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Writing about sex (with footnotes)

Matthew Reisz recalls some memorable examples of academics venturing beneath the sheets

Published on
January 15, 2016
Last updated
January 28, 2016
Source: iStock
Who let an academic into our bedroom?

Novelists can write about sex in ways that are exciting or disturbing, comic or nostalgic, lyrical or grotesque. None of these options is really open to academics. And just as there is a good deal of academic writing about food, sport or rock 鈥檔鈥 roll, for example, that manages to drain all the fun and passion out of these topics, the same is certainly true of sex. Fortunately, there are also many academics who manage to be serious and illuminating about sex without being dull.

It probably says something about me, but shortly after I joined Times Higher Education I decided to write a feature investigating some of the research on sex then going on in the UK, given that sexology has never really acquired the status of a proper academic discipline in this country.

I thought back to that article recently when I was reading and then writing about a bold new book titled The Domesticated Penis: How Womanhood Has Shaped Manhood. Here two US associate professors of anthropology, Loretta Cormier and Sharyn Jones, get to grips with (insert alternative double entendre of your choice) the male organ, and set out a striking central thesis: roughly that the human penis has been shaped by female choice over the course of evolution into an organ 鈥済eared toward providing sexual pleasure to women鈥.

The reason that this has not been widely acknowledged, they suggest, is that most evolutionary theory has been written by men and has tended to give females something of a 鈥減assive鈥, bystander鈥檚 role in the processes that drive evolution. In particular, earlier researchers have been coy about admitting 鈥渢he possibility that females actively seek out sexual encounters and choose mates that provide them with enhanced sexual pleasure鈥 and have 鈥渢ypically minimized鈥he extent to which female sexuality is expressed outside of reproduction鈥. (This can hardly be news, of course, to anyone who has ever been to a nightclub or heard of contraception, but perhaps some researchers have led very sheltered lives or believe that female animals live by stricter moral codes than their fellow humans.)

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I am sure there is something in the claim by Jo Brewis, professor of organisation and consumption at the University of Leicester, that: 鈥淭here hasn鈥檛 been enough research about sexuality and class.鈥 One of her own projects explored the phenomenon of 鈥渃havinism鈥, whereby middle-class 鈥済ay men buy clothes in order to dress as chavs鈥 or even 鈥渟eek 鈥榬eal鈥 sex with tracksuit-wearing, baseball-cap-sporting youths鈥. This can lead to some amusing confusions, with Brewis鈥 paper citing the case of one couple who tried to pick up 鈥溾楤urberry-capped鈥 Rob鈥 for a threesome and said they 鈥渨ouldn鈥檛 mind going back to his council flat鈥 鈥 only to discover that he was just as affluent as they were.

But while I鈥檓 on the subject of academics dealing with sexual themes whose work I have found startling and 鈥渆ducational鈥, I can hardly omit Dani Ploeger, now senior lecturer in performance arts at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. He has written very interestingly about the po-faced way that many artists and critics talk about nudity and sexual themes in 鈥渉igh art鈥. But he is also a performance artist of a particularly 鈥渙ut there鈥 kind. One piece (see previous link) involved such heroic feats of buttock-clenching that he was acclaimed by a Czech newspaper as 鈥渢he Jimi Hendrix of the sphincter鈥.

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It was also Ploeger who co-organised a conference I attended on the boundaries between pornography and performance art. This featured a demonstration of Japanese rope bondage (a good deal less exciting than it sounds) as well as presentations by 鈥渃amgirls鈥 and 鈥渟ubmissives鈥. There was even a video of a sort of girl-meets-octopus erotic encounter, produced by the feminist art collective CUNTemporary.

When I googled them to find out more, the search engine made every effort to spare my blushes: 鈥淎re you sure you don鈥檛 mean 鈥榗ontemporary鈥?鈥

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