If you are a child of the Seventies or Eighties, chances are that your formative sexual education was considerably influenced by rifling furtively through a Nancy Friday book. Even today, thanks to well-thumbed titles like My Secret Garden and Forbidden Flowers, a generation of middle-aged women still dutifully have sex with their husbands once a month, enlivened by images of being sold to Bedouins or made to copulate with donkeys. The American journalist collected and organised the unexpurgated fantasies of hundreds of women — and later on, men — selling millions of copies in the process. And now, film and TV star Gillian Anderson hopes to update the genre with a new book out this week, called simply Want.
Billed as “a new book of fantasies for a new generation”, Anderson makes a conscious nod to Friday’s seminal oeuvre in her introduction, enquiring, Carrie Bradshaw-like, “how have women’s deepest internal desires changed?” For the purposes of girlboss science, ethnicity, religious belief, wage bracket, “sexual identity” and relationship status are recorded for each participant, though weirdly not age. And as with Friday’s written contributions, there is a lot of quasi-feminist posturing at the beginning of each section. “Sexual liberation must mean freedom to enjoy sex on our terms, to say what we want, not what we are pressured or believed we are expected to want,” we’re solemnly told. “Fantasies can help crystallise our wants and needs.”
One thing that definitely seems to have changed since the Seventies is that aesthetic standards in sex writing have improved, presumably honed by contact with a thousand self-published erotic novels on Amazon Kindle. In Friday’s day, the means of expression was often rough and ready but in Want it tends to be silky smooth. Devouring looks and quickening pulses are swiftly followed by competently handled flushes, swellings, openings, and so forth.
In this professionalised context, the odd bit of purple prose stands out all the more starkly. One image unlikely to leave me anytime soon describes “a saintly stake of flesh that points to the heavens, aloof and destined to do good” whose presence is soon to be felt against the protagonist’s “sopping dividing wall”. Other bits are simply baffling: “She pulls out a large onion and rubs it across my erection,” writes one contributor.
But perhaps a more interesting way in which desires seem to have changed over the decades is that they have got a lot more boring. Things like racial dynamics, incest, slavery, and bestiality — all casually included by Friday, to the point where it was hard to find much else in there — are absent from this collection, said to be the result of whittling down eight volumes worth of responses to the publisher’s call. In fact, this book is generally so vanilla that, perhaps anticipating disengagement from readers in advance, Anderson is forced to entice us with the promise that her own fantasy is included among the anonymous offerings. Certainly, this keeps the reader more alert than she otherwise might have been. Is it the one about the door handle, one wonders? Or maybe the one about the Weasley twins?
But since many of the main fantasy themes of Friday’s era still appear on message boards all over the internet, it seems likely that their invisibility in Want is not because women have become more repressed in the meantime, but rather because publishers have. Even in its relatively etiolated form, I presume extra fainting couches were required for this book’s sensitivity readers. The closest we get to genuine transgression of old taboos is a bit of water sports and a few tentative rape scenes, rushed through with evident embarrassment and a lot of editorial emphasis that — in this case only, for some reason — the fantasies absolutely do not crystallise the author’s “wants and needs”. Not all of the participants are so convincing. “I’d probably be super-upset if my actual dentist tried to fuck me,” writes one, with an interesting use of the word “probably”.
All this coyness makes something of a mockery of the collection’s main conceit: that it’s offered in the cause of freeing women from shame about what turns them on. Predictably, contributions are not even exclusively from women: “women” is described by Anderson as “an imperfect term” and there are male voices here too. Rather than boldly illuminating the wellsprings of the contemporary female libido, Want is probably more profitably read as a guide to respectable sexual mores in the 21st century. As with female-associated activities generally, there are a lot of unspoken rules. And frankly, the news for men who don’t identify as women isn’t great.
This is the article we read without indicating so by commenting. Kathleen does a good job of leaving me as untitillated as she clearly was by the book.
competently handled flushes
I think we have Kohler’s new advertising slogan!
It’s possible that the most boring thing in the world is someone else’s mind.
Quite possible the truest thing I’ve read in the comments.
I disagree profoundly. Finding out how the world looks through someone else’s eyes is fascinating. It’s only their sexual fantasies which are (apparently) derivative and dull.
The book sounds so very boring, but I suppose some women will want to read it. I predict disappointment.
