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Looking Good, The Adonis Complex, and The Vagina Monologues

Is It Man-Hating To Masturbate?

Posted Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2001, at 12:30 PM ET

Well, I can't resist jumping in here. I haven't read The Vagina Monologues in book form, but I went to the Madison Square Garden gala performance, and I thought it was fantastic. So what if it isn't Hamlet or even Tom Stoppard? When was the last time you saw a modern American play that measured up to the literary standards you are applying here--especially on the page, where many plays look a little thin and wan? What we have here is a performance piece--loosely constructed, often revised and updated, that is by turns hilarious, brassy, lyrical, poignant, romantic, tragic, vulgar, exhilarating. It has nothing to apologize for--it's a great night in the theatre. You really should have been there!

Actually, I thought some of The Vagina Monologues was pretty wonderful, even as writing--the old woman who thinks of her "down there" as a cellar full of dead animals and who tells the story about her one passionate kiss and her dream of Burt Reynolds swimming in her embarrassing "flood" of sexual wetness. Some of it was a little familiar, like the "Angry Vagina" monologue about the little indignities of uncomfortable tampons and gyno exams. (Although Rosie Perez was really comical in this one, all pumped up and snorting like a girl prize fighter.) Some of the parts that probably look flat on the page--the opening list of slang names for vaginas (mimi, toto, etc.)--have a wacky, surreal, cumulative effect when recited by ball gown-clad actresses swirling about the stage. As for the "Cunt" segment, on the page it's kind of obvious alliterative word play. Performed by Glenn Close, who relished each sound as if it was a bite of the most wonderful meal she'd ever had in her life--it was delicious.

The Vagina Monologues is a performance piece--loosely constructed; changing over time; in segments that are by turns hilarious, exhilarating, poignant, romantic, and tragic. It's about transforming female sexuality from a source of shame and disgust into a source of pleasure, connection, and creative energy. (And before you make fun of that, consider how often the penis has been given that symbolic role, as sword, as sceptre, as pen.) It's about becoming a sexual subject instead of the sexual object that is mostly what our culture--and other cultures--consider a woman to be. That's a dry sentence, so let me assure our readers that Eve Ensler makes her points not by preaching or dryly expounding but through humor, metaphor, stories, fantasy, music, voices.

It's true that there is some sexual violence in the play, but I am surprised that both Chris and Erik see it, and its audience, as hostile to sex and men. (Now that they know Jodi and I were there, they'll want to rethink that, of course). I just don't get that. The whole play is an ode to sex--not porno-mechanical sex, as Chris claims, but warm, quirky, affectionate, friendly sex. There is no praise of celibacy, no "political lesbianism," no anti-male diatribes--and no praise of sex without feeling. The scene that bothered you both, in which a frigid, uptight woman learns to masturbate, is not about excluding men from one's life on principle; it's about learning to have an orgasm. What could be the harm in that? Do you think it's man-hating to masturbate? I detect a certain element of threatened masculinity here.

Chris compares the audience laughing and applauding sexy taboo words to the Women's Christian Temperance Union (i.e., anti-sex prudes) and the play's feminist sensibilities to the Turner Diaries, the white supremacist pulp novel which features mass lynchings of blacks and Jews after a Neo-Nazi takeover of the United States. I don't understand this comparison at all. Chris, do you really think Marisa Tomei and Calista Flockhart and Julie Kavner (voice of Marge Simpson) are the moral equivalents of Hitler fans and racists? Is Tampax, which helped underwrite the show, the IG Farben de nos jours?

Why not change into something a little more comfortable and just let your mind float free ... think about seashells, rose petals, snowflakes, breasts ... yes, that's right ... right there ... like that. ...

Katha

Is It Man-Hating To Masturbate?

Posted Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2001, at 12:30 PM ET
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Looking Good, The Adonis Complex, and The Vagina MonologuesThis week, Chris Caldwell, Jodi Kantor, and Erik Tarloff examine three books about body image: Looking Good, The Adonis Complex, and The Vagina Monologues. Click here for a word on our format. To read this discussion from the beginning, click here.
COMMENTS

Reader Comments From The Fray:


[Notes from the Fray Editor: All right, calm down everyone. Let's just say, the Fray reflected the Book Club. Strong words, strong feelings, and a lot of comment on sex, relationships and vaginas. And on childbirth, some of it from those who are never going to experience it. Yes, that Natalie Angier post (below) did provoke comment. Yes, the views held were somewhat, but not wholly, gender-predictable. Yes, having an opinion on what women think during childbirth is apparently a valuable debating skill. Yes, we at the Fray keep remembering how much we enjoyed those tips on making grilled cheese sandwiches that came with the John Le Carre Book Club a few weeks back.

