lesbiaphrodite
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- May 29, 2007
- Posts
- 3,296
There's a great quote from Woody Allen's Annie Hall. It's just after Woody and Annie have made love and he says:
"That's the most fun I've ever had without laughing."
I've always thought that everything in life is better if we have a sense of humor about ourselves and about the human condition in general.
Some of the most entertaining material that I have read about sex has been written with a sense of humor. For example, I see de Sade's work as hilarious. He is not serious about anything he does or says. Maybe it's because he lived in a time when he and his fellow citizens were being hanged and drawn & quartered on a daily basis that he learned to laugh at himself and others.
Yes, he had his perversions and he was fond of things that many of us don't appreciate. But, he is funny and his presentation of sex is funny.
I can also think of those hilarious romance novels that I used to read as a kid when the hero and the heroine did all that bodice-ripping and went on the dark journey through the love grotto. Those colorful prose works made me laugh. Sure, they were stupid and not very good, but somehow taking the seriousness out of sex made it more interesting to me.
I tend to think of what Henry Miller said about sex. He felt that sex was a natural, basic part of life. Not mysterious. Not poetic. Just a beautiful real thing to be loved and nurtured, not glorified or made too serious. He said that Americans are "obsessed with the idea of sex but lacking a full and natural experience of sex." He writes about sex with humor and even coarse language, and I value that.
What do ya think?
Is sex too elevated in American culture?
Is it still held up on some high ground and not realistic?
Do sex and humor and fun fit together?
"That's the most fun I've ever had without laughing."
I've always thought that everything in life is better if we have a sense of humor about ourselves and about the human condition in general.
Some of the most entertaining material that I have read about sex has been written with a sense of humor. For example, I see de Sade's work as hilarious. He is not serious about anything he does or says. Maybe it's because he lived in a time when he and his fellow citizens were being hanged and drawn & quartered on a daily basis that he learned to laugh at himself and others.
Yes, he had his perversions and he was fond of things that many of us don't appreciate. But, he is funny and his presentation of sex is funny.
I can also think of those hilarious romance novels that I used to read as a kid when the hero and the heroine did all that bodice-ripping and went on the dark journey through the love grotto. Those colorful prose works made me laugh. Sure, they were stupid and not very good, but somehow taking the seriousness out of sex made it more interesting to me.
I tend to think of what Henry Miller said about sex. He felt that sex was a natural, basic part of life. Not mysterious. Not poetic. Just a beautiful real thing to be loved and nurtured, not glorified or made too serious. He said that Americans are "obsessed with the idea of sex but lacking a full and natural experience of sex." He writes about sex with humor and even coarse language, and I value that.
What do ya think?
Is sex too elevated in American culture?
Is it still held up on some high ground and not realistic?
Do sex and humor and fun fit together?