rather than the blatant erotica which was the original target of this law.[120]

In contrast to England, where actions against obscene literature were the preserve of the magistrates, such actions were the responsibility of the Postal Inspection Service in America. They were embodied in the federal and state Comstock laws and named after the postal officer and anti-obscenity crusader Anthony Comstock, who proved himself officious in the work of suppression both in his official capacity and through his New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.[121] The first such law was the Comstock Act, (ch. 258 17 Stat. 598 enacted March 3, 1873) which made it illegal to send any "obscene, lewd, and/or lascivious" materials through the mail. Twenty-four states passed similar prohibitions on materials distributed within the states.[122]

Modern legislation edit

This question of whether a book had literary merit eventually prompted a change in the law in both America and the UK. In the United Kingdom the Obscene Publications Act 1959 provided for the protection of "literature" but conversely increased the penalties against pure "pornography." The law defined obscenity and separated it from serious works of art.

The new definition read:

[A]n article shall be deemed to be obscene if its effect or (where the article comprises two or more distinct items) the effect of any one of its items is, if taken as a whole, such as to tend to deprave and corrupt persons who are likely, having regard to all relevant circumstances, to read, see or hear the matter contained or embodied in it.

After this piece of legislation questions of the literary merit of the work in question were allowed to be put before the judge and jury as in the Lady Chatterley trial. The publishers of the latter book were found not guilty by the court on the grounds of the literary merit of the book. In later prosecutions of literary erotica under the provisions of the act, however, even purely pornographic works with no apparent literary merit escaped destruction by the authorities. Purely textual pornographic texts, with no hint of libel, ceased to be brought to trial following the collapse of the Inside Linda Lovelace trial in 1976. However, in October 2008, a man was unsuccessfully prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act (the R v Walker trial) for posting fictional written material to the Internet allegedly describing the kidnap, rape and murder of the pop group Girls Aloud.[123]

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution gives protection to written fiction, although the legal presumption that it does not protect obscene literature has never been overcome. Instead, pornography has successfully been defined legally as non-obscene, or "obscene" been shown to be so vague a term as to be unenforceable. In 1998 Brian Dalton was charged with creation and possession of child pornography under an Ohio obscenity law. The stories were works of fiction concerning sexually abusing children which he wrote and kept, unpublished, in his private journal. He accepted a plea bargain, pleaded guilty and was convicted.[124] Five years later, the conviction was vacated.

Importing books and texts across national borders can sometimes be subject to more stringent laws than in the nations concerned. Customs officers are often permitted to seize even merely 'indecent' works that would be perfectly legal to sell and possess once one is inside the nations concerned. Canada has been implicated in such border seizures.[citation needed]

Although the Obscene Publications Act of 1857, as well as 1959 legislation, outlawed the publication, retail and trafficking of certain types of writings and images regarded as pornographic, and would order the destruction of shop and warehouse stock meant for sale, the private possession of and viewing of pornography was not prosecuted in those times.[125] In some nations, even purely textual erotic literature is still deemed illegal and is also prosecuted.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hyde (1964) p. 1
  2. ^ a b Hyde (1964); pp. 1–26
  3. ^ Patrick J. Kearney (1982) A History of Erotic Literature. Parragon: 7–18
  4. ^ "Oldest love poem". Guinness World Records. Retrieved September 15, 2019.
  5. ^ Fant, Clyde E.; Reddish, Mitchell G. (October 15, 2008). Lost Treasures of the Bible: Understanding the Bible Through Archaeological Artifacts in World Museums. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 9780802828811.
  6. ^ Longman III, Tremper; Enns, Peter (June 6, 2008). Dictionary of the Old Testament: Wisdom, Poetry & Writings: A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 9780830817832.
  7. ^ Wolkstein, Diane; Kramer, Samuel Noah (1983). Inanna: Queen of Heaven and Earth: Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer. New York City, New York: Harper&Row Publishers. pp. 150–155. ISBN 0-06-090854-8.
  8. ^ Leick, Gwendolyn (2013) [1994], Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature, New York City, New York: Routledge, pp. 64–79, 90–96, ISBN 978-1-134-92074-7
  9. ^ Garrett, Duane (1993). Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs. B&H Publishing Group. p. 366. ISBN 9780805401141.
  10. ^ a b Derek Parker 404, ed. (1980) An Anthology of Erotic Verse. London: Constable ISBN 0-09-463500-5
  11. ^ Cahill, Thomas (2003). Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter. New York City, New York: Anchor Books. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-0-385-49554-7.
  12. ^ François de Blois. Haft Peykar // Encyclopædia Iranica 404. — December 15, 2002. — V. XI. — pp. 522–524.
  13. ^ Derek Parker, ed. (1980) An Anthology of Erotic Verse; pp. 88–96
  14. ^ Patrick J. Kearney (1982) A History of Erotic Literature. Parragon Books: 22, 40–41
  15. ^ Parker, Derek, ed. (1980) An Anthology of Erotic Verse. London: Constable
  16. ^ Clifford J. Scheiner (1996) The Essential Guide to Erotic Literature, Part Two: After 1920. Ware: Wordsworth: 26–27
  17. ^ Patrick J. Kearney (1982) A History of Erotic Literature. Parragon Books: 65
  18. ^ Patrick J. Kearney (1982) A History of Erotic Literature. Parragon Books: 71-4
  19. ^ Derek Parker, ed. (1980) An Anthology of Erotic Verse: 22
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  32. ^ Hyde (1964); pp. 76
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  34. ^ Wendy Beth Heller, Emblems of Eloquence: opera and women's voices in seventeenth-century Venice, Berkeley: University of California Press 404, 2003, ISBN 0-520-20933-8, p.75
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  44. ^ Muchembled (2008) p. 77
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  46. ^ Kronhausen (1969); pp. 26–32
  47. ^ a b Patrick J Kearney (1982) A History of Erotic Literature. Parragon: 53-7
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  124. ^ . Archived from the original on February 15, 2012. Retrieved April 28, 2012.
  125. ^ H. Montgomery Hyde A History of Pornography. (1969) London, Heinemann: 14

References edit

  • Brulotte, Gaëtan & Phillips, John (eds.) (2006) Encyclopedia of Erotic Literature. New York: Routledge
  • Gibson, Ian (2001) The Erotomaniac London: Faber & Faber
  • H. Montgomery Hyde (1964) A History of Pornography. London: Heinemann
  • Kearney, Patrick J. (1982) A History of Erotic Literature, Parragon, ISBN 1-85813-198-7
  • Kronhausen, Phyllis & Eberhard (1959) Pornography and the Law, The Psychology of Erotic Realism and Pornography. New York: Ballantine Books
  • Kronhausen, Phyllis & Eberhard (1969) Erotic Fantasies, a Study of Sexual Imagination. New York: Grove Press
  • Muchembled, Robert (2008) Orgasm and the West: a history of pleasure from the 16th century to the present, Polity, ISBN 0-7456-3876-7
  • Sontag, Susan (1969). The Pornographic Imagination in Styles of Radical Will. Picador. ISBN 0-312-42021-8.
  • Weller, Michael J. The Secret Blue Book. Home Baked Books,[2], London.
  • Williams, Linda (1999) Hardcore: Power, Pleasure, and the 'Frenzy of the Visible'. Berkeley: University of California Press

Further reading edit

  • Kearney, Patrick, ed. (1981). The Private Case: an annotated bibliography of the Private Case Erotica Collection in the British (Museum) Library. London Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey: J. Landesman Distributed by Humanities Press. ISBN 9780905150246. With an introduction by G. Legman.
  • Pietrek, Klaus (1992). Lexikon der erotischen Literatur: Autoren, Werke, Themen, Aspekte (in German). Meitingen: Corian-Verl. ISBN 9783890480503.
  • Bondy, François (1989), "Erotische literatur", in Bondy, François (ed.), Harenbergs Lexikon der Weltliteratur: Autoren - Werke - Begriffe (Band 2) (in German), Dortmund: Harenberg-Lexikon-Verl, ISBN 9783611000911.
  • Schweikle, Günther; Schweikle, Irmgard (1990), "Erotische literatur", in Schweikle, Günther; Schweikle, Irmgard (eds.), Metzler Literatur Lexikon: Begriffe und Definitionen (in German), vol. 2, Stuttgart: J.M. Metzlersche, ISBN 9783476006684.
  • von Wilpert, Gero (2001), "Erotische literatur", in von Wilpert, Gero (ed.), Sachwörterbuch der Literatur (in German), vol. 8, Stuttgart: Kröner, ISBN 9783520231086
  • Hogen, Hildegard; Bode, Eva Beate (2004), "Erotische literatur", in Hogen, Hildegard; Bode, Eva Beate (eds.), Der Brockhaus Literatur: Schriftsteller, Werke, Epochen, Sachbegriffe (in German), vol. 2, Mannheim: F.A. Brockhaus, ISBN 9783765303517
  • Brulotte, Gaétan; Phillips, John, eds. (2006). Encyclopedia of erotic literature. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781579584412.
  • Roy, Pinaki (January 2014). (PDF). Labyrinth. Gwalior, India: Dr. Lata Mishra. 5 (1): 68–77. ISSN 0976-0814. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 8, 2016.
  • Straight, Sheryl. "The erotica bibliophile". A Bibliography of Works Published by Charles Carrington
  • Wood, Rachel (July 2015). "Sexual consumption within sexual labour: producing and consuming erotic texts and sexual commodities" (PDF). Porn Studies. Taylor and Francis. 2 (2–3): 250–262. doi:10.1080/23268743.2015.1051308. hdl:10034/621054. S2CID 143264651.