I wonder if Stock’s view of this book confirms a prejudice of mine.
While, clearly and splendidly l, gay people have become free, straight sex has become more self-conscious and less free. We had some fairly wild adventures as a young couple and, while discretion was necessary, there seemed less judgement. Sex for fun was more usual.
Friday’s book was pretty wild and guilt free. The women who wrote seemed to have no qualms about enjoying their fantasies.
Well yes, because if you belong to the category that used to be called “normal” almost everything you think and do is now suspect and a trigger for self examination and guilt. As per the woman worrying about having internalised the patriarchy.
You could always redefine yourself as “queer” of course – a category that gets more inclusive by the day.
It’s all a bit sad, isn’t it? These fantasies sound about as erotic as a Tesco shopping-list.
What turns a person on is intensely personal. If doing it in a muddy field, wearing nothing more than your welly boots, floats your boat, then it floats your boat.
Still, I can’t help thinking some (most?) women need to put their backs into their fantasy sex-lives.
Excellent article. It’s funny how it is often so obvious what the fantasist wants but she refuses to acknowledge it, see the fantasy of having vanilla sex in a suburban home with a loving husband.
Well, with respect, I don’t think I shall be picking up Gillian Anderson’s book anytime soon. The most titillating thing for me about the article was the word “etiolated”. Maybe I’ve got some kind of word fetish.
Words really do have power then.
Clearly you are not a botanist.
Imagine being tied up, the only light in the velvet bedraped bedroom from the candles whose wax the Bibliographer drips on your unclothed body.
“Dactylomegaly,” he whispers in your ear, and your body shudders.
“Obloquy,” the Bibliographer insists. You writhe against the bounds, loving yet hating every syllable he utters.
Now he is leaning fully over you. You feel the heat from his breath against your ear as he exhales the word “osculate.”
And you lose all control…
We should meet
Katherine… maybe we should connect. I’ve been enchanted by ‘etiolated’ for decades.
Me Too! Really
How immensely exhausting all this sounds.
I know. I think I would rather have a nice cup of tea. But it doesn’t half make your wil lie sore
Because in our oddly moralistic day this is worthy rather than pervy.
It’s just another step along the path of expunging men from the gyneverse [my word].
What a missed opportunity. A lot of men still seem to be massively naive about the scope and wildness of female sexuality – but this book doesn’t seem to offer much enlightenment.
So if they can’t talk openly to their wives and girlfriends, where should they look?
“So if they can’t talk openly to their wives and girlfriends, where should they look?”
——-
If a man can’t talk openly to his wife or girlfriend, then there is a huge problem in that relationship. Ditto if a woman can’t talk openly to her husband/boyfriend.
And this is true not only about s3x, but pretty much about any topic.
Quite so. When asked for advice on pleasing women sexually the advice should be “ask her what she likes”
And then just wait for the Bedouin to arrive?
Sorry, I did not understand your point. If you could elaborate on it, it would be really good. (I am serious).
My point was that if in a relationship people cannot talk openly and sincerely about things that are important for them (whatever the topic migh be), then there is a problem in that relationship.
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A bit off: it seems that your comment was also kept for a long time in the purgatory and reappeared with a big delay (like my other post below). In such cases, I always suggest writing to UnHerd Support. Their moderation system is dismal and the more people complain about it, the better chance we all have for the system to be replaced with another one that, hopefully, will not remove absolutely innocuous comments.
Not very realistic. Among men, women are infamous for never saying what they really mean (eg. him-“what should we do for dinner?”; her-“I don’t know. What do you want?”).
And I wouldn’t be surprised if women tended to think the same thing about men.
I think that you indirectly confirm my point.
If someone does not say what they really mean, then there is a problem with communication, i.e. with the relationship.
In my view, it is perfectly realistic to be able to maintain open, sincere and mutually respectful communication.
Yes, even between a man and a woman 😉
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Edited to add: this comment was removed immediately after I posted it and re-appeared 17 (yes, seventeen!) hours later.
And this given that I wrote immediately to UnHerd Support.
Am seriously considering cancelling my subscription.
Or there’s always:
He: What do you like?
She: You shouldn’t have to ask me
But I would believe that it would be hardly helpful if you start asking other women what the woman you asked in the first place likes. What do you think?
