Miss_Pixie
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2010
- Posts
- 1,265
What? lol doesn't it basically sum up both side of the arguement?
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What? lol doesn't it basically sum up both side of the arguement?
I find that offensive!Dont get us wrong, as weird and insane as you girls are, we love you. Despite you dragging us out to take us clothes shopping.
I find that offensive!
I hate clothes shopping. I hate shopping of everything except gift-buying and even that gets old after a while.
Despise it.
Loathe it with great loathing.
Srsly.
Way too many men write up height/weight/size charts that don't make any sense.
"She was 6'-0" tall, athletically built weighing in at 60 pounds, had 44 dd cups with 2" long nipples and 18" diameter areola (spelling please?), and a butt that stuck out a foot from her back."
Whether you like the laundry list of details or not, that just doesn't add up! It's nonsensical, and written by someone that has no idea what the measurements they are using really mean (all of those are from various stories combined into one horrid description).
Way too many men write up height/weight/size charts that don't make any sense.
"She was 6'-0" tall, athletically built weighing in at 60 pounds, had 44 dd cups with 2" long nipples and 18" diameter areola (spelling please?), and a butt that stuck out a foot from her back."
Whether you like the laundry list of details or not, that just doesn't add up! It's nonsensical, and written by someone that has no idea what the measurements they are using really mean (all of those are from various stories combined into one horrid description).
Most assuredly, she does. She'll do it willingly for others, but NEVER try to convince her to shop for herself. Being one of the most unselfish people on this planet has its drawbacks.
Oh and hi. I'm that guy she talks about sometimes on whom she insists, for whatever reason, on basing her male protagonists.
Me? I'm just thrilled that she loves me![]()
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Are these the ones with the 12 inch members?
And welcome.![]()
Thank you for the welcomeI hope to contribute meaningfully, if only some art (just thinking about breaking into erotic art, actually
), a few laughs and a furry thing for Sera to lean up against
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Both sides have gender sterotypes. We'll give up ours when you give up yours![]()
Are these the ones with the 12 inch members?![]()
I have to repeat this point and underline it several times. Erotical is aimed towards women. Doesn't mean men don't read and write it, but men are generally more visual. Porn is a male market. Erotica is porn for women because it approaches the 'build your own fantasy' deal women seem to prefer. When men write erotica, being GENERALLY more visual they tend to approach with the laundry list style. Then drop someone in there who reads erotica to form a fantasy, and well, if the descriptions are broken those break our (or at least my) ability to get really into that scene.djserani said:Now, I might be argued with (and probably will) but erotica seems like it's aimed more toward women.
Spot on!I think the things each sex most often get wrong, say some very important things about what each sex in general would like in a partner.
Women tend to write men with too much talk, too many emotions, preturnaturally aware of their partner's needs, monogamous.
Men tend to write women without enough talk, emotions, or thought processes, and tend to make them far more poly than most women actually are.
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Agreed totally..
I have to repeat this point and underline it several times. Erotical is aimed towards women. Doesn't mean men don't read and write it, but men are generally more visual. Porn is a male market. Erotica is porn for women because it approaches the 'build your own fantasy' deal women seem to prefer. When men write erotica, being GENERALLY more visual they tend to approach with the laundry list style..
..
I have to repeat this point and underline it several times. Erotical is aimed towards women. Doesn't mean men don't read and write it, but men are generally more visual. Porn is a male market. Erotica is porn for women because it approaches the 'build your own fantasy' deal women seem to prefer.
I have to repeat this point and underline it several times. Erotical is aimed towards women. Doesn't mean men don't read and write it, but men are generally more visual. Porn is a male market.
I agree men are more visual, and I used to agree with this whole thing. Now, I'm not so sure. A lot of men are reading it. Most male writers here seem to start out by reading it first themselves. And there are a lot of male writers.
I loved Stella's comment. So true. And it might explain why men seem to just be able to more easily plunk down a sex scene and I struggle with constructing one. Or not. Stereotyping is a rough business.![]()
That's one very good scale there. Of course, it doesn't include the incredibly hard-core written (and visual as well) porn that women also create for themselves. And some of the soppiest of romance comes from male writers under female nom de plumes. But as a general rule, yeppers!Which brings me to a confession. I misquoted my SO. What he really said was "Most porn was written for men." It was I who substituted "erotica" for "porn." Since I'm new to the business, I sometimes get confused with the terminology. The usual references (dictionary, Internet, thesaurus) haven't been very helpful, and the best my research can suggest is that it's a sort of sliding scale, from "pornography" (male-oriented, visual, visceral) at one end to "romantic" (female-oriented, emotional, introspective) at the other, with "erotica" somewhere in between, containing elements of both. Am I far "off base" here?
I realize, of course, that sweeping generalizations like this one leave out a lot of women who like porn, and men who like romances.
Actually? That's about the best definition I've ever heard!My SO is no help. When I asked him the difference between erotica and porn, he said that if he can remember anything about the story after his orgasm, it's erotica. You see what I have to work with here.
You make a good point; bad female writers and bad male writers do both write similarly. It's once they learn to work out the kinks in the writing hose, that differences start to come through. And a truly good writer you'll never know the difference... because it's all just the writing. Though I have noticed things that younger male writers tend towards and younger female writers tend towards. I have been sent "this is my first story" many times... and I've found amidst the men it becomes a laundry list sex scene and amidst the women it becomes a nervous, passive voice romance leading to a very careful sex scene.All writers start out by reading, first.
From my experience as a volunteer editor, I can say there is not a big difference between inexperienced male and female writers. As a writer matures, they find an audience and their style changes to please that audience.
Okay, let me change my statement. Erotica is porn MARKETED towards women. Doesn't mean that they're the only ones who write it.driphoney said:I agree men are more visual, and I used to agree with this whole thing. Now, I'm not so sure. A lot of men are reading it. Most male writers here seem to start out by reading it first