Amazon.com Review
In broaching a taboo subject, Martha Roth explores the question "Why does sexual arousal carry both excitement and guilt?" She examines the mental and physical effects of arousal as forbidden fruit, and considers how these effects direct our behavior by inhibiting or enhancing it. Roth's approach is unique in that she concentrates on the causes and connections of arousal, which lead into insights on how American society defines sexuality. From an early age, for example, images of sex are entwined with images of violence and punishment. She discusses how attitudes toward sexuality are illustrated in cultural icons such as vampires and vamps, films and novels.
Roth's purpose is to challenge readers to look at both the whys and the why nots of their own patterns of arousal, to be aware of the relationship between sex and violence with which we are all enculturated, and to move beyond guilt to enjoyment of all the varied pleasures of arousal. --Susan Swartwout
From Publishers Weekly
In this muddled academic feminist discourse, Roth, co-editor of Transforming a Rape Culture, on the one hand deplores the countless images linking sex and violence in movies, TV, novels, ads?images which turn women into objects. On the other hand, her graphic autobiographical account of her own sexual coming-of-age dwells on her ambivalent pleasure in violent sexual fantasies?a predilection she traces to growing up Jewish in Chicago during WWII, when her fear of becoming a victim of violence, fusing with parental strictures to keep erotic pleasure secret, led to fantasies of being a beautiful captured spy or Jewish prisoner. Writing in the tradition of Julia Kristeva and Helene Cixous, Roth meshes a sophisticated feminist critique of Freudian phallocentric society with psychoanalytic insights a la Jacques Lacan and Eastern wisdom. Her wide-ranging meditation on women's suppression of their sexuality touches too sketchily on diverse topics (from androgyny to the gynecological profession), using an array of illustrative examples ranging from Plato to Masters and Johnson, and from Colurbet's female nudes to Robert Crumb's comics. Her prescription that releasing the Kundalini energies linked in yoga to creativity and arousal will trigger both a transformation of our sexual selves and a social revolution seems as vague and pointless as Madonna's exhortations that sex is a good thing. Author tour.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.






