Sex Dolls at Sea: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies

Sex Dolls at Sea: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies

by Bo Ruberg
Sex Dolls at Sea: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies

Sex Dolls at Sea: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies

by Bo Ruberg

Paperback

$35.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Investigating and reimagining the origin story of the sex doll through the tale of the sailor’s dames de voyage.

The sex doll and its high-tech counterpart the sex robot have gone mainstream, as both the object of consumer desire and the subject of academic study. But sex dolls, and sexual technology in general, are nothing new. Sex dolls have been around for centuries. In Sex Dolls at Sea, Bo Ruberg explores the origin story of the sex doll, investigating its cultural implications and considering who has been marginalized and who has been privileged in the narrative.

Ruberg examines the generally accepted story that the first sex dolls were dames de voyage, rudimentary figures made of cloth and leather scraps by European sailors on long, lonely ocean voyages in centuries past. In search of supporting evidence for the lonesome sailor sex doll theory, Ruberg uncovers the real history of the sex doll. The earliest commercial sex dolls were not the dames de voyage but the femmes en caoutchouc: “women” made of inflatable vulcanized rubber, beginning in the late nineteenth century.

Interrogating the sailor sex doll origin story, Ruberg finds beneath the surface a web of issues relating to gender, sexuality, race, and colonialism. What has been lost in the history of the sex doll and other sex tech, Ruberg tells us, are the stories of the sex workers, women, queer people, and people of color whose lives have been bound up with these technologies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262543675
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 06/14/2022
Series: Media Origins
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.98(h) x 0.68(d)

About the Author

Bo Ruberg is Associate Professor in the Department of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Irvine, and the author of The Queer Games Avant-Garde and Video Games Have Always Been Queer.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: "The Beginning of the Modern Sex Doll"—Imagining the History of Sex Tech 1
I Searching for the Very First Sex Doll 29
1 Contemporary Tales of the Dames de Voyage: The History of an Imagined History 31
2 How Fantasy Became History: The Dames de Voyage in Pseudoscience, Erotica, and Advertising 59
3 The Birth of the Dames de Voyage: From Sex Workers to the Sexual Technologies of Sailors 89
4 "All Is Rubber!": The Femmes en Caoutchouc and the Actual Origins of the Commercial Sex Doll 115
II Interrogating the Story of the Very First Sex Doll 147
5 Making Sex Tech Masculine, Making Sex Tech Straight: The Disavowal and Return of Femininity and Queerness 149
6 From Bamboo Lovers to Undersea Kingdoms: Colonialism and Race in Stories of Sailors' Sex Dolls 171
7 Legitimizing Sex with Technology: Prisoners, Nazis, Misogynists, and the Origin Stories that Go Untold 193
Conclusion: Reclaiming the Dames de Voyage—The Feminist Potential of a Fictional Past 213
Notes 227
Index 275

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“This book is a tour de force. Brilliantly researched and eminently readable, Bo Ruberg’s Sex Dolls at Sea will fundamentally change the way you think about histories of sexuality and technology.”
—Lynn Comella, Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; author of Vibrator Nation: How Feminist Sex-Toy Stores Changed the Business of Pleasure  

“Ruberg’s sharp, imaginative take on the history of sex dolls constructively blurs the boundaries between the history of sex, the history of sexuality, and the history of technology. It shows readers how origin stories can be key to understanding a technology’s present, and its potential futures.”
—Mar Hicks, Associate Professor of History of Technology at Illinois Institute of Technology; author of Programmed Inequality: How Britain Discarded Women Technologists and Lost Its Edge in Computing  

“Ruberg expertly unearths the multiple histories of the sex doll, arguing that sexual technologies shape which people, and whose desires, matter.”
—Jacob Gaboury, Associate Professor of Film & Media, University of California at Berkeley; author of Image Objects: An Archaeology of Computer Graphics

Winner of the Anne Friedberg Innovative Scholarship Award, SCMS, 2023

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews