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Overview

What is Love? provides a timely appreciation of Richard Carlile’s neglected shocker, Every Woman’s Book. Originally published in 1826, it scored a double first: as a progressive sex manual and as the first book in English to specify methods of contraception.

Carlile, a leading radical of the early nineteenth century, was notorious for his blend of republicanism, atheism and libertarianism. His book created a philosophy of sex which was found irresponsible and obscene at the time but today appears sensible and progressive. It proposed that sex was a right of adulthood rather then a marital privilege; that sexual satisfaction was necessary to a person’s health and happiness; that sexual intercourse was a virtue and therefore a source of morality; and that men and women both had the same sexual needs and were therefore naturally equal.

Michael Bush provides a lucid and entertaining introduction to Carlile, a man opposed to alcohol and meat-eating but committed to the ‘health-giving’ properties of raw mercury, and who served ten years in prison for his beliefs, during which he organised an extensive following of fellow republicans and atheists. Bush’s careful analysis of the personal and intellectual origins of Carlile’s work and its impact do full justice to what is both a fascinating historical document and a key influence on society’s acceptance of a liberal, sensualist view of sex.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781859848517
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication date: 09/17/1998
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.60(w) x 7.80(h) x 0.81(d)

Table of Contents

Foreword
1. The Making of Every Woman's Book
The Dangerous Man in the Extravagant Collar
From Essay to Book
Contents of the Book
The Principle of Love and its Provenance
Editions and Revisions
2. The Text of The Essay: "What Is Love?"
3. The Text of Every Woman's Book
4. The Impact of Every Woman's Book
Carlile's Estimation of the Book
Reception
Significance
Appendices
1. Carlile to Garland, 1 August 1824
2. Carlile to Bailey, 10 November 1824
3. Carlile to Henry Lees, 30 November 1824
4. Carlile to Wilberforce, 10 March 1825
5. Carlile to Wilberforce, 26 March 1825
6. Carlile's Farewell to his Readership, 29 December
7. Carlile to Miss Brown, 3 October 1828
Notes
Index
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