History edit

General edit

  • Atkins, John (1970) Sex in Literature, 4 vols. 1970–1982
  • Bertolotti, Alessandro. Curiosa la bibliotheque érotique. Paris, Editions La Martiniere, 2012, ISBN 978-2-7324-5274-6
  • Di Folco, Philippe, ed. (2005) Dictionnaire de la pornographie. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, ISBN 2-130-54414-2
  • Englisch, Paul (1927) Geschichte der erotischen Literatur, 1927, Reprint 1977, ISBN 3-921695-01-5
  • Fischer, Carolin (1997) Gärten der Lust: eine Geschichte erregender Lektüren, Stuttgart; Weimar: Metzler ISBN 3-476-01563-7, paperback: München: Dt. Taschenbuch-Verlag, 2000
  • Gnüg, Hiltrud (2002) Der erotische Roman: von der Renaissance bis zur Gegenwart, Ditzingen: Reclam ISBN 3-15-017634-4
  • Kronhausen, Eberhard & Phyllis (1969) Bücher aus dem Giftschrank: eine Analyse der verbotenen und verfemten erotischen Literatur
  • Pia, Pascal, ed. (1971) Dictionnaire des œuvres érotiques. Paris: Mercure de France
  • Schreiber, Hermann (1969) Erotische Texte: sexualpathologische Erscheinungen in der Literatur
  • Spedding, Patrick, curator (2010) Lewd and Scandalous Books: An exhibition of material from the Monash University Library Rare Books Collection, Clayton (Melbourne): Monash University,

Ancient world and Middle Ages edit

  • Leick, G. (1994) Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature ISBN 0-415-06534-8
  • Mulchandani, S. (2006) Erotic Literature of Ancient India: Kama Sutra, Koka Shastra, Gita Govindam, Ananga Ranga ISBN 81-7436-384-X

Modern times to 1900 edit

  • Goulemot, J. (1993) Gefährliche Bücher: erotische Literatur, Pornographie, Leser und Zensur im 18. Jahrhundert ISBN 3-499-55528-X
  • Moulton, I. (2000) Before Pornography: erotic writing in early modern Europe ISBN 0-19-513709-4