Some nice posts below. A good discussion on phallocentric writing started here. And it was a relief that all Goatgut wanted to tell us tell us was that it's Visa which is 'everywhere you want to be'; whereas Mastercard is 'priceless'.]


Chris Caldwell says:

"Or that poem about being in a room when a baby was born--which has nothing about a baby being born. The poem is all about the vagina--a really demented perspective, for anyone who has ever watched a delivery."

Demented perspective?!? Demented perspective??!! For the nearly two hours of delivering my kid, the only goddamn thing I thought about was my vagina, and my anus, too, because they felt like one and the same conduit throughout the ordeal. As Shulamith Firestone put it, childbirth is "like shitting a pumpkin," and for the average heaving vagina in labor, the baby counts for nothing until it has been expelled, ejected, dumped! Which takes forever! And then you still have to push out the placenta! Eve Ensler has it exactly right:

Childbirth is really about vaginas. Except when it's about assholes.

Chris Caldwell must have been watching a C-section

--Natalie Angier

(To reply, click here.)


I think the Adonis complex is lodged firmly (excuse the pun) in the upper-middle class. The upper class can woo and succeed on money and collections alone. The upwardly mobile, however, need an extra edge. Or perhaps I'm completely wrong, but has anyone ever studied whether non-college college-aged women are as susceptible to eating disorders as those in college?

Btw: what's the problem with the Vagina Monologues? They may not work as literature, but I don't know of anyone who's ever seen them (I haven't) and not enjoyed it. I also understand that a couple of rapists and Bob the Curious are the only males that show up, but isn't the whole point that it is not about men? I mean, who but the most cynical of Hollywood producers would insist that some vagina-loving men be inserted to counterbalance the vagina-hating ones?

--Fletch

(To reply, click here.)


Christopher Caldwell asks, "And what kind of sad person prefers power to romance?" Well, any person who has no power, or any person who has only a very indirect kind of power. Frankly, the power versus romance thing sort of smacks of the ethics versus a full stomach. Only the people who have the basics (and power is a basic for a human being, regardless of gender) have the time to focus on the nice things like romance. Is it sad that people lack these basics? You bet.

--Dea

(To reply, click here.)


Jodi Kantor and Katha Pollitt seem to see The Vagina Monologues as simply a female counterpart to something that men have always done--publicly exploring their sexuality and taking pride in their bodies. But where exactly do they see all this male celebration of male anatomy and male physiological functions? (That's why I've always thought Steinem's "If Men Could Menstruate" essay was the height of silliness. After all, men can masturbate, but it's hardly something that has been traditionally celebrated in our culture.)

Yes, one can find some passages in D.H. Lawrence, Henry Miller and Norman Mailer exalting the generative and creative powers of male genitalia. (In Sexual Politics, Kate Millett cites a hilarious Lawrence passage on the mystical powers of balls.) Still, this is fairly marginal stuff. Kantor cites Portnoy's Complaint and There's Something About Mary as male parallels of sorts to Monologues. But these works, in facts, are expressions of sexual shame, not of "penis pride."

Since I haven't seen or even read The Vagina Monologues, I don't know whether or not it has a lot of male-bashing...I have to wonder, however: doesn't it bother Kantor and Pollitt that the play celebrates an adult woman's seduction of a 13-year-old girl? The girl is even shown saying, "if it was rape, it was a good rape." No need, I think, to ask anyone to imagine what the reaction would be if this was an adult male seducing a 13-year-old girl...

--Cathy Young

(To reply, click here.)


I take issue with the writers' assertion that women do not like the bodybuilder's body. The pictures to which the women so negatively reacted probably were of professional bodybuilders in full contest mode. Most men would never think that this level of size would attract many women. But show those same women pictures of professional fitness models, or Chippendale dancers, and the reaction would be quite different. These are men who are in reality very large and very defined, just not as much as the guys who do anabolic steroids for the whole off-season. Think Brad Pitt in Fight Club and you know what most men in the gym are trying to achieve. Please do not tell me that women do not find it attractive. Since I have been working out significantly, my dating prospects zoomed through the roof.

Oh, by the way, the female orgasm plays can play a role in impregnation: the woman is more likely to be inseminated after an orgasm, so don't say that it has no reproductive function

--Bruce Garrison

(To reply, click
here.)





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