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Saturday, March 24, 2007 | Science : Psychiatry and Psychology | print version Print | Comments

Document Sex in the 1700s

by PhysOrg

Reposted from PhysOrg:
http://www.physorg.com/news93886163.html

Prostitutes, perversions and public scandals – the stuff of the 21st century tabloids was familiar to readers three centuries earlier, according to new research from the University of Leeds.

The reading of erotic literature was already a social activity 300 years ago.

Jenny Skipp's three-year PhD study examined, catalogued and categorised every known erotic text published in eighteenth-century Britain: "I tried to get a grip on just how many were published, detail the various types of sexual behaviour portrayed and find out who was doing what – and to whom." It proved a surprisingly rich field: "Most people have heard of Fanny Hill, but there was a huge amount of erotic literature published in the 18th century."

And despite earlier work suggesting that these texts were only for solitary consumption – at home, alone, and behind closed doors – Skipp's work throws up a surprising image of how these works were used. "They would be read in public – everywhere from London's rough-and-ready alehouses to the city's thriving coffee houses, which weren't quite the focus of polite society in the way we sometimes think," she explained. "Some texts even came as questions and answers and were clearly intended for groups of men to read together, with one asking the questions and the others answering them."

Much of the work is derogatory in its references to women. They are subordinates, courtesans, prostitutes, carriers of venereal disease and bearers of deformed children. "When men write this way, or read these texts, it gives them a context for asserting their authority over women," Skipp added. Yet some texts portray women altogether differently, discussing the nature of female sexuality or describing lascivious aristocratic females.

One group predominant in this literature is the Libertines – whose all-in hedonistic, smoking, drinking, swearing, pleasure-seeking lifestyle was typified by their subjugation of women. Literature aimed at this group, encouraging men to assert their dominance, translated the repressive attitudes of Libertinism further down the class structure.

And Skipp's analysis of the pricing of these works revises earlier studies to show that rather than being solely targeted at the gentry, much of this work was cheap and widely available. Though many from the poorer sections of society are considered illiterate because they were unable to sign their name, they may still have been able to read: "Many more people could read than write," she said. "In London, for example, we believe about 70 per cent of men could read."

The works range from books, down to single-sheet pamphlets. "The price and content of this material suggests it was available to merchants, traders, skilled and semi-skilled men and even labourers," Skipp went on. Its accessibility allowed sexual attitudes to percolate down the social strata.

Dr Simon Burrows of the University's school of history, one of Skipp's PhD supervisors, described the study as "pioneering work." He said: "Jenny has shown that erotic texts are about much more than sexual fantasy. They can give us genuine new insights into cultural attitudes, sexual norms and social customs."

And Skipp describes a literary quality to the writing which you might struggle to find in modern erotic fiction or top-shelf pornography. "It is very different to today's erotica," she said. "It is more humorous, more literary and more engaged with the wider issues of the life and politics of the times." Its metaphors mirror the passions of the age: "At a time when military power was equated with virility, armed conquest is often used as a metaphor for sex – in phrases such as 'unsheathing the weapon', 'storming the fort' and 'releasing the cannon'."

By the 1770s, the transcripts of adultery trials became a new source of titillation. To secure a divorce, a man would first have to successfully sue a rival for 'violating his property', before petitioning Parliament to dissolve the marriage. "There is something rather voyeuristic about these trials," said Skipp. "Often servants would give evidence while innkeepers would testify about lovers taking rooms together."

"The appetite for this kind of material shows readers were interested in gossip about their social betters and fascinated by the sordid details of marital breakdown – just like modern-day readers scanning the tabloids for a juicy scandal.

"The production of erotica was frequently stimulated by intrigues in the lives of well-known public figures – the aristocracy, politicians, writers, playwrights and actresses and occasionally the monarchy. The wives and mistresses were both celebrated and derided in erotic texts – they were the WAGS of their day."

As Skipp said: "Eighteenth century readers were just as fascinated with public figures as we are today – especially when they had skeletons in their closet!"

Source: University of Leeds

Comments 1 - 11 of 11 |

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1. Comment #27335 by Estragon on March 24, 2007 at 5:27 am

It's not porn mum! it's a source of genuine insight into cultural attitudes, sexual norms and social customs!

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2. Comment #27382 by DavidJMH on March 24, 2007 at 10:10 am

Ladies and Gentlemen,
All very illuminating and enervating I am sure, but what might I be so bold as to ask is Jenny Skipps going to use her new found knowledge and doctorate for; educating the sex obsessed, adolescent, western world that it is somehow justified to carry on with the profligate, licentious, self indulgence because there is an evolutionary precursor?

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3. Comment #27394 by WittyReference on March 24, 2007 at 11:09 am

 avatarDavidjmh

it's more likely to show that our interest in sex is ongoing and always has been and it can't be used as an argument in the now as an example of "the decline of modern morality/ society" etc

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4. Comment #27479 by DavidJMH on March 24, 2007 at 9:14 pm

WittyReference,
A very good point but it was not the one I was trying to make. A doctorate study of a base instinct doesn't exactly uplift the mind above the navel or provide humanity with anything new. I hope you agree that to rise above one's animalistic preoccupations is a noble and civilizing endeavour and Jenny Skipp's time and the money that paid for it could have been better spent.

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5. Comment #27597 by Luthien on March 25, 2007 at 2:41 pm

 avatar1. Comment #27335 by Estragon on March 24, 2007 at 5:27 am
It's not porn mum! it's a source of genuine insight into cultural attitudes, sexual norms and social customs!

tee hee hee :D

Other Comments by Luthien

6. Comment #27606 by scottishgeologist on March 25, 2007 at 3:16 pm

 avatarHow language was used then is quite interesting as well. For instance, heres an interesting little Wikipedia entry:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gropecunt_Lane

:-)))

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7. Comment #27612 by mjwemdee on March 25, 2007 at 4:27 pm

 avatarFascinating. But...er...why is this posted on THIS website?

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8. Comment #27615 by BaronOchs on March 25, 2007 at 4:45 pm

 avatarmjwemdee I understand this site to be about not just atheism but promoting knowledge and understanding in general. So why not an article about C18th erotic literature?! The format of this site is very accessible so I say the more that is made of it the better. I hope in time the totally or pretty much empty categories on the menu at the top (Maths and Tech/Economics/Law etc)will fill up with interesting material.

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9. Comment #27616 by mjwemdee on March 25, 2007 at 4:54 pm

 avatarI guess you're right. 'All human life is there' as one of the British broadsheets used to say...

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10. Comment #27706 by WittyReference on March 26, 2007 at 8:17 am

 avatargreat posts by Beth and ColAbernathy

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11. Comment #27810 by Russell Blackford on March 26, 2007 at 10:12 pm

So much prudery combined with so many capital letters.

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