So, I was wandering through Big W( like Kmart) at lunchtime
when I saw Fifty Shades Darker, the
follow up to the very successful Fifty Shades of Gray, book on sale.
Apparently, speaking to one of the staff members there, they have restocked
this book several times. I walked away
thinking to myself “What does this say
about women?” that they would buy such a sado-masochistic book that’s all
about extreme sex that is saturated with degradation, submission, obsession
and pain? Sure, there would be a small percentage of women who want to be
shocked, outraged or titillated so they buy the book for that. But the rest?
It could be argued that it’s because secretly a large percentage of women want
to be controlled or dominated or treated like crap by a man or maybe the diatribe
that are we more sexually liberated so we read stuff like this because we can.
Either way I can’t help but feel it must be getting harder and harder for a man
to work out what a woman wants. Force? Pain? Love? Romance? Denial? Bondage? Humiliation?
Submission? Forever? I can’t help but think fondly of the good old Mills and
Boon days where no one but the bad guy got hurt and the heroine slapped the hero occasionally.
Showing posts with label submission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label submission. Show all posts
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
Love or degradation? Hmmm?
Posted by Unknown at 6:14 pm 1 comments
Labels: Amarinda Jones, degradation, forever, love, men, Mills and Boon, pain, Romance, submission, what do women want
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
“So 90 percent of sales were discreet ebook downloads…”

"Ana," as he calls her, willingly and excitedly agrees to spanking, whipping and gagging, with props like ice, rope, tape -- a repertoire right out of a BDSM [bondage, discipline, dominance and submission] manual.
The heart of the romance is the notion of submission and the way in which Steele accommodates Grey to "make him love her,"according to Rachel. "She sees being submissive as a necessity to save him," she said. "He was broken. That was more of the appeal. And the sex was a bonus."
The heart of the romance is the notion of submission and the way in which Steele accommodates Grey to "make him love her,"according to Rachel. "She sees being submissive as a necessity to save him," she said. "He was broken. That was more of the appeal. And the sex was a bonus."
British mom and former TV producer James initially wanted to replicate the success of the "Twilight" fan fiction series. The novels were published by a small independent Australian press and hard copy distribution was limited. So 90 percent of sales were discreet ebook downloads...."
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/50-shades-grey-women-turned-sexual-submission/story?id=16059118
Hmmm… So 90 percent of sales were discreet ebook downloads? Wait a second….that can’t be right. Explicit sex/porn on ebook sites is apparently forbidden and you can get reported for it and have bamboo slithers put under your fingernails making it impossible to type ever again.
Makes you wonder don’t it? A skeptic would say it's making too much money to ban it and money makes the rules....hmmm...
Hmmm… So 90 percent of sales were discreet ebook downloads? Wait a second….that can’t be right. Explicit sex/porn on ebook sites is apparently forbidden and you can get reported for it and have bamboo slithers put under your fingernails making it impossible to type ever again.
Makes you wonder don’t it? A skeptic would say it's making too much money to ban it and money makes the rules....hmmm...
Posted by Unknown at 4:54 pm 1 comments
Labels: Amarinda Jones, censorship, ebook sites, ebooks, porn, rules, submission
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