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New Erotica for Feminists: The must-have book for every hot and bothered feminist out there

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Say it with us: There’s no reason being queer should limit your porn options. We’ve all seen what a male-centered worldview can do in the world of erotica. Boobs are jiggling everywhere, and orgasms don’t sound at all like they do IRL. (Why is that a thing, btw?) Whether you’re into femme-on-femme action or you’re looking for more trans representation in the ~sexy content~ you consume, The Crash Pad offers an authentic take on queer sexuality that is second to none. 33. Dane Jones Sounds of Pleasure is a Tumblr featuring nothing but the sounds of sex. Listening to someone having sex is surprisingly intimate. It’s thrilling and voyeuristic all at once, like overhearing something you shouldn’t. SoP has dirty talk—aka audio from people having sex with themselves or others—and JOI (jerk-off instructions). Plus, everything is self-submitted and created, so real people are recording themselves and sending the audio in, which is hella erotic and empowering. 19. Orgasmic Tips for Girls Sex acts in every conceivable configuration are depicted in technicolour across a long narrative that is sure to jar the reader’s knowledge of at least a few great classical works. Like, I want different types of careers and life situations and ages and races and sexualities and identities, and just different personalities, different types of people and what sex and eroticism mean to them. And then also different types of sex acts, like what they’re doing and how they’re doing it, where they’re doing it. I really try to encourage authors to just think outside the box, because if I’m looking at a hundred or 200 stories and they’re all set in someone’s bedroom … I will gravitate towards those that are set somewhere different or that just give me a character that’s different than other characters I’ve read. I’m also looking for, I feel like I’ve built myself up as someone publishing a lot of depressing erotica or dark erotica, but I’m also looking for humor. Had a bad day at work because the boss thinks your male colleague was better suited to a project you had been working on for months? Or got catcalled while walking to the grocery store? This is the perfect book to come home to when you’ve had a day full of patriarchy-fuelled hijinks.

So, I think a lot of it is about the flow of the writing and what is happening and how it’s being described and how it feels for that character. So not every story about, a given topic, whether it’s a foot fetish or dirty talk or whatever is going to be the same. So, you might like one aspect of one and one aspect of another, and you might discover something about what turns you on or what gets your fantasies going that you hadn’t thought about before. And I think that’s, to me, that’s one of the real values of erotica. Karen: I wanted to jump in with that question that we … so that first conversation that we all had as hosts was what makes erotica feminist, and for you, how would you answer that question and kind of what things would go into to your answer? Rachel: You think it’s, I think it’s a really good question. I think it’s also a tough question because is everything I’ve written feminist? I mean, I’m a feminist and I hope it is not anti-feminist, but I think it’s an interesting question. I mean, I think some of the feminist values I’ve brought to my writing and editing are … I mean, I can’t say I’ve never used these words — especially around language, certain words people might think of as sexist or pejorative. In the right context, they can be shown to not be. So I think it’s really about the perspective. And empowerment might not always be applicable, but it’s about making it clear that what’s happening is not just consensual. Consensual as a baseline, but also, especially women, but really any people of any gender, are not just going along with something for the sake of pleasing someone else, unless that’s part of their kink.Transcript Rachel Kramer Bussel: Is everything I’ve written feminist. I mean, I’m a feminist and I hope it is not anti-feminist. What is feminist erotica? You’re kind of asking what is feminist sex. Sexual entrepreneurship encapsulates how, in recent decades, sex and intimate relationships have become subject to market logics of consumerism, investment, and enterprise. The most glaring example of this is the work of adult filmmaker Erika Lust, founder of XConfessions, Lust Cinemas, Else Cinema, and The Store. All are adult film studios that are marketed as “sex positive,” “focused on female pleasure,” and “ethical.”

