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29 July 2005 |
aldrichart.org
New York Times: The Romans did it. Rembrandt did it. Japanese masters did it. Picasso, especially in his dotage, did it. They all made erotic imagery, the kind that has been chiseled, carved, painted and drawn the world over since even before picture-making segued into art.
That tradition of visually celebrating sexual love and desire is carried on in a titillating show, "Contemporary Erotic Drawing," at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum here.
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eDiets: . . . it is possible to break one’s penis, although highly unlikely. Interestingly, male anxiety over breaking one’s penis is far more prevalent than actual occurrences, and a not an entirely uncommon fear.
“Broken penises” usually happen when an erect penis is thrust against a harder object, like a pelvic bone, for example, tearing the thick membrane surrounding the corpora cavernosa.
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Telegraph: Susan Lydon, the American writer who died on July 15 aged 61, inspired generations of feminists with her theory that the "vaginal orgasm" is a male myth designed to keep women in economic, social and political subjection.
Her claim in a famous essay entitled The Politics of Orgasm (1970) that the clitoris is the centre of female sexual pleasure and that (in consequence) women do not need men to achieve sexual fulfilment was said to have liberated women from male tyranny between the sheets. Her observation that women "often fake orgasm to appear 'good in bed'," led to the faked orgasm becoming a metaphor for sexual exploitation of all sorts.
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© Copyleft 2005 sexendipity.
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