Btw, if a woman replies like she did in your example, this is definitely a sign that she has some serious psychological problems.
If someone refuses communication and cooperation (again, in whatever field, it’s not only about s#x) and tries to guilt-trip the other party (in your example, punishing the man for asking, because her reaction is meant to be a punishment), this should be a serious warning for the other party that they are in for a very unhealthy future and are already in a very unhealthy present.
—-
Sorry, have just seen that you were replying to Mr Scaduto, not to me, but hope you don’t mind me replying to your post 🙂
Agree with all you say. But the complaint from men, that women expect them to be mind readers, is not a rare one. And the complaint from women that men shouldn’t have to be told is equally common.
You may have been lucky – but communication problems between men and women seem to be pretty common.
Yes, I agree, this is a situation that can be encountered all too often, unfortunately.
I would disagree with you, though, about the “luck” factor. It’s a matter of choice: I just believe in open and honest (yet tactful, hopefully) communication, I consciously chose this line of behaviour a long time ago and this is what I do.
Makes life significantly easier, for sure. At least, mine…
[wanted to add a smile emoji at the end, but am afraid that the moderation system will take down my comment for another couple of weeks because of that. That’s also related to the topic of (mis)communication…]
I wrote a reply, but the moderation system removed it immediately. Hopefully, they will kindly restore it in a week or two from now…
[sigh]
It’s an inevitable result of the current attention economy that people clamour to ‘expose’ their public private selves to an audience, swathed in pudeur and pseudo-self-awareness, a bit like uploading your own home movies to an Islington Pornhub with all the head shots edited out. And then we get to read a Kathleen Stock expose to mask our own prurience and other non-u urges, rather than permit ourselves to read the real thing. On both sides of the fence, it’s shame masquerading as shamelessness. Reassuringly British.
Great review. As Kathleen Stock has remarked previously “Men are pretty much banned from making any generalisations about women good or bad” so it has been inevitable in our time that the taking down of the “new range of [sexual] social taboos” has had to come from women like her. It seems to me that they have emerged from what I would call a kind of militant androgyny. And in particular from ‘Third Wave’ feminism’s grand dame of androgyny Judith Butler. It never ceases to amaze me how someone whose ‘philosophy’ seems mostly a projection of her own personal hang-ups ever came to be so hugely influential on those 21st c. sexual mores. Here is some Wikipedia gobbledegook on her: “For Butler, “men” and “women” are categories complicated by factors such as class, ethnicity, and sexuality…..[she challenges] assumptions about the distinction often made between sex and gender, according to which sex is biological while gender is culturally constructed. Butler argues that this false distinction introduces a split into the supposedly unified subject of feminism. Sexed bodies cannot signify without gender, and the apparent existence of sex prior to discourse and cultural imposition is only an effect of the functioning of gender. Sex and gender are both constructed.” https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/shall-we-dance
All in all, not very sexy is it?
For Judith Butler see also word salad.
The power of social construction seems really quite amazing, almost miraculous. As a working biologist, it would never have occurred to me that society, just by thinking so much about gender, could cause embryos to develop ovaries or testicles, vaginas or penises. Wow! Judith Butler seems to have discovered a new mechanism for evolution, and maybe for the whole universe. It’s all just one big shared socially constructed idea! Who’d a thunk it?
‘Sex and gender are both constructed’
Hopefully not as badly as Ms Butler’s writing. Or the human race wouldn’t have survived.
“Every time I find a woman attractive, I fear that it will come across as predatory, and any time I find a man attractive I question my own feelings, wondering if they are true or if it’s the patriarchal conditioning of society.”
Proof. If any was needed. Some people can read way too many books and have too many ideas spinning around in their heads.
Life is short. Get on and live it god damn it!
I probably shouldn’t say it but I’m not altogether sorry Kathleen was hounded out of academia. She is such a pleasure to read. Their loss, our gain.
Sounds like a fantasy to me (except it happened).
This is the funniest article I have read in a very long time. Thank you Kathleen! Good pub fodder for a Friday night.
