Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Kamasutra In The Time Of Porn Ban: 'The Mare's Trap' Will Shock India's 'Moral Brigade'

Preetha Nair IANS, 14 Aug, 2015 01:41 PM
    'The Mare's Trap: Nature and Culture in the Kamasutra' might come as a shocker to the "moral brigade" at work in India.
     
    The book, a re-telling of the Kamasutra by Wendy Doniger, explicates how ancient India appreciated eroticism and its progressive outlook on gender and female sexuality.
     
    Doniger's account of the liberal outlook of Kamasutra, a third century work by Indian ascetic Vatsyayana, is a rap on the knuckles for contemporary India. Putting the "puritanical censorship" to shame, Doniger, an American academic, explores how a progressive Vatsyayana endorsed same-sex love and adultery (with some caution).
     
    Doniger, whose first book, 'The Hindus: An Alternative History' sparked a row last year, contends in her new book that Kama (desire) is as old as Hinduism and the earliest Hindu text the Rig Veda revels in the language of pleasure and fertility.
     
    The author also seeks to establish the Kamasutra, the world's most famous text of erotic love, as a landmark of India's secular literature. Dispelling popular notions that Kamasutra is all about improbable positions, she argues that the book is about the art of living, about finding a partner, maintaining power in a marriage and committing adultery.
     
    Doniger positions Kamasutra as a feminist text rather than a book offering "mattress-quaking sex styles. She puts forth her arguments for it being a text for women rather than men.
     
    "A woman should study the Kamasutra and its subsidiary arts before she reaches the prime of her youth and she should continue when she has been given away, if her husband wishes it," the book says.
     
    According to Doniger, Vatsyayana's view of the female orgasm is "far more subtle than views that prevailed in Europe until very recently." Doniger says that Vatsyayana knew about the G-Spot, the female pleasure point named after the 20th century German gynecologist Ernst Graefenberg, and squarely put the blame on British scholar Richard Burton's misleading translation of Kamasutra for keeping it a secret from the western world.
     
     
    Vatsyayana also takes an extraordinary stand that the sexual act is for pleasure and not to produce children, which is the basic premise of the institution of marriage in India.
     
    Doniger says that despite being a highly-sophisticated book, Kamasutra is not getting the attention it deserves - sometimes taken as a matter of national shame rather than pride - and in the rest of the world it is a source of amused amazement.
     
    Doniger also throws light on how Kamasutra has heavily borrowed from Kautilya's Arthashastra, a book on statecraft. She also describes how both the books mostly differ with Manu's Dharmashastra, which coined castes and defined women as inferior to men.
     
    To drive home her point, the scholar points out that Vatsyayana was a strong advocate of women's sexual pleasure and Kamasutra assumes a kind of sexual freedom for women that would have appalled Manu.
     
    In a surprisingly modern take, Vatsyayana suggests that a woman must leave her husband if she is not getting pleasure and even defends adultery. However, Manu advocates that a virtuous wife should constantly serve her husband like a God, even if he behaves badly and adultery is a legal crime, according to him.
     
    Vatsyayana finds it natural for a woman getting attracted to men: "A woman desires any attractive man she sees, and, in the same way, a man desires a woman." Vatsyayana even advises men on where to meet married women.
     
     
    Doniger also refers to Vatsyayana's non-judgmental attitude on same-sex love even more daring in his day than it is in ours now. Anyone listening?
     
    The Mare's Trap: Nature and Culture in the Kamasutra
     
    Publisher: Speaking Tiger
     
    Price: Rs.399; Pages: 182

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Brain wave may help investigators spot liars

    Brain wave may help investigators spot liars
    Bringing out the truth from people involved in an investigation may soon be a lot easier as researchers have found that a particular brain wave could be...

    Brain wave may help investigators spot liars

    Age at first drink decides alcohol addiction among teens

    Age at first drink decides alcohol addiction among teens
    An early onset of drinking is a risk factor for subsequent heavy drinking and negative outcomes among high school students, finds a new study....

    Age at first drink decides alcohol addiction among teens

    US Woman Jasmine Tridevil Adds Third Breast To Make Herself Less Attractive To Men

    US Woman Jasmine Tridevil Adds Third Breast To Make Herself Less Attractive To Men
    A 21-year-old Florida woman has surgically implanted a third breast on her chest which, according to her, is to make herself less attractive to men because she's sick of dating.

    US Woman Jasmine Tridevil Adds Third Breast To Make Herself Less Attractive To Men

    Why Australian couples can't have 'sober' sex anymore

    Why Australian couples can't have 'sober' sex anymore
    Most Australian couples avoid sex unless they are on alcohol or drugs to get the kick, reveal experts. According to sex therapist Jacqueline Hellyer, there has been a rise in the number of couples who have never had "sober" sex.

    Why Australian couples can't have 'sober' sex anymore

    Why unequal pay irks employees

    Why unequal pay irks employees
    Ever wondered why it bothers you when your colleague earns more even when both of you do the same job? This is because humans have a...

    Why unequal pay irks employees

    Is your dog a pessimist? Find out

    Is your dog a pessimist? Find out
    According to Australian researchers, finding out as accurately as possible whether a particular dog is optimistic or pessimistic is particularly helpful...

    Is your dog a pessimist? Find out