External links edit

erotic, literature, comprises, fictional, factual, stories, accounts, eros, passionate, romantic, sexual, relationships, intended, arouse, similar, feelings, readers, this, contrasts, erotica, which, focuses, more, specifically, sexual, feelings, other, common. Erotic literature comprises fictional and factual stories and accounts of eros passionate romantic or sexual relationships intended to arouse similar feelings in readers 1 This contrasts erotica which focuses more specifically on sexual feelings Other common elements are satire and social criticism Much erotic literature features erotic art illustrating the text Although cultural disapproval of erotic literature has always existed its circulation was not seen as a major problem before the invention of printing as the costs of producing individual manuscripts limited distribution to a very small group of wealthy and literate readers The invention of printing in the 15th century brought with it both a greater market and increasing restrictions including censorship and legal restraints on publication on the grounds of obscenity 2 Because of this much of the production of this type of material became clandestine 3 Contents 1 Erotic verse 1 1 Early periods 1 2 17th and 18th centuries 1 3 19th century 1 4 20th century 2 Erotic fiction 2 1 History of western erotic fiction 2 1 1 Ancient medieval and early modern periods 2 1 2 18th century 2 1 3 19th century 2 1 4 20th century 2 2 Asian erotic fiction 2 3 Contemporary erotic fiction 2 3 1 Internet erotic fiction 2 3 2 Student erotica 3 Other accounts 3 1 Writings of prostitutes 3 2 Erotic memoirs 3 3 Sex manuals 4 Legal status 4 1 Early legislation 4 1 1 To 1857 4 1 2 1857 1959 4 2 Modern legislation 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 History 8 1 1 General 8 1 2 Ancient world and Middle Ages 8 1 3 Modern times to 1900 9 External linksErotic verse edit nbsp Sappho the tenth Muse fresco from PompeiiEarly periods edit The oldest located love poem is Istanbul 2461 4 an erotic monologue written by a female speaker directed to king Shu Sin 5 6 In ancient Sumer a whole cycle of poems revolved around the erotic lovemaking between the goddess Inanna and her consort Dumuzid the Shepherd 7 8 In the Hebrew Bible the Song of Songs found in the last section of the Tanakh celebrates sexual love giving the voices of two lovers praising each other yearning for each other proffering invitations to enjoy 9 Many erotic poems have survived from ancient Greece and Rome The Greek poets Straton of Sardis and Sappho of Lesbos both wrote erotic lyric poems 10 The poet Archilochus wrote numerous satirical poems filled with obscene and erotic imagery 11 Erotic poems continued to be written in Hellenistic and Roman times by writers like Automedon The Professional and Demetrius the Fortunate Philodemus Charito and Marcus Argentarius Notable Roman erotic poets included Catullus Propertius Tibullus Ovid Martial and Juvenal and the anonymous Priapeia 10 Some later Latin authors such as Joannes Secundus also wrote erotic verse Haft Peykar Persian هفت پیکر also known as Bahramnameh بهرام نامه The Book of Bahram is a romantic epic by the Persian poet Nizami Ganjavi written in 1197 This poem is a part of the Nizami s Khamsa The original title Haft Peykar can be translated literally as seven portraits with the figurative meaning of seven beauties The poem is a masterpiece of erotic literature but it is also a profoundly moralistic work 12 During the Renaissance period many poems were not written for publication instead they were merely circulated in manuscript form among a relatively limited readership This was the original method of circulation for the Sonnets of William Shakespeare who also wrote the erotic poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece 13 The Perfumed Garden of Sensual Delight Arabic الروض العاطر في نزهة الخاطر is a fifteenth century Arabic sex manual and work of erotic literature by Muhammad ibn Muhammad al Nefzawi also known simply as Nefzawi The book presents opinions on what qualities men and women should have to be attractive and gives advice on sexual technique warnings about sexual health and recipes to remedy sexual maladies It gives lists of names for the penis and vulva and has a section on the interpretation of dreams Interspersed with these there are a number of stories which are intended to give context and amusement 17th and 18th centuries edit nbsp Portrait by Jacob Huysmans of John Wilmot Earl of Rochester a notorious author of erotic verseIn the 17th century John Wilmot Earl of Rochester 1647 80 was notorious for obscene verses many of which were published posthumously in compendiums of poetry by him and other Restoration rakes such as Sir Charles Sedley Charles Sackville 6th Earl of Dorset and George Etherege Though many of the poems attributed to Rochester were actually by other authors his reputation as a libertine was such that his name was used as a selling point by publishers of collections of erotic verse for centuries after One poem definitely by him was A Ramble in St James s Park in which the protagonist s quest for healthy exercise in the park uncovers instead Bugg ries Rapes and Incest on ground polluted by debauchery from the time when Ancient Pict began to Whore This poem was being censored from collections of Rochester s poetry as late as 1953 though in line with the subsequent general change in attitudes to sexuality it was dramatised as a scene in the film The Libertine about his life based on an existing play 14 15 English collections of erotic verse by various hands include the Drollery collections of the 17th century Pills to Purge Melancholy 1698 1720 the Roxburghe Ballads Bishop Percy s Folio The Musical Miscellany National Ballad and Song Merry Songs and Ballads Prior to the Year AD 1800 1895 97 edited by J S Farmer the three volume Poetica Erotica 1921 and its more obscene supplement the Immortalia 1927 both edited by T R Smith 16 French collections include Les Muses gaillardes 1606 Le Cabinet satyrique 1618 and La Parnasse des poetes satyriques 1622 17 A famous collection of four erotic poems was published in England in 1763 called An Essay on Woman This included the title piece an obscene parody of Alexander Pope s An Essay on Man Veni Creator or The Maid s Prayer which is original the Universal Prayer an obscene parody of Pope s poem of the same name and The Dying Lover to his Prick which parodies A Dying Christian to his Soul by Pope These poems have been attributed to John Wilkes and or Thomas Potter and receive the distinction of being the only works of erotic literature ever read out loud and in their entirety in the House of Lords before being declared obscene and blasphemous by that body and the supposed author Wilkes declared an outlaw 18 Robert Burns worked to collect and preserve Scottish folk songs sometimes revising expanding and adapting them One of the better known of these collections is The Merry Muses of Caledonia the title is not by Burns a collection of bawdy lyrics that were popular in the music halls of Scotland as late as the 20th century 19th century edit nbsp Illustration by Maurice Ray for Pierre Louys s Aphrodite mœurs antiquesOne of the 19th century s foremost poets Algernon Charles Swinburne devoted much of his considerable talent to erotic verse producing inter alia twelve eclogues on flagellation titled The Flogging Block by Rufus Rodworthy annotated by Barebum Birchingly 19 more was published anonymously in The Whippingham Papers c 1888 20 Another notorious anonymous 19th century poem on the same subject is The Rodiad ascribed seemingly falsely and in jest 21 to George Colman the Younger 22 John Camden Hotten even wrote a pornographic comic opera Lady Bumtickler s Revels on the theme of flagellation in 1872 23 Pierre Louys helped found a literary review La Conque in 1891 24 where he proceeded to publish Astarte an early collection of erotic verse already marked by his distinctive elegance and refinement of style He followed up in 1894 with another erotic collection in 143 prose poems Songs of Bilitis Les Chansons de Bilitis this time with strong lesbian themes 20th century edit Although D H Lawrence could be regarded as a writer of love poems he usually dealt in the less romantic aspects of love such as sexual frustration or the sex act itself Ezra Pound in his Literary Essays complained of Lawrence s interest in his own disagreeable sensations but praised him for his low life narrative This is a reference to Lawrence s dialect poems akin to the Scots poems of Robert Burns in which he reproduced the language and concerns of the people of Nottinghamshire from his youth He called one collection of poems Pansies partly for the simple ephemeral nature of the verse but also a pun on the French word panser to dress or bandage a wound The Noble Englishman and Don t Look at Me were removed from the official edition of Pansies on the grounds of obscenity Lawrence felt wounded by this citation needed From the age of 17 Gavin Ewart acquired a reputation for wit and accomplishment through such works as Phallus in Wonderland and Poems and Songs which appeared in 1939 and was his first collection The intelligence and casually flamboyant virtuosity with which he framed his often humorous commentaries on human behaviour made his work invariably entertaining and interesting The irreverent eroticism for which his poetry is noted resulted in W H Smith s banning of his The Pleasures of the Flesh 1966 from their shops citation needed Canadian poet John Glassco wrote Squire Hardman 1967 a long poem in heroic couplets purporting to be a reprint of an 18th century poem by George Colman the Younger on the theme of flagellation 25 Italian Una Chi distinguished herself among other publications for coldly analytical prose and for the crudeness of the stories Erotic fiction editErotic fiction is fiction that portrays sex or sexual themes generally in a more literary or serious way than the fiction seen in pornographic magazines It sometimes includes elements of satire or social criticism Such works have frequently been banned by the government or religious authorities Non fictional works that portray sex or sexual themes may contain fictional elements Calling an erotic book a memoir is a literary device that is common in this genre For reasons similar to those that make pseudonyms both commonplace and often deviously set up the boundary between fiction and non fiction is broad Erotic fiction has been credited in large part for the sexual awakening and liberation of women in the 20th and 21st centuries citation needed History of western erotic fiction edit Ancient medieval and early modern periods edit nbsp 1757 Latin edition of the Dialogues of Luisa Sigea first published c 1660 by Nicholas Chorier nbsp Title page and frontispiece of The London Jilt Or the Politick Whore London 1683The Satyricon of Petronius Arbiter later made into a film by Fellini is an ancient Roman novel which has partially survived