The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture
The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture provides a unique consideration of writings on self-abuse in the long nineteenth century. The book examines the discourse on masturbation in medical works by English, Continental and American practitioners and demonstrates the influence and impact of these writings, not only on Victorian pornography but also in the creation of fictional characters by canonical authors such as Bram Stoker, J. S. Le Fanu, Charles Dickens and Oscar Wilde.

The book also features the first detailed and balanced study of the largely overlooked literature on masturbation as it pertains to women in clinical and popular medical works aimed at the female reader. Mason concludes with a consideration of the way the distinctly Victorian discourse on masturbation has persisted into the late-twentieth and twenty-first centuries with particular reference to Willy Russell’s tragic-comic novel, The Wrong Boy (2000) and to the construction of ‘Victorian Dad’, a character featured in the adult comic, Viz.

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The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture
The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture provides a unique consideration of writings on self-abuse in the long nineteenth century. The book examines the discourse on masturbation in medical works by English, Continental and American practitioners and demonstrates the influence and impact of these writings, not only on Victorian pornography but also in the creation of fictional characters by canonical authors such as Bram Stoker, J. S. Le Fanu, Charles Dickens and Oscar Wilde.

The book also features the first detailed and balanced study of the largely overlooked literature on masturbation as it pertains to women in clinical and popular medical works aimed at the female reader. Mason concludes with a consideration of the way the distinctly Victorian discourse on masturbation has persisted into the late-twentieth and twenty-first centuries with particular reference to Willy Russell’s tragic-comic novel, The Wrong Boy (2000) and to the construction of ‘Victorian Dad’, a character featured in the adult comic, Viz.

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The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture

The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture

by Diane Mason
The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture

The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture

by Diane Mason

Hardcover

$130.00 
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Overview

The secret vice: Masturbation in Victorian fiction and medical culture provides a unique consideration of writings on self-abuse in the long nineteenth century. The book examines the discourse on masturbation in medical works by English, Continental and American practitioners and demonstrates the influence and impact of these writings, not only on Victorian pornography but also in the creation of fictional characters by canonical authors such as Bram Stoker, J. S. Le Fanu, Charles Dickens and Oscar Wilde.

The book also features the first detailed and balanced study of the largely overlooked literature on masturbation as it pertains to women in clinical and popular medical works aimed at the female reader. Mason concludes with a consideration of the way the distinctly Victorian discourse on masturbation has persisted into the late-twentieth and twenty-first centuries with particular reference to Willy Russell’s tragic-comic novel, The Wrong Boy (2000) and to the construction of ‘Victorian Dad’, a character featured in the adult comic, Viz.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780719077142
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 08/01/2008
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Diane Mason is a freelance writer and occasional lecturer in English literature

Table of Contents

Acknowledgement
Introduction
1. ‘It is more than blackguardly, it is deadly’: masturbation in the male
2. ‘A beauty treatment that leaves us glowing': female masturbation and its consequences
3. ‘The languor which I had long felt began to display itself in my countenance’: vampires, lesbians and masturbators
4. ‘That mighty love which maddens one to crime’: masturbation and same-sex desire in Teleny
5. ‘His behaviour betrays the actual state of things’: onanism and obsessive behaviour in Our mutual friend
6. ‘Sin is a thing that writes itself across a man’s face’: conflicting signifiers of vice in The picture of Dorian Gray and The mystery of Edwin Drood
Afterword
Bibliography
Index

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