For example, women in relationships might dictate the couple’s social calendar or his-and-her fashion choices, but defer to their partners when faced with major financial decisions, such as purchasing a home or moving from one city to another. Karen: Yep, absolutely. You didn’t fumble that at all. We, so our conversation was an hour and I can’t tell you how many different things we came up with for it. And, it is really difficult to define. And I love what you said about what is feminist sex. I think it says a lot that I bought the URL, feministerotica.com like a month and a half ago. Like that was not something that was out in the world and not that feminist erotica, of course, doesn’t exist, but those were not two words that somebody had pushed together and bought already. So I feel like part of the fun of this for me is that exploration of that idea and kind of creating … how do you create standards around that? And as you said, we get to decide because we have this podcast, but I feel like it will be different for everyone. And I love the idea that we all kind of just, as we personally get to decide whether or not we’re feminists and whether we consider other people feminists and what they’re producing to be feminist — we can bring all of that to this as well. Rachel: Yeah. I mean, I wish I had a clear answer, but I also feel like I wouldn’t want to make some declarative statement and then someone say, ‘Oh, well this or this,’ but I will give one example. I think most creative people, you remember the things that people criticize, but there’s a story I published in an anthology called Spanked and it was a daddy/girl role-play scenario. And so this, if you read it closely, if you read it understanding what that is, you would realize that it’s role-playing because they break the roleplay at one point and they go into how their relationship is set up. But someone posted a review saying, ‘Oh, well this is incest. And this is this.’ And it kind of touched a nerve for me because I felt like it is very challenging to talk about certain aspects of role-playing or other kinks and make it clear like this is something people are voluntarily, consensually engaging in, and they’re kind of playing with something that’s taboo.

The “pornification” of culture

An earnest sex diary turned into an erotic novel, these incredibly detailed, to-the-point stories chronicle a married couple’s real sex sessions as documented by the author Tessa Desalada. They can’t seem to keep their hands off one other no matter what setting they’re in, which makes this book a captivatingly sensual read. Because I refuse to get my nuts off of the Christian Greys and Massimo Torricellis of the world who thrive on controlling women, I have cobbled together a list of feminist erotica for your reading pleasure: a world where sex isn’t demeaning to women, but a tool to embrace their own sexuality as a primal being without being deemed a chaalu Charu. Dipsea is a female-founded startup and story studio, and the emphasis on storytelling is apparent in their content. The platform promises to always be relatable, feminist, and celebratory of sex in a positive way. Wanna get even more into it? Dipsea also accepts voice actors and writers to contribute to their new content. They have categories for “her and her,” “her and him,” and “her and them” stories as well, offering more inclusivity than a lot of mainstream, traditional porn. The stories range from 5 to 20 minutes. And did we mention that more than 300 new stories and sessions are added every week?! 15. Lady Cheeky’s Smut for Smarties Tumblr

But that doesn’t mean they always catch explicit photos or videos that include someone under the age of 18. I also try to vary types of sexuality and like first person, third person, and also location. And some of these things that I’m always tweaking when I put out a call for submissions, for authors, like what I’m looking for to get more variety, like a lot of people write stories, set in cities, which is great. You know, cities are interesting, but I’m also like what about the person in a town of 500 people or the people, you know? Some of you might be off-put by the many, many kinks that the book explores, and be warned, there are taboo topics that might require you to stop, take a break, and reconsider your thoughts. You might even find it revolting, because Nin transforms the reader into a voyeur, witnessing, participating passively in every manner of ‘deviant’ behaviour. When her chips are down, a poker player shows her hand, and much more. By Rosalia Zizzo Girls, Interrupted Floating into adulthood, confused how to delicately ask someone how the time-stopping thing works is when she bumps into Jon who — wait for it — also has the same power.Recent decades have witnessed the emergence of the female-oriented erotic industry, including boutiques and designer sex toys, a rise in sex practices once generally considered taboo, and sex manuals, blogs, and podcasts. Suzie finds out that she can stop time…with her orgasms. With the naïveté of a teenage girl, she thought this is what happened to everyone when they rub one out.

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