narrating the misadventures of an impotent man named Encolpius who has been cursed by the god Priapus The novel is filled with bawdy and obscene episodes including orgies ritual sex and other erotic incidents 26 The discovery of several fragments of Lollianos s Phoenician Tale reveal that a genre of picaresque erotic novel also existed in ancient Greece 27 Some of the ancient Greek romance novels such as Daphnis and Chloe also contain elements of sexual fantasy 28 From the medieval period there is the Decameron 1353 by the Italian Giovanni Boccaccio made into a film by Pasolini which features tales of lechery by monks and the seduction of nuns from convents This book was banned in many countries Even five centuries after publication copies were seized and destroyed by the authorities in the US and the UK For instance between 1954 and 1958 eight orders for destruction of the book were made by English magistrates 29 From the 15th century another classic of Italian erotica is a series of bawdy folk tales called the Facetiae by Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini The Tale of Two Lovers Latin Historia de duobus amantibus written in 1444 was one of the bestselling books of the 15th century even before its author Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini became Pope Pius II It is one of the earliest examples of an epistolary novel full of erotic imagery The first printed edition was published by Ulrich Zel in Cologne between 1467 and 1470 30 The 16th century was notable for the Heptameron of Marguerite de Navarre 1558 inspired by Boccaccio s Decameron and the notorious I Modi which married erotic drawings depicting postures assumed in sexual intercourse by Giulio Romano with obscene sonnets by Pietro Aretino 31 Aretino also wrote the celebrated whore dialogue Ragionamenti in which the sex lives of wives whores and nuns are compared and contrasted 32 33 Later works in the same genre include La Retorica delle Puttane The Whore s Rhetoric 1642 by Ferrante Pallavicino 34 35 L Ecole des Filles The school for girls 1655 attributed to Michel Millot and Jean L Ange 36 37 and The Dialogues of Luisa Sigea c 1660 by Nicolas Chorier 38 39 Such works typically concerned the sexual education of a naive younger woman by an experienced older woman and often included elements of philosophising satire and anti clericalism 40 Donald Thomas has translated L Ecole des filles as The School of Venus 1972 described on its back cover as both an uninhibited manual of sexual technique and an erotic masterpiece of the first order 41 42 In his diary Samuel Pepys records reading and in an often censored passage masturbating over this work 43 Chorier s Dialogues of Luisa Sigea goes a bit further than its predecessors in this genre and has the older female giving practical instruction of a lesbian nature to the younger woman plus recommending the spiritual and erotic benefits of a flogging from willing members of the holy orders 44 This work was translated into many languages under various different titles appearing in English as A Dialogue between a Married Woman and a Maid in various editions 45 The School of Women first appeared as a work in Latin entitled Aloisiae Sigaeae Toletanae Satyra sotadica de arcanis Amoris et Veneris This manuscript claimed that it was originally written in Spanish by Luisa Sigea de Velasco an erudite poet and maid of honor at the court of Lisbon and was then translated into Latin by Jean or Johannes Meursius The attribution to Sigea and Meursius was a lie the true author was Nicolas Chorier A unique work of this time is Sodom or the Quintessence of Debauchery 1684 a closet play by the notorious Restoration rake John Wilmot 2nd Earl of Rochester in which Bolloxinion King of Sodom authorises that buggery may be used O er all the land so cunt be not abused which order though appealing to soldiery has deleterious effects generally leading the court physician to counsel Fuck women and let Bugg ry be no more 46 18th century edit nbsp Scene from chapter eight of Fanny HillAn early pioneer of the publication of erotic works in England was Edmund Curll 1675 1747 who published many of the Merryland books These were an English genre of erotic fiction in which the female body and sometimes the male was described in terms of a landscape 47 The earliest work in this genre seems to be Erotopolis The Present State of Bettyland 1684 probably by Charles Cotton This was included in abbreviated form in The Potent Ally or Succours from Merryland 1741 Other works include A New Description of Merryland Containing a Topographical Geographical and Natural History of that Country 1740 by Thomas Stretzer Merryland Displayed 1741 and set of maps entitled A Compleat Set of Charts of the Coasts of Merryland 1745 The last book in this genre appears to be a parody of Laurence Sterne s A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy 1768 entitled La Souriciere The Mousetrap A Facetious and Sentimental Excursion through part of Austrian Flanders and France 1794 by Timothy Touchit 47 The rise of the novel in 18th century England provided a new medium for erotica One of the most famous in this genre was Fanny Hill 1748 by John Cleland This book set a standard in literary smut and was often adapted for the cinema in the 20th century Peter Fryer suggests that Fanny Hill was a high point in British erotica at least in the eighteenth century in a way that mainstream literature around it had also reached a peak at that time with writers like Defoe Richardson and Fielding all having made important and lasting contributions to literature in its first half After 1750 he suggests when the Romantic period began the quality of mainstream writing and of smut declined in tandem Writes Fryer sex was driven out of the English novel in the latter half of the eighteenth century The castration of imaginative English literature made the clandestine literature of sex the most poverty stricken and boring in Europe 48 nbsp Justine or The Misfortunes of VirtueFrench writers kept their stride One genre which vies in oddness with the English Merryland productions was inspired by the newly translated Arabian Nights and involved the transformation of people into objects which were in propinquity with or employed in sexual relationships such as sofas dildos and even bidets The climax of this trend is represented in French philosopher Diderot s Les Bijoux indiscrets 1747 in which a magic ring is employed to get women s vaginas to give an account of their intimate sexual histories 49 Other works of French erotica from this period include Therese Philosophe 1748 by Jean Baptiste de Boyer Marquis d Argens which describes a girl s initiation into the secrets of both philosophy and sex 50 The Lifted Curtain or Laura s Education about a young girl s sexual initiation by her father written by the French revolutionary politician Comte de Mirabeau and Les Liaisons dangereuses Dangerous Liaisons by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos first published in 1782 In the late 18th century such works as Justine or the Misfortunes of Virtue and 120 Days of Sodom by the Marquis de Sade were exemplars of the theme of sado masochism and influenced later erotic accounts of sadism and masochism in fiction De Sade as did the later writer Sacher Masoch lent his name to the sexual acts which he describes in his work 19th century edit In the Victorian period the quality of erotic fiction was much below that of the previous century it was largely written by hacks citation needed Some works however borrowed from established literary models such as Dickens The period also featured a form of social stratification Even in the throes of orgasm the social distinctions between master and servant including form of address were scrupulously observed Significant elements of sado masochism were present in some examples perhaps reflecting the influence of the English public school where flagellation was routinely used as a punishment 51 These clandestine works were often anonymous or written under a pseudonym and sometimes undated thus definite information about them often proves elusive English erotic novels from this period include The Lustful Turk 1828 The Romance of Lust 1873 The Convent School or Early Experiences of A Young Flagellant 1876 by Rosa Coote pseud The Mysteries of Verbena House or Miss Bellasis Birched for Thieving 1882 by Etonensis pseud actually by George Augustus Sala and James Campbell Reddie The Autobiography of a Flea 1887 Venus in India 1889 by Captain Charles Devereaux 52 53 54 Flossie a Venus of Fifteen By one who knew this Charming Goddess and worshipped at her shrine 1897 55 A novel called Beatrice once marketed as another classic of Victorian erotica from the pen of the ubiquitous Anon now appears to be a very clever 20th century pastiche of Victorian pornography It first appeared in 1982 and was written by one Gordon Grimley a sometime managing director of Penthouse International 56 Clandestine erotic periodicals of this age include The Pearl The Oyster and The Boudoir collections of erotic tales rhymes songs and parodies published in London between 1879 and 1883 nbsp Coverpage of a catalogue of books published by Charles Carrington Paris 1906 The centre of the trade in such material in England at this period was Holywell Street off the Strand London An important publisher of erotic material in the early 19th century was George Cannon 1789 1854 followed in mid century by William Dugdale 1800 1868 and John Camden Hotten 1832 1873 57 An evaluation of 19th century pre 1885 and earlier underground erotica from the author s own private archive is provided by Victorian writer Henry Spencer Ashbee using the pseudonym Pisanus Fraxi in his bibliographical trilogy Index Librorum Prohibitorum 1877 Centuria Librorum Absconditorum 1879 and Catena Librorum Tacendorum 1885 His plot summaries of the works he discusses in these privately printed volumes are themselves a contribution to the genre Originally of very limited circulation changing attitudes have led to his work now being widely available 58 59 Notable European works of erotica at this time were Gamiani or Two Nights of Excess 1833 by Frenchman Alfred de Musset and Venus in Furs 1870 by the Austrian author Leopold von Sacher Masoch 60 61 The latter erotic novella brought the attention of the world to the phenomenon of masochism named after the author Toward the end of the 19th century a more cultured form of erotica began to appear by poets such as Algernon Charles Swinburne who pursued themes of paganism lesbianism and sado masochism in such works as Lesbia Brandon and in contributions to The Whippingham Papers 1888 edited by St George Stock author of The Romance of Chastisement 1866 This was associated with the Decadent movement in particular with Aubrey Beardsley and the Yellow Book But it was also to be found in France amongst such writers as Pierre Louys author of Les chansons de Bilitis 1894 a celebration of lesbianism and sexual awakening Pioneering works