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Prostitution
Havelock Ellis
Prostitution
Havelock Ellis
Prostitution
Sex in Relation to Society
From Studies in the Psychology of Sex - Volume 6
By Havelock Ellis
An Early 20th Century Study
The Definition of ProstitutionProstitution Among SavagesThe Influence of Christianity on ProstitutionThe Sexual Instinct in ProstitutesThe Physical and Psychic Characters of ProstitutesThe Decay of the BrothelThe Charm of VulgarityThe OrgyThe Religious Origin of the OrgyThe Feast of FoolsRecognition of the Orgy by the Greeks and RomansThe Orgy Among Savages
Traditional morality, religion, and established convention combine to promote not only the extreme of rigid abstinence but also that of reckless license. They preach and idealize the one extreme; they drive those who cannot accept it to adopt the opposite extreme. In the great ages of religion it even happens that the severity of the rule of abstinence is more or less deliberately tempered by the permission for occasional outbursts of license. We thus have the orgy, which flourished in mediæval days and is, indeed, in its largest sense, a universal manifestation, having a function to fulfil in every orderly and laborious civilization, built up on natural energies that are bound by more or less inevitable restraints.
The consideration of the orgy, it may be said, lifts us beyond the merely sexual sphere, into a higher and wider region which belongs to religion. The Greek orgeia referred originally to ritual things done with a religious purpose, though later, when dances of Bacchanals and the like lost their sacred and inspiring character, the idea was fostered by Christianity that such things were immoral. Yet Christianity was itself in its origin an orgy of the higher spiritual activities released from the uncongenial servitude of classic civilization, a great festival of the poor and the humble, of the slave and the sinner. And when, with the necessity for orderly social organization, Christianity had ceased to be this it still recognized, as Paganism had done, the need for an occasional orgy. It appears that in 743 at a Synod held in Hainault reference was made to the February debauch (de Spurcalibus in februario) as a pagan practice; yet it was precisely this pagan festival which was embodied in the accepted customs of the Christian Church as the chief orgy of the ecclesiastical year, the great Carnival prefixed to the long fast of Lent. The celebration on Shrove Tuesday and the previous Sunday constituted a Christian Bacchanalian festival in which all classes joined. The greatest freedom and activity of physical movement was encouraged; "some go about naked without shame, some crawl on all fours, some on stilts, some imitate animals."
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | July 19, 2017 |
ISBN13 | 9781973719625 |
Publishers | Createspace Independent Publishing Platf |
Pages | 80 |
Dimensions | 216 × 279 × 4 mm · 208 g |
Language | English |
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