Nov 022007
 

After waiting way too long, I finally rented Bret Wood’s film Psychopathia Sexualis. It’s definitely an odd film, but worth seeing in studying our history of sexuality. Psychopathia Sexualis was a very important book in the evolution of sexuality in general and kink in particular, the first book to put the words “sadism” and “masochism” together.

Wood’s film is a set of interconnected vignettes, dramatizing the case studies Krafft-Ebing collected as well as inferred scenes. They’re shot in a style intended to suggest the early days of silent film, as if some German expressionist had tried to make a film version in the 1920s.

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Jul 152007
 

Hughes, Kathryn. The Short Life & Long Times of Mrs. Beeton Fourth Estate, London, 2005

I’ve read about the fetishist correspondence in mid- and late-Victorian magazines in several sources. These were the 19th century precursors of Penthouse Forum letters, people apparently writing in about their personal experiences and/or fantasies. I take the position that most of these letters were genuine, in that they were not fabricated in-house, but came in from outside.

The question is, however, why were these letters published in such mainstream, middle-class publications?
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Mar 162007
 

One of the key texts in the evolution of kink is the correspondence columns in Victorian popular magazines, the great-great-grandparents of Penthouse Forum. Even magazines as staid and middle class as The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, published by the Beetons, ran fetishistic letters about corporal punishment and corset tight lacing.

There’s three ways of looking at these letters.

  1. They’re written in house and therefore wholly fabricated
  2. They’re written by the readers and mainly genuine
  3. They’re written by the readers and mainly fantasy

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Jul 222006
 

After a very long time, I’ve finally finished David Kunzle’s Fashion and Fetishism. I’d say it’s pretty much the last word on corset history, though Valerie Steele’s work is a lot shorter.

There’s really only one area of Kunzle’s book I question. In the 19th century, there clearly was a subculture of corset tight-lacers, often lower-class, upwardly-mobile women, and their admirers. But were there families and schools in which women were customarily introduced to tight-lacing in their early teens, as described in the fetishist letters in magazines like Englishwomen’s Domestic Magazine and The Family Doctor? It seems clear to me that most of them were exaggerations or outright fabrications, but were all of them?

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Feb 212006
 

I finally got a hold of James Cleugh’s The First Masochist, a biography of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, author of Venus in Furs and the inspiration of the term “masochism”. For some reason, there’s plenty of biographical material on the Marquis de Sade, but much less material on von Sacher-Masoch.

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Jan 272006
 

My copy of the out of print Confessions of Wanda von Sacher-Masoch came in the mail the other day. I’m surprised this book isn’t in print, as it’s a fascinating look at the intersection of class, gender, money and sexuality. It’s also a well-written and compelling story, though it’s as depressing as any story of a woman married to an abusive celebrity.

Written by Laura Rumelin (with an umlaut over the “u” in her last name), a poor glovemaker who got involved in a prank played on the famous writer, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Though she was turned off when she heard of his unconventional interests, she was taken by his charm in person, and the books and money he sent her did the rest. They were wed.

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Jan 062006
 

In 1917, the same year a generation of Englishmen were being slaughtered on the killing fields of Europe, Thomas Edward Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia, was captured by Turks at Der’a, beaten and threatened with rape. By his own account, he liked it.

“I remembered smiling idly at him, for a delicious warmth, probably sexual, was swelling through me; and then that he flung up his arm and hacked with the full length of his whip into my groin. This doubled me half-over, screaming, or, rather, trying impotently to scream, only shuddering through my open mouth. One giggled with amusement. A voice cried, ‘Shame, you’ve killed him,” Another slash followed. A roaring, and my eyes went black; while within me the core of life seemed to heave slowly up through the rending nerves, expelled from its body by this last indescribable pang.”

Lawrence survived and escaped, but not without his experience leaving a lasting effect on him.

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Sep 142005
 

Hudson, Derek. “Munby: Man of Two Worlds” John Murray, 1972

It is hateful to be reminded thus, that one cannot show one’s chiefest treasure to any living soul, because of that very homeliness and lowliness which is one of its best charms to me.

-The diaries of Arthur Munby, 23 March 1862

Munby and Cullwick met in 1854, but they didn’t start keeping detailed diaries until 1860, unfortunately. Furthermore, in the first few years Munby kept tearing out pages which probably had to do with Cullwick. This is a pain, because it means that there are no direct accounts of the early stage of their relationship.

Even more frustrating, there are surprisingly few mentions of Hannah Cullwick, though they pick up in 1863. I don’t know if this is Munby’s self-censoring or Hudson’s editorial decisions. Hudson barely touches on some of the juiciest stuff, with brief quotes instead of the full entries. Cullwick calls herself Munby’s “faithful drudge and slave!” in an entry dated 3 August 1862.

I still don’t know where the Master-slave aspect came from. Did Munby concoct it from his classical education, or did it have more to do with his fondness for negro minstrel shows? Or did Cullwick devise it based on the play The Death of Sardanapalus?

Munby loved constrast and transformation. His description of working women compared their intelligence and dedication to their physical coarseness. In a photography session on 9 August 1862, he had Cullwick posed as chimneysweep, “in her dirt.”

… she was taken in the same black and forlorn condition, crouching on the ground at my feet– I doing my best to look down upon her like a tyrant! That was for ‘the contrast’: contrast indeed– but which was the nobler?

She wished to be photographed also in an attitude of her own: and this being granted, she sat down on the floor, with only her shift and serge petticoat on, & thrust out a bare foot, leaning on one knee and clasping her [locked slave neck] chain with the other hand. She was so anxious about this pose, which was very happy, that I enquired its meaning when we were alone. It was ‘the way I sit on the floor when I’m going to bed, and–think of you!’

McClintock, in “Imperial Leather”, portrays Arthur J Munby as a smug, bourgeois doofus, but I feel sympathy for Munby. Here is a guy who, whether by nature or nurture, had no interest, emotional or sexual, in the kind of women he was supposed to marry. His desires were out of step with social norms, which describes any kinky or queer person.

Munby could have married a woman of appropriate social status and continued his “studies” of working women on the sly. He could have discretely schtupped the housemaid on a regular basis. Plenty of other men of his status had mistresses or patronized prostitutes, or made sexual access a condition of employment for the household help.

Instead, he married Cullwick. This was more a matter of legitimating their existing relationship than reaching a greater degree of intimacy or commitment. It wasn’t a decision he made lightly, nor did it create the domestic bliss he hoped, but he viewed it as the moral choice, instead of the pragmatic choice. Munby didn’t exactly come out of the closet, but he didn’t lead a sham life of middle-class respectability either. He chose to follow his bliss and be wed (albeit in secret) to a woman he cared deeply about. Undeniably, there was a vast gulf in class between them, and covert power struggles, but they met each others wants and needs in a way no one else could.

Until and unless I get some serious money to purchase research collections, I have to work with Hudson’s book and the like. I hope the inter library loan for Cullwick’s diaries come through. I really need to read her side of the story.