of gay male erotica from this time were The Sins of the Cities of the Plain 1881 62 which features the celebrated Victorian transvestite duo of Boulton and Park as characters 63 and Teleny or The Reverse of the Medal 1893 64 65 66 Two important publishers of erotic fiction at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th were Leonard Smithers 1861 1907 64 and Charles Carrington 1867 1921 67 both of whom were subject to legal injunctions from the British authorities in order to prohibit their trade in such material Because of this legal harassment the latter conducted his business from Paris 68 Erotic fiction published by Carrington at this period includes Raped on the Railway a True Story of a Lady who was first ravished and then flagellated on the Scotch Express 1894 69 70 71 72 and The Memoirs of Dolly Morton 1899 set on a slave plantation in the Southern States of America 73 74 75 20th century edit 20th century erotic fiction includes such classics of the genre as Suburban Souls 1901 published by Carrington and possibly written by him also 76 The Confessions of Nemesis Hunt issued in three volumes 1902 1903 1906 77 attributed to George Reginald Bacchus 78 79 printed by Duringe of Paris for Leonard Smithers in London 64 Josephine Mutzenbacher 1906 by Anon presumably Felix Salten Sadopaideia 1907 by Anon possibly Algernon Charles Swinburne 80 Les Memoires d un jeune Don Juan 1907 and the somewhat disturbing Les onze mille verges 1907 by Guillaume Apollinaire 81 The Way of a Man with a Maid 1908 82 and A Weekend Visit by Anon Pleasure Bound Afloat 1908 Pleasure Bound Ashore 1909 and Maudie 1909 by Anon probably George Reginald Bacchus and My Lustful Adventures 1911 by the pseudonymous Ramrod Manuel de civilite pour les petites filles a l usage des maisons d education 1917 and Trois filles de leur mere 1926 by Pierre Louys 83 84 Story of the Eye 1928 by Georges Bataille Tropic of Cancer 1934 and Tropic of Capricorn 1938 by Henry Miller The Story of O 1954 by Pauline Reage Helen and Desire 1954 and Thongs 1955 by Alexander Trocchi Ada or Ardor 1969 by Vladimir Nabokov Journal 1966 Delta of Venus 1978 85 and Little Birds 1979 by Anais Nin 86 and The Bicycle Rider 1985 by Guy Davenport and Lila Says 1999 by an anonymous author A study found that the most popular of the Armed Services Editions paperbacks distributed to American soldiers during World War II are novels that deal frankly with sexual relations regardless of tone literary merit and point of view no matter whether the book is serious or humorous romantically exciting or drably pedestrian 87 Vladimir Nabokov s Lolita is usually described as an erotic novel but in the view of some it is a literary drama with elements of eroticism citation needed Like Nabokov s Lolita Johannes Linnankoski s The Song of the Blood Red Flower is also often described as erotic novel only a little explicit and cleverly cloaked in gentler romance 88 Lolita and The Story of O were published by Olympia Press a Paris based publisher launched in 1953 by Maurice Girodias as a rebadged version of the Obelisk Press he inherited from his father Jack Kahane It published a mix of erotic fiction and avant garde literary works The Girls of Radcliff Hall is a roman a clef novel in the form of a lesbian girls school story written in the 1930s by the British composer and bon vivant Gerald Berners the 14th Lord Berners under the pseudonym Adela Quebec published and distributed privately in 1932 89 Another trend in the twentieth century was the rise of the lesbian pulp fiction Works such as The Price of Salt 1952 Spring Fire 1952 Desert of the Heart 1964 and Patience and Sarah 1969 were only a few examples of this subgenre Many of the authors were women themselves such as Gale Wilhelm and Ann Bannon Many gay men also enjoyed gay pulp fiction which borrowed the same sexploitation format as the lesbian books 90 Asian erotic fiction edit nbsp The title page from the first volume of a Ming dynasty edition of The Embroidered Couch one of the most notorious and controversial erotic novelsChinese literature has a rich catalogue of erotic novels that were published during the mid Ming to early Qing dynasties Some well known erotic novels with explicit sexuality during this period include Ruyijun zhuan The Lord of Perfect Satisfaction The Embroidered Couch Su e pian Langshi Chipozi zhuan Zhulin yeshi and The Carnal Prayer Mat The critic Charles Stone has argued that pornographic technique is the union of banality obscenity and repetition and contains just the rudiments of plot style and characterization while anything that is not sexually stimulating is avoided If this is the case he concluded then The Lord of Perfect Satisfaction is the fountainhead of Chinese erotica but not pornography 91 The novel Jin Ping Mei or The Plum in the Golden Vase written by an author who used only a pseudonym as his real name is unknown is generally regarded as the greatest of all Chinese erotic novels Its literary status is unparalleled among erotic fiction and it has been described by critic Stephen Marche in the Los Angeles Review of Books as one of the world s great novels if not simply the greatest 92 There is also a tradition of erotic fiction in Japan Some portion of this is doujinshi or independent comics which are often fan fiction The sharebon 洒落本 was a pre modern Japanese literary genre Plots revolved around humor and entertainment at the pleasure quarters It is a subgenre of gesaku Contemporary erotic fiction edit In the 21st century a number of female authors including Alison Tyler Rachel Kramer Bussel and Carol Queen rose to prominence Mitzi Szereto is an editor and author who said she wants to see the term erotica removed from novels and anthologies that include depictions of sexual activities Other authors celebrate the term but also question why literature featuring sexual activity should be considered outside literary fiction The debate was rekindled in 2012 by the release of the 50 Shades of Grey trilogy written by E L James The success of her erotica for every woman dubbed mommyporn gave rise to satires like Fifty Shames of Earl Grey by Fanny Merkin real name Andrew Shaffer a book of essays called Fifty Writers on Fifty Shades ed Lori Perkins and editors of erotic imprints re evaluating the content and presentation of the genre 93 One development in contemporary erotica is the knowledge that many women and not just men are aroused by it This is regardless of whether it is traditional pornography or tailor made women s erotica Romantic novels are sometimes marketed as erotica or vice versa as mainstream romance in recent decades has begun to exhibit blatant if poetic descriptions of sex Erotic romance is a relatively new genre of romance with an erotic theme and very explicit love scenes but with a romance at the heart of the story Erotic fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy fiction and utilizes erotica in a fantasy setting These stories can essentially cover any of the other subgenres of fantasy such as high fantasy contemporary fantasy or even historical fantasy The extents of the genre to break existing conventions and limits in subject matter have managed to shock popular audiences with genres such as monster erotica emerging with the ease of digital publishing Erotic fantasy fiction has similarities to romantic fantasy but is more explicit Erotic fantasy can also be found in fan fiction which uses plot elements and characters from popular fiction such as television film or novels Erotic fan fiction may use characters from existing works in non canon relationships such as slash homoerotic fan fiction Fan fiction and its Japanese counterpart doujinshi account for an enormous proportion of all erotica written today citation needed Internet erotic fiction edit This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Lacking sources Please help improve this section if you can July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Internet and digital revolution in erotic depiction has changed the forms of representing scenes of a sexual nature Erotica was present on the Internet from its earliest days as seen from rec arts erotica on Usenet This news group was a moderated forum for the exchange of erotic stories that predated the creation of the World Wide Web Most of this migrated to the alt hierarchy forums by the 1990s including alt sex stories The vast majority of Internet erotica is written by amateurs for the enjoyment of the author and readers instead of for profit The increased interactivity and anonymity allows casual or hobby writers the opportunity not only to author their own stories but also to share them with a world wide audience Many authors adopt colorful pseudonyms and can develop cult followings within their genre although a small number use their real names Among transgender or non binary authors it is a common practice to adopt a feminine or masculine alter ego although a writer may use their own given name Student erotica edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2020 nbsp Portrayal of Erotica at the library of CongressIn the 21st century a new literary genre of student published journals at American universities was started 94 The following is a partial list of publications The Moderator Bard College 95 96 Virgin Mawrtyr Bryn Mawr College 97 98 H Bomb Harvard University 99 100 Quake University of Pennsylvania 101 Squirm Vassar College 102 Vita Excolatur University of Chicago 103 Bang 104 and Untouchables 104 Swarthmore College Boink Boston University 105 Other accounts editWritings of prostitutes edit nbsp Harris s List of Covent Garden LadiesProstitution was the focus of much of the earliest erotic works The term pornography is derived from the Greek pornographos meaning writer about prostitutes originally denoting descriptions of the lives and manners of prostitutes and their customers in Ancient Greece According to Athenaeus in The Deipnosophists these constituted a considerable genre with many lubricious treatises stories and dramas on the subject 106 A surviving example of this genre is Lucian of Samosata s Dialogues of the Courtesans 107 Accounts of prostitution have continued as a major part of the genre of erotic literature In the 18th century directories of prostitutes and their services such as Harris s List of Covent Garden Ladies 1757 1795 provided both entertainment and instruction In the 19th century the sensational journalism of W T Stead s The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon 1885 about the procuring of underage girls into the brothels of Victorian London provided a stimulus for the erotic imagination Stead s account was widely translated and the revelation of padded rooms for the purpose of stifling the cries of the tortured victims of lust and brutality and the symbolic figure of The Minotaur of London confirmed European observers worst imaginings about Le Sadisme anglais and inspired erotic writers to write of similar scenes set in London or involving sadistic English