Margaret Mitchell liked erotica.

gunhilltrain

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Who would have believed it? Worth the full quote:

Mitchell began collecting erotica from book shops in New York City while in her twenties.  The newlywed Marshes and their social group were interested in "all forms of sexual expression". Mitchell discussed her interest in dirty book shops and sexually explicit prose in letters to a friend, Harvey Smith. Smith noted her favorite reads were Fanny Hill, The Perfumed Garden, and Aphrodite.

Mitchell developed an appreciation for the works of Southern writer James Branch Cabell, and his 1919 classic, Jurgen, A Comedy of Justice.  She read books about sexology and took particular interest in the case studies of Havelock Ellis, a British physician who studied human sexuality. During this period in which Mitchell was reading pornography and sexology, she was also writing Gone with the Wind.


Those bookstores weren't dirty; I'm sure they mopped the floors every day. So, somebody here should write something - I wouldn't call it "honoring" but rather "acknowledging" her interests. I can't do it because that Southern plantation thing doesn't appeal to me. I've got to wonder who that "friend" Harvey Smith was.

 
Okay, I hate to admit this, but when I read the tag, I thought who the hell is this Margaret Mitchell? I did a search, and damn, what an idiot I felt like.
 
I'm not surprised. I have no doubt Scarlett O'Hara would have been a smut fan, although she wouldn't have admitted it to anyone except Ashley, if he'd expressed interest.

"Why, Miss Scarlett, what's that silver, tear-drop shaped thing in your hand?" Ashley asked.

"Why, this?" she replied. "It's a plug."

"A plug?" he asked, his handsome face puzzled and concerned.

"Yes, a . . . a plug," Scarlett stammered. "I was wondering if you could help me with it."

A look of panic swept over Ashley's face.

"Melanie needs me. I better be off now. Pardon me."
 
Rhett would probably be an erotica fan too. But in the end he wouldn’t give a damn whether Scarlett was or wasn’t.

Another fun fact- Wonder Woman was created by a man and two women trio into polyamory and light bondage.
 
Another fun fact- Wonder Woman was created by a man and two women trio into polyamory and light bondage.
The definitive book on that was The Secret History of Wonder Woman, written by historian (and Harvard professor) Jill Lepore. He went into it in some detail. It's a great read. There's also a movie called Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, which is a fictionalized retelling of the story. It strayed a bit from the facts, which is why the descendants of the book cautioned people about it.
 
The definitive book on that was The Secret History of Wonder Woman, written by historian (and Harvard professor) Jill Lepore. He went into it in some detail. It's a great read. There's also a movie called Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, which is a fictionalized retelling of the story. It strayed a bit from the facts, which is why the descendants of the book cautioned people about it.
Marston also invented the polygraph. Wikipedia says WW's lasso was a symbol for the submissive sex he had with the women, but I have to wonder. I mean, it was named the Lasso of Truth, after all.

Just got this in my feed:
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David O Selznick, who prduced, "Gone With the Wind" is on record as saying the novel "read like a whore's dream."
 
Wasn't Mitchell's research shown to be questionable on the sexual habits of the people she studied?
 
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