John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroticises the act of defloration. As such it is a revealing illustration of what Ivan Bloch termed the ‘defloration mania’ of the eighteenth century. This article maps narrative events on to contemporary medical depictions of first intercourse to show the ways that the theories and ideas presented in medical and pseudo-medical texts transferred into erotic fiction and demonstrates how in some instances the bloody defloration scenes can be read as being sex during menstruation, an act which was culturally forbidden at this time
As the foundational text of the eighteenth-century antimasturbation movement, Onania hasattracted co...
This article sets the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) (2021) Act in the context of histo...
John Cleland’s 1749 text Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure has squeezed its way into popular culture by...
John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroti...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
This thesis builds upon the existing scholarship such as that by Patricia Crawford, Helen King, Alex...
John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure has been described as the first erotic novel in Englis...
Early-modern medicine can often be seen to be looking back and deferring to the ancient authorities ...
This dissertation traces the changing story of female sexuality--a distinctly heterosexual story--th...
Throughout the early modern period, medical writers described a plethora of remedies designed to pro...
The Curse of Eve—or the menstrual process—was a topic widely stigmatized and perpetuated in the thir...
This thesis explores early modem perceptions of menstrual bleeding, demonstrating that attempts to u...
Thy righteousness is but a menstrual clout: sanitary practices and prejudice in early modern Englan
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
As the foundational text of the eighteenth-century antimasturbation movement, Onania hasattracted co...
This article sets the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) (2021) Act in the context of histo...
John Cleland’s 1749 text Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure has squeezed its way into popular culture by...
John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroti...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
This thesis builds upon the existing scholarship such as that by Patricia Crawford, Helen King, Alex...
John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure has been described as the first erotic novel in Englis...
Early-modern medicine can often be seen to be looking back and deferring to the ancient authorities ...
This dissertation traces the changing story of female sexuality--a distinctly heterosexual story--th...
Throughout the early modern period, medical writers described a plethora of remedies designed to pro...
The Curse of Eve—or the menstrual process—was a topic widely stigmatized and perpetuated in the thir...
This thesis explores early modem perceptions of menstrual bleeding, demonstrating that attempts to u...
Thy righteousness is but a menstrual clout: sanitary practices and prejudice in early modern Englan
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
As the foundational text of the eighteenth-century antimasturbation movement, Onania hasattracted co...
This article sets the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) (2021) Act in the context of histo...
John Cleland’s 1749 text Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure has squeezed its way into popular culture by...