gentlemen Such writers include D Annunzio in Il Piacere Paul Jean Toulet in Monsieur de Paur 1898 Octave Mirbeau in Jardin des Supplices 1899 and Jean Lorrain in Monsieur de Phocas 1901 108 Well known recent works in this genre are The Happy Hooker My Own Story 1971 by the Dutch madame Xaviera Hollander and The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl 2005 by Belle de Jour Erotic memoirs edit nbsp Medallion portrait of Casanova engraving by Berka used as frontispiece for Icosameron 1788 Erotic memoirs include Casanova s Histoire de ma vie from the 18th century Notable English works of this genre from the 19th century include The Ups and Downs of Life 1867 by Edward Sellon and My Secret Life by Walter Edward Sellon was a writer translator and illustrator of erotic literature who wrote erotica for the pornographic publisher William Dugdale including such works as The New Epicurean 1865 109 The true identity of Walter is unknown Ian Gibson in The Erotomaniac speculates that My Secret Life was actually written by Henry Spencer Ashbee and therefore it is possible that Walter is a fiction A famous German erotic work of this time published in two parts in 1868 and 1875 entitled Pauline the Prima Donna purports to be the memoirs of the opera singer Wilhelmine Schroder Devrient Various discrepancies with known facts of the singer s life however have led many to doubt the veracity of this book and the erotic adventures contained in the second volume at least appear to be implausible These include the author indulging in lesbian sadomasochism group sex sodomy bestiality scatology necrophilia prostitution and vampirism all before she had reached the age of 27 110 20th century contributions to the genre include Frank Harris s My Life and Loves 1922 27 and the convicted Austrian sex criminal Edith Cadivec s Confessions and Experiences and its sequel Eros the Meaning of My Life published together 1930 1 111 A 21st century example is One Hundred Strokes of the Brush Before Bed 2004 by Melissa Panarello Sex manuals edit Main article Sex manual Sex manuals are among the oldest forms of erotic literature Three brief fragments of a sex manual written in the fourth century BC that is attributed to Philaenis of Samos have survived Modern scholars generally regard it as a work of parody probably written by a man and this was most likely Athenian sophist Polycrates 112 113 Other examples of the genre from the classical world include the lost works of Elephantis 114 and Ovid s Ars Amatoria The Indian Kama Sutra is one of the world s best known works of this type The Ananga Ranga a 12th century collection of Indian erotic works is a lesser known one The Perfumed Garden for the Soul s Recreation a 16th century Arabic work by Sheikh Nefzaoui is also well known and is often reprinted and translated There is anecdotal evidence that as late as the mid 20th century sex therapists and other physicians prescribed erotic literature as treatment for erectile dysfunction citation needed The ancient Chinese versions of the sex manual include the texts that contain the Taoist sexual practices These include books that show illustrations of the ideal sexual behavior because sex in this religion is not considered taboo but a manifestation of the concept of the yin and yang 115 wherein the male and female engage in an act of joining of energy or joining of essences The belief is that proper sexual practice is key to achieving good health The manuals included the Ishinpo text 116 which is a medical document that also included sections devoted to sexual hygiene and sexual manuals of the Tang and Han dynasties Qigong manuals include warming a wet towel and covering penis for a few minutes then rubbing one direction away from base of penis hundreds of times daily similar to qigong Squeezing sphincter while semi erect or fully erect dozens of times daily particularly a few hours before intercourse will help delay orgasm or enhance non ejaculatory pleasure The Universal Tao system was developed by Mantak Chia to teach Taoist meditative and exercise techniques to balance the body and increase and refine one s vital energy or qi Front and back channel the back channel is where the perineum is located between anus and scrotum moving up the tailbone to the crown the front channel is moving down the front of your body down the midline Breathing up the back channel and then breathing out from the front channel down to and from the abdomen moves chi Many practices combined help chi to be transformed into spiritual energy or shen Not all sex manuals were produced to arouse or inform readers about sexual acts Some were created as a form of satire or social criticism as in the case of a mock sex manual produced in the early sixteenth century by Pietro Aretino It was in response to the clerical censorship of the nude engravings of the Roman artists Marcantonio Raimondi 117 This was released in cheap wood with a corresponding sonnet serving as the voice of the characters Legal status editFurther information Obscenity The examples and perspective in this deal primarily with England and the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new as appropriate November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early legislation edit To 1857 edit nbsp Cover of an undated American edition of Fanny Hill c 1910Erotic or pornographic works have often been prosecuted censored and destroyed by the authorities on grounds of obscenity 2 In Medieval England erotic or pornographic publications were the concern of the ecclesiastical courts After the Reformation the jurisdiction of these courts declined in favour of the Crown which licensed every printed book Prosecutions of books for their erotic content alone were rare and works which attacked the church or state gave much more concern to the authorities than erotica or obscene libel as it was then known For instance the Licensing Act 1662 was aimed generally at heretical seditious schismatical or offensive books of pamphlets rather than just erotica per se Even this Licensing Act was allowed to lapse in 1695 and no attempt made to renew it The first conviction for obscenity in England occurred in 1727 when Edmund Curll was fined for the publication of Venus in the Cloister or The Nun in her Smock under the common law offence of disturbing the King s peace This set a legal precedent for other convictions 118 The publication of other books by Curll however considered seditious and blasphemous such as The Memoirs of John Ker apparently most offended the authorities Prosecutions of erotica later in the 18th century were rare and were most often taken because of the admixture of seditious and blasphemous material with the porn 1857 1959 edit nbsp Erotic literature going up in smoke and its distributors being put in jail courtesy of Anthony Comstock s New York Society for the Suppression of ViceIt was the Obscene Publications Act 1857 which made the sale of obscene material a statutory offense giving the courts power to seize and destroy offending material The origins of the act itself were in a trial for the sale of pornography presided over by the Lord Chief Justice Lord Campbell at the same time as a debate in the House of Lords over a bill aiming to restrict the sale of poisons Campbell was taken by the analogy between the two situations famously referring to the London pornography trade as a sale of poison more deadly than prussic acid strychnine or arsenic 119 and proposed a bill to restrict the sale of pornography giving statutory powers of destruction would allow for a much more effective degree of prosecution The bill was controversial at the time receiving strong opposition from both Houses of Parliament It was passed on the assurance by the Lord Chief Justice that it was intended to apply exclusively to works written for the single purpose of corrupting the morals of youth and of a nature calculated to shock the common feelings of decency in any well regulated mind The House of Commons successfully amended it so as not to apply to Scotland on the grounds that Scottish common law was sufficiently stringent The Act provided for the seizure and destruction of any material deemed to be obscene and held for sale or distribution following information being laid before a court of summary jurisdiction magistrates court The Act required that following evidence of a common law offence being committed for example on the report of a plain clothes policeman who had successfully purchased the material the court could issue a warrant for the premises to be searched and the material seized The proprietor then would be called upon to attend court and give reason why the material should not be destroyed Critically the Act did not define obscene leaving this to the will of the courts While the Act itself did not change the scope of the work affected by it did In 1868 Sir Alexander Cockburn Campbell s successor as Lord Chief Justice held in an appeal that the test of obscenity was whether the tendency of the matter charged as obscenity is to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences and into whose hands a publication of this sort may fall This was clearly a major change from Campbell s opinion only ten years before the test now being the effect on someone open to corruption who obtained a copy not whether the material was intended to corrupt or offend Cockburn s declaration remained in force for several decades and most of the high profile seizures under the Act relied on this interpretation Known as the Hicklin test no cognisance was taken of the literary merit of a book or on the extent of the offending text within the book in question The widened scope of the original legislation led to the subsequent notorious targeting of now acknowledged classics of world literature by such authors as Zola James Joyce and D H Lawrence plus medical textbooks by such as Havelock Ellis rather than the blatant erotica which was the original target of this law 120 In contrast to England where actions against obscene literature were the preserve of the magistrates such actions were the responsibility of the Postal Inspection Service in America They were embodied in the federal and state Comstock laws and named after the postal officer and anti obscenity crusader Anthony Comstock who proved himself officious in the work of suppression both in his official capacity and through his New York Society for the Suppression of Vice 121 The first such law was the Comstock Act ch 258 17 Stat 598 enacted March 3 1873 which made it illegal to send any obscene lewd and or lascivious materials through the mail Twenty four states passed similar prohibitions on materials distributed within the states 122 Modern legislation edit This question of whether a book had literary merit eventually prompted a change in the law in both America and the UK In the United Kingdom the Obscene Publications Act 1959 provided for the protection of literature but conversely increased the penalties against pure pornography The law defined