I laugh when I ever watch a mainstream film now when it has a heterosexual ‘sex’ scene. In nearly every case now the women cannot be on the bottom because its just not girlboss so it leads to the most formulaic scenes where the woman throws the man on to his back so she can be on top (I mean this in the broad literal and figurative sense). So for example in ‘Jack Reacher’ the slim, petite female ‘throws’ the hulking musclebound macho titular character beneath her. Its laughable how censorious and self censoring many have become to meet the perceived uniform ‘woke’ narrative.
I always assumed that was so the viewers could get a better view of her t*ts, something for which I’m always grateful
Hang on, isn’t Jack Reacher played by Tom Cruise?
Most women could pick him up one-handed and pop him in their purse. Like a discreet, well-designed sex toy.
Gillian Anderson must have joined the Junior Anti-Sex League at some point. Too bad, Scully.
Having turned every other facet of human existence into something pathological, one should not be surprised that sex is going down that road. I’m also struck by the number of chronological adults who cannot write a simple thought without the need for the ubiquitous f-word, which today has all the gravity of saying “green” to due to misapplied overuse.
Dear Kathleen,
Thank you for reading that book so that I don’t have to.
I always thought that “pansexual” referred to someone who would f*** anything.
Many women fantasise constantly about sex with the Prophet Muhammed, but this is unfortunately taboo for sexually repressed Western women, who have no outlet for their fantasies.
The figure of a semi-naked Christ on a cross is so obviously an example of sexual imagery that it became passé.
As a gentleman of advancing years who was until relatively recently very interested in (heterosexual) sex and fortunate enough to be attractive to a surprising number of women, I would nowadays prefer the legendary cup of tea. When one is not susceptible to carnal drives one judges the objects of one’s previous desires on criteria that are not dominated by physical appearance. As a result I now have far fewer interactions with women. By and large they aren’t very interesting. However I do now have a dog who does not appear anywhere in my biannual sexual fantasy.
Thank you. I’m currently slumped semi drunk on a hotel bed laughing at this post.
She rubbed an onion up and down it. So come on. Was it Spanish, Red, Brown or perhaps even Pickled. Did she do it to enhance the taste or mask it? We afficionadoes need the detail.
PS Good article Ms Stock.
The discussion this sort of article is meant to provoke or perhaps the insights that are supposed to be acquired from studying it, are so remote from my life experience that I believe I must be living on a different planet from the author.
The entire topic speaks to narcissism, hyper individualism and kind of corruption of indolence. And it’s like organizing your life or a cult around sausage rolls, or pot noodles. Kind of juvenile. Sex is great – in its place, in marriage, in the context of conception and child rearing. First stop widespread obsession with sexuality and sexual identity and fantasy. Next stop demographic collapse. Long live the Amish.
The Weasley twins? It’s not just me then.
Strictly only ideologically approved fantasies are allowed these days. It sounds like the morality police are living rent free in these women’s heads.
Fabulous comment. Thank you.
It’s worth analysing why erotic fiction outsells any other genre now thanks to a huge female readership.
One factor is the accessibility of ebooks on mobile phones which can sell for as little as a dollar and don’t have to be found room for in a handbag (they’ll also electronic and discrete).
The female erotic fiction market is also a signifier of sexual dissatisfaction. App dating has actually created more inconvenience, turning the culture against the ‘bar chat-up’ as an instrument of harrassment and male chauvinism.
Very, very funny article KS. An absolute dismantling of the collective insanity engulfing us. Thank you.
There are many Academic Papers upon Human Sexuality
Most of which are based on the real world and not fantasy
And should you care to seek out and study with a open mind then you very quickly realise that Anderson scribbles are nothing more that a make money exercise
“I’d probably be super-upset if my actual dentist tried to f**k me,” writes one, with an interesting use of the word “probably” – I spit my tea out at this. I think Kathleen should treat us to a few quotes from this book once a month.
My experience listening to thousands of people talking about their lives – and sex lives – makes it clear to me that the kind of people who contribute to this kind of drivel are very atypical of humanity, over-educated to the point of stupidity, and self-absorbed to the point of being trivial. It is no surprise that “a celebrity”, especially “an actress” would offer something like this an consider it a representative and worthwhile contribution
Sign of the times when sexual fantasy has become a bland commodity. It sounds more like an exercise in rampant consumerism than unbridled lust. The book hardly sounds like it’s very provocative. Positively flaccid by the sound of it. Expect to see plenty of copies in your favourite charity shop very soon.