And I'm only saying that your point is not sufficient to defend this "book." If the pros and cons of this "book" were two people on a see-saw, the pros would be pre-mature infant and the cons would be Andre the Giant.
Additionally, if you want to spread the good word about BDSM, pick any one of the thousands of books that don't get it completely wrong and portray it as abuse.
Lastly, to say that terribly-written Twilight porn is "liberating women's sexuality" and it's "what women really want but wouldn't admit previously" is just insulting. It'd be like saying that a knock-off of the worst Michael Bay film is profoundly inspirational to so many men. It'd be like saying that White Chicks is a staple of African American culture.
We can do better. If we can't, and 50 Shades is liberating to women, you can just call Charon up and get me on the ferry to Hell now.
The fact that you intensely dislike it, that you think it shouldn't be culturally important, and that you and I agree it portrays and romanticizes an abusive relationship( as is the author's right, by the way) doesn't take away from the fact that for thousand of women reading it, it has given them inspiration to pursue better sex lives.
I can make any point sufficient to 'defend the book', if that's what I'm doing, but it isn't. What I'm really saying is, to the thousands of women who've made it a platform to get their husband's to spice things up -- ''good for you!!'
In my opinion it's about time women (and men) in modern relationships recognized that dull sex lives are one of the most detrimental types in a marriage, next to abusive sex lives and non-existent sex lives. If you want marriages to last longer, you gotta be willing to discover what fulfills your partner, safely, consensually and openly. If it's BDSM, then I'm all for them. Some women don't like it; they don't have to participate. And while the book does, as I've said several times, portray in its non-sexual relationship dynamic a man who has complete psychological authority over a woman, that just exaggerates the sexual dynamic of domination. Yes, of course, it might make people think ''abuse is okay'', but not one person on this thread has relayed such a view, yet all of us are aware of, or have read, the book. Perhaps that tells you people aren't as stupid as you think they are.
A loving, committed adult relationship is about what works for two people, not what a fictional book romanticizes. There's no checklist of what makes a good marriage, just like there's no checklist of what makes a good sex life, everybody's different. That said, BDSM seems to be on the modern agenda (for which Fifty Shades has done much), yet abuse is most definitely not. Nobody, man or woman, wants to be on the end of an abusive partner, and I certainly don't think two committed partners, one of whom reads fifty shades and asks her husband to get some handcuffs and chains, are about to embark on rape, physical abuse and psychological oppression. They love one another, and they would try different things out of a desire to try them; that requires trust and respect to begin with.
Exaggeration of domination in a fictional book is not a blueprint for an exciting sex life or a good relationship. It is however, considering its sales and responses from
many, many women -- my friends, aunts, friends' girlfriends, sex experts -- evidence that a lot of women find sexual adventurousness arousing.
Please refer to context. You're making huge, universal statements out of what I have written in context. I said the sexual experimentation within the book, and the social acceptance of the book, have enabled many women to be more honest about their sexual desires, where before they may have been too shy, timid or afraid of the taboo nature of some of them. You turned that into ''Twilight porn is liberating women's sexuality', and ''it's what women want but wouldn't previously''. I would think women have
always wanted adventurous sex lives, but male oppression, social taboo and fear of rejection have coerced many women into suppressing that desire.
Fifty Shades of Grey has given many women justification to stop suppressing it.