obscenity and separated it from serious works of art The new definition read A n article shall be deemed to be obscene if its effect or where the article comprises two or more distinct items the effect of any one of its items is if taken as a whole such as to tend to deprave and corrupt persons who are likely having regard to all relevant circumstances to read see or hear the matter contained or embodied in it After this piece of legislation questions of the literary merit of the work in question were allowed to be put before the judge and jury as in the Lady Chatterley trial The publishers of the latter book were found not guilty by the court on the grounds of the literary merit of the book In later prosecutions of literary erotica under the provisions of the act however even purely pornographic works with no apparent literary merit escaped destruction by the authorities Purely textual pornographic texts with no hint of libel ceased to be brought to trial following the collapse of the Inside Linda Lovelace trial in 1976 However in October 2008 a man was unsuccessfully prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act the R v Walker trial for posting fictional written material to the Internet allegedly describing the kidnap rape and murder of the pop group Girls Aloud 123 The First Amendment to the United States Constitution gives protection to written fiction although the legal presumption that it does not protect obscene literature has never been overcome Instead pornography has successfully been defined legally as non obscene or obscene been shown to be so vague a term as to be unenforceable In 1998 Brian Dalton was charged with creation and possession of child pornography under an Ohio obscenity law The stories were works of fiction concerning sexually abusing children which he wrote and kept unpublished in his private journal He accepted a plea bargain pleaded guilty and was convicted 124 Five years later the conviction was vacated Importing books and texts across national borders can sometimes be subject to more stringent laws than in the nations concerned Customs officers are often permitted to seize even merely indecent works that would be perfectly legal to sell and possess once one is inside the nations concerned Canada has been implicated in such border seizures citation needed Although the Obscene Publications Act of 1857 as well as 1959 legislation outlawed the publication retail and trafficking of certain types of writings and images regarded as pornographic and would order the destruction of shop and warehouse stock meant for sale the private possession of and viewing of pornography was not prosecuted in those times 125 In some nations even purely textual erotic literature is still deemed illegal and is also prosecuted citation needed See also edit nbsp Novels portal nbsp Human sexuality portal nbsp Erotica and pornography portalBedroom farce Erotic literature and art in ancient Rome Hispano Arabic homoerotic poetry Femdom List of authors of erotic works List of genres List of pornographic book publishers Literotica Pornography Pornotopia Romance novel Sex positive movementNotes edit Hyde 1964 p 1 a b Hyde 1964 pp 1 26 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon 7 18 Oldest love poem Guinness World Records Retrieved September 15 2019 Fant Clyde E Reddish Mitchell G October 15 2008 Lost Treasures of the Bible Understanding the Bible Through Archaeological Artifacts in World Museums Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 9780802828811 Longman III Tremper Enns Peter June 6 2008 Dictionary of the Old Testament Wisdom Poetry amp Writings A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship InterVarsity Press ISBN 9780830817832 Wolkstein Diane Kramer Samuel Noah 1983 Inanna Queen of Heaven and Earth Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer New York City New York Harper amp Row Publishers pp 150 155 ISBN 0 06 090854 8 Leick Gwendolyn 2013 1994 Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature New York City New York Routledge pp 64 79 90 96 ISBN 978 1 134 92074 7 Garrett Duane 1993 Proverbs Ecclesiastes Song of Songs B amp H Publishing Group p 366 ISBN 9780805401141 a b Derek Parker 404 ed 1980 An Anthology of Erotic Verse London Constable ISBN 0 09 463500 5 Cahill Thomas 2003 Sailing the Wine Dark Sea Why the Greeks Matter New York City New York Anchor Books pp 96 97 ISBN 978 0 385 49554 7 Francois de Blois Haft Peykar Encyclopaedia Iranica 404 December 15 2002 V XI pp 522 524 Derek Parker ed 1980 An Anthology of Erotic Verse pp 88 96 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon Books 22 40 41 Parker Derek ed 1980 An Anthology of Erotic Verse London Constable Clifford J Scheiner 1996 The Essential Guide to Erotic Literature Part Two After 1920 Ware Wordsworth 26 27 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon Books 65 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon Books 71 4 Derek Parker ed 1980 An Anthology of Erotic Verse 22 Bragman L J 1934 The Case of Algernon Charles Swinburne a study in Sadism Psychoanal Rev 404 21 59 74 Hammill Faye 2009 John Glassco Canadian erotica and the Lying Chronicle In Anctil Pierre Loiselle Andre Rolfe Christopher eds Canada exposed Canadian Studies Vol 20 Peter Lang p 286 ISBN 978 90 5201 548 4 John Glassco s Squire Hardman a Poem and its Contexts Uwo ca July 9 1954 Archived from the original on March 5 2012 Retrieved January 21 2014 Prins Yopie 1999 Victorian Sappho Princeton University Press p 152 ISBN 0 691 05919 5 Rosemary Lloyd Mallarme the Poet and His Circle Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 404 2005 ISBN 0 8014 8993 8 pp 195 197 Hammill Faye 2009 John Glassco Canadian erotica and the Lying Chronicle In Anctil Pierre Loiselle Andre Rolfe Christopher eds Canada Exposed Canadian Studies Vol 20 Peter Lang pp 279 296 ISBN 978 90 5201 548 4 Arbiter Petronius The Satyricon Project Gutenberg Project Gutenberg Retrieved June 5 2017 Reardon Bryan P 1989 Collected Ancient Greek Novels Berkeley University of California Press pp 809 810 ISBN 0 520 04306 5 Retrieved May 31 2017 Garland Robert 2008 Ancient Greece Everyday Life in the Birthplace of Western Civilization New York City New York Sterling pp 184 185 ISBN 978 1 4549 0908 8 Hyde 1964 pp 71 72 Morrall E J 1996 Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini Pius II Historia de duobus amantibus Library s6 XVIII 3 216 29 doi 10 1093 library s6 XVIII 3 216 Hyde 1964 pp 75 76 Hyde 1964 pp 76 Ian Frederick Moulton Before Pornography erotic writing in Early Modern England Studies in the History of Sexuality Oxford Oxford University Press 404 2004 ISBN 0 19 517982 X p 130 Wendy Beth Heller Emblems of Eloquence opera and women s voices in seventeenth century Venice Berkeley University of California Press 404 2003 ISBN 0 520 20933 8 p 75 James Turner Libertines and Radicals in Early Modern London sexuality politics and literary culture 1630 1685 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 404 2002 ISBN 0 521 78279 1 p 3 Mitchell Greenberg Baroque Bodies psychoanalysis and the culture of French absolutism Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 404 2001 ISBN 0 8014 3807 1 pp 78 79 Muchembled 2008 p 90 Sarah Toulalan Imagining Sex pornography and bodies in seventeenth century England Oxford Oxford University Press 404 2007 ISBN 0 19 920914 6 p 100 Alastair J L Blanshard Sex Vice and Love from Antiquity to Modernity Chichester John Wiley and Sons 2010 ISBN 1 4051 2291 9 p 51 Kronhausen 1969 pp 7 8 The original title is L escole des filles ou la philosophie des dames later editions sometimes ascribe it to M Mililot sic Pascal Durand edited it in 1959 The School of Venus orig L Ecole des filles ou la Philosophie des dames by Michel Millot et Jean L Ange New American Library 404 1971 Panther 1972 ISBN 0 586 03674 1 Hyde 1964 p 19 Muchembled 2008 p 77 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon 34 46 Kronhausen 1969 pp 26 32 a b Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon 53 7 Peter Fryer 1966 Public Case Private Scandal Secker amp Warburg p 84 Patrick J Kearney 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon 60 5 Mark Steel 2003 Vive la Revolution London Scribner pp 39 40 Ronald Pearsall 1969 The Worm in the Bud the world of Victorian sexuality Macmillan pp 404 22 Hyam Ronald 1990 Empire and sexuality the British experience in Studies in Imperialism Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 2504 4 p 135 Jarman Francis 2005 White Skin Dark Skin Power Dream collected essays on literature and culture I O Evans studies in the philosophy and criticism of literature vol 27 Holicong Pa Borgo Press ISBN 0 8095 1188 6 p 25 Irvin Cemil Schick 1999 The Erotic Margin sexuality and spatiality in alteritist discourse London Verso ISBN 1 85984 732 3 pp 117 18 Donald Thomas A long time burning the history of literary censorship in England Routledge amp Kegan Paul 404 1969 p 284 Introduction to Beatrice 2001 by Gordon Grimley 404 London The Scarlet Library illustrated Hyde 1964 167 68 Henry Spencer Ashbee 1969 Index of Forbidden Books Sphere Steven Marcus 1969 The Other Victorians London Corgi pp 34 77 Kendall Davies Barbara 2003 The Life and Work of Pauline Viardot Garcia Cambridge Scholars Press pp 45 46 ISBN 1 904303 27 7 Livia Anna Hall Kira 1997 Queerly Phrased Language Gender and Sexuality Oxford University Press US p 157 ISBN 0 19 510470 6 Harford Montgomery Hyde The love that dared not speak its name a candid history of homosexuality in Britain Little Brown 1970 pp 121 123 Ronald Pearsall 1971 The Worm in the Bud The World of Victorian Sexuality London Penguin 561 8 a b c Nelson James Publisher to the Decadents Leonard Smithers in the Careers of Beardsley Wilde Dowson Philadelphia Pennsylvania State University Press 2000 Robert Gray and Christopher Keep An Uninterrupted Current Homoeroticism and collaborative authorship in Teleny in Marjorie Stone Judith Thompson edd Literary Couplings Writing Couples Collaborators and the Construction of Authorship University of Wisconsin Press 2007 ISBN 0 299 21764 7 p 193 Edouard Roditi Oscar Wilde New Directions Publishing 1986 ISBN 0 8112 0995 4 p 168 Rachel Potter Obscene Modernism and the Trade in Salacious Books Modernism modernity 404 Volume 16 Number 1 January 2009 pp 87 104 doi 10 1353 mod 0 0065 Hyde 1964 177 80 Lee Grieveson Peter Kramer The Silent Cinema Reader Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 25284 9 p 59 Ronald Pearsall 1969 The Worm in the Bud the world of Victorian sexuality Macmillan pp 321 364 Peter Mendes Clandestine erotic fiction in English 1800 1930 a bibliographical study Scolar Press 1993 ISBN 0 85967 919 5 p 319 Alan Norman Bold 404 The Sexual Dimension in Literature Vision Press 1983 ISBN 0 389 20314 9 pp 94 97 102 Emma Goldman Candace Falk Barry Pateman Jessica M Moran Emma Goldman Making speech free 1902 1909 Volume 2 of Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Jessica M Moran Emma Goldman Series University of California Press 2004 ISBN 0 520 22569 4 p 514 Lisa Z Sigel International exposure perspectives on modern European pornography 1800 2000 Rutgers University Press 2005 ISBN 0 8135 3519 0 p 98 Joseph W Slade Pornography and sexual representation a reference guide Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 ISBN 0 313 31519 1 p 55 Martha Cornog ed 1991 Libraries Erotica Pornography Phoenix Oryx Press 404 ISBN 0 89774 474 8 p 189 Frank A Hoffmann 1973 Analytical Survey of Anglo American Traditional Erotica Bowling Green Ohio Bowling Green University 404 Popular Press ISBN 0 87972 055 7 p 34 Tracy C Davis 1989 The Actress in Victorian Pornography in Theatre Journal 404 Vol 41 No 3 Performance in Context October 1989 pp 294 315 1 Kristine Ottesen Garrigan ed 1992 Victorian Scandals representations of gender and class Annual meeting on Victorian scandals decorum and its enemies Extended papers Athens OH Ohio University Press 404 ISBN 0 8214 1019 9 pp 113 131 Kearney 1981 p 215 Kearney 1982 pp 163 64Karin Lesnik Oberstein 2006 The Last Taboo women and body hair Manchester Manchester University Press 404 ISBN 0 7190 7500 9 p 94Neil Cornwell 2006 The Absurd in Literature Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 7410 X pp 86 87Roger Shattuck 1961 The Banquet Years the arts in France 1885 1918 Alfred Jarry Henri Rousseau Erik Satie Guillaume Apollinaire Garden City Doubleday p 268 Clifford J Scheiner 1996 The Essential Guide to Erotic Literature Part One Before 1920 Ware Wordsworth pp 326 29 Kearney 1982 p 171 Pascal Pia 404 1978 Les Livres de l Enfer bibliographie critique des ouvrages erotiques dans leurs differentes editions du XVIe siecle a nos jours C Coulet et A Faure ISBN 2 902687 01 X pp 425 426 778 Andrew Gibson 1999 Postmodernity Ethics and the Novel from Leavis to Levinas London Routledge ISBN 0 415 19895 X p 177 Elizabeth Kowaleski Wallace Encyclopedia of Feminist Literary Theory Taylor amp Francis 404 1997 ISBN 0 8153 0824 8 p 190Helen Tookey Anais Nin Fictionality and Femininity playing a thousand roles Oxford Oxford University Press 404 2003 ISBN 0 19 924983 0 p 87Joseph W Slade Pornography and Sexual Representation a reference guide Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 ISBN 0 313 31521 3 p 819 Appelbaum Yoni September 10 2014 Publishers Gave Away 122 951 031 Books During World War II The Atlantic Retrieved May 8 2023 Erotica pp 102 103 Still Judith Worton Michael 1993 Textuality and Sexuality Reading Theories and Practices Manchester University Press p 190 ISBN 0 7190 3605 4 Forrest Katherine V 2005 Lesbian Pulp Fiction The Sexually Intrepid World of Lesbian Paperback Novels 1950 1965 Cleis Press p 440 ISBN 1 57344 210 0 Charles R Stone The Fountainhead of Chinese Erotica The Lord of Perfect Satisfaction Ruyijun Zhuan with a Translation and Critical Edition Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2003 pp 13 14 ISBN 0824824121 Marche Stephen October 21 2013 At Last an English Translation of The Plum in the Golden Vase Los Angeles Review of Books the first complete English translation of the Chin Ping Mei one of the world s great novels if not simply the greatest was released only last month It s a masterpiece an epic scholarly achievement Like all the great works of humanistic realism the Chin Ping Mei relishes its own contradictions Sexual Seduction Stories Storify Retrieved July 16 2017 gt sepoy December 1 2004 Erotic Vita Retrieved September 13 2005 The Moderator Bard College The Moderator Twitter Virgin Mawrtyr Retrieved November 4 2006 Halpern Ashlea November 1 2006 Art School Confidential City Paper Archived from the original on November 2 2010 H Bomb Archived from the original on October 20 2004 Retrieved October 20 2004 Nona Walia August 10 2005 A sex bomb at Harvard The Times of India Quake Archived from the original on December 1 2005 Retrieved December 1 2005 Squirm Archived from the original on August 13 2001 Retrieved August 13 2001 Vita Excolatur Retrieved April 24 2006 a b Swarthmore College Media Howard Stern September 28 2005 The Howard Stern Show Hyde 1964 pp 34 44 Lucian The Mimes of the Courtesans sacredtexts org Retrieved June 5 2017 Mario Praz 1970 The Romantic Agony Oxford University Press 443 451 H Montgomery Hyde 1964 A History of Pornography 113 5 Clifford J Scheiner 1996 The Essential Guide to Erotic Literature Part One Before 1920 Ware Wordsworth 91 113 Armand Coppens 1973 The Memoirs of an Erotic Bookseller St Albans Panther 66 69 Plant Ian Michael 2004 Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome An Anthology University of Oklahoma Press p 45 ISBN 0 8061 3622 7 Retrieved February 3 2017 Tsantsanoglou K 1973 The Memoirs of a Lady from Samos Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik Bonn Germany Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH 12 183 195 JSTOR 20180553 Plant Ian Michael 2004 Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome An Anthology University of Oklahoma Press p 118 ISBN 0 8061 3622 7 Retrieved June 5 2017 Frayser Suzanne Whitby Thomas 1995 Studies in Human Sexuality A Selected Guide Englewood Colorado Libraries Unlimited p 646 ISBN 1563081318 Sugimoto Masayoshi Swain David 2016 Science and Culture in Traditional Japan Rutland VT Tuttle Publishing p 140 ISBN 9781462918133 Lavery Hannah 2014 The Impotency Poem from Ancient Latin to Restoration English Literature Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing p 80 ISBN 9781472422026 The Obscenity of Censorship A History of Indecent People and Lacivious Publications The Erotica Bibliophile Retrieved May 29 2006 Perhaps the earliest known appearance of this ever popular analogy compare I would rather give a healthy boy or a healthy girl a phial of prussic acid than this novel describing The Well of Loneliness 404 in 1928 Cyril Pearl 1955 The Girl With the Swansdown Seat p 270 Hyde 1964 pp 15 16 Daniel J Kevles July 22 2001 The Secret History of Birth Control The New York Times Retrieved October 21 2006 Green Chris October 3 2008 Blogger wrote of murdering Girls Aloud Independent co uk Retrieved January 21 2014 Ohio man convicted for obscene stories in his private journal Archived from the original on February 15 2012 Retrieved April 28 2012 H Montgomery Hyde A History of Pornography 1969 London Heinemann 14References editBrulotte Gaetan amp Phillips John eds 2006 Encyclopedia of Erotic Literature New York Routledge Gibson Ian 2001 The Erotomaniac London Faber amp Faber H Montgomery Hyde 1964 A History of Pornography London Heinemann Kearney Patrick J 1982 A History of Erotic Literature Parragon ISBN 1 85813 198 7 Kronhausen Phyllis amp Eberhard 1959 Pornography and the Law The Psychology of Erotic Realism and Pornography New York Ballantine Books Kronhausen Phyllis amp Eberhard 1969 Erotic Fantasies a Study of Sexual Imagination New York Grove Press Muchembled Robert 2008 Orgasm and the West a history of pleasure from the 16th century to the present Polity ISBN 0 7456 3876 7 Sontag Susan 1969 The Pornographic Imagination in Styles of Radical Will Picador ISBN 0 312 42021 8 Weller Michael J The Secret Blue Book Home Baked Books 2 London Williams Linda 1999 Hardcore Power Pleasure and the Frenzy of the Visible Berkeley University of California PressFurther reading editKearney Patrick ed 1981 The Private Case an annotated bibliography of the Private Case Erotica Collection in the British Museum Library London Atlantic Highlands New Jersey J Landesman Distributed by Humanities Press ISBN 9780905150246 With an introduction by G Legman Pietrek Klaus 1992 Lexikon der erotischen Literatur Autoren Werke Themen Aspekte in German Meitingen Corian Verl ISBN 9783890480503 Bondy Francois 1989 Erotische literatur in Bondy Francois ed Harenbergs Lexikon der Weltliteratur Autoren Werke Begriffe Band 2 in German Dortmund Harenberg Lexikon Verl ISBN 9783611000911 Schweikle Gunther Schweikle Irmgard 1990 Erotische literatur in Schweikle Gunther Schweikle Irmgard eds Metzler Literatur Lexikon Begriffe und Definitionen in German vol 2 Stuttgart J M Metzlersche ISBN 9783476006684 von Wilpert Gero 2001 Erotische literatur in von Wilpert Gero ed Sachworterbuch der Literatur in German vol 8 Stuttgart Kroner ISBN 9783520231086 Hogen Hildegard Bode Eva Beate 2004 Erotische literatur in Hogen Hildegard Bode Eva Beate eds Der Brockhaus Literatur Schriftsteller Werke Epochen Sachbegriffe in German vol 2 Mannheim F A Brockhaus ISBN 9783765303517 Brulotte Gaetan Phillips John eds 2006 Encyclopedia of erotic literature New York Routledge ISBN 9781579584412 Roy Pinaki January 2014 Reviewing Steamies the literary steam of twenty first century feminism PDF Labyrinth Gwalior India Dr Lata Mishra 5 1 68 77 ISSN 0976 0814 Archived from the original PDF on February 8 2016 Straight Sheryl The erotica bibliophile A Bibliography of Works Published by Charles Carrington Wood Rachel July 2015 Sexual consumption within sexual labour producing and consuming erotic texts and sexual commodities PDF Porn Studies Taylor and Francis 2 2 3 250 262 doi 10 1080 23268743 2015 1051308 hdl 10034 621054 S2CID 143264651 History edit General edit Atkins John 1970 Sex in Literature 4 vols 1970 1982 Bertolotti Alessandro Curiosa la bibliotheque erotique Paris Editions La Martiniere 2012 ISBN 978 2 7324 5274 6 Di Folco Philippe ed 2005 Dictionnaire de la pornographie Paris Presses Universitaires de France ISBN 2 130 54414 2 Englisch Paul 1927 Geschichte der erotischen Literatur 1927 Reprint 1977 ISBN 3 921695 01 5 Fischer Carolin 1997 Garten der Lust eine Geschichte erregender Lekturen Stuttgart Weimar Metzler ISBN 3 476 01563 7 paperback Munchen Dt Taschenbuch Verlag 2000 Gnug Hiltrud 2002 Der erotische Roman von der Renaissance bis zur Gegenwart Ditzingen Reclam ISBN 3 15 017634 4 Kronhausen Eberhard amp Phyllis 1969 Bucher aus dem Giftschrank eine Analyse der verbotenen und verfemten erotischen Literatur Pia Pascal ed 1971 Dictionnaire des œuvres erotiques Paris Mercure de France Schreiber Hermann 1969 Erotische Texte sexualpathologische Erscheinungen in der Literatur Spedding Patrick curator 2010 Lewd and Scandalous Books An exhibition of material from the Monash University Library Rare Books Collection Clayton Melbourne Monash University Ancient world and Middle Ages edit Leick G 1994 Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature ISBN 0 415 06534 8 Mulchandani S 2006 Erotic Literature of Ancient India Kama Sutra Koka Shastra Gita Govindam Ananga Ranga ISBN 81 7436 384 XModern times to 1900 edit Goulemot J 1993 Gefahrliche Bucher erotische Literatur Pornographie Leser und Zensur im 18 Jahrhundert ISBN 3 499 55528 X Moulton I 2000 Before Pornography erotic writing in early modern Europe ISBN 0 19 513709 4External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Category Erotica nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Category Erotic poetry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erotic literature amp oldid 1188972713 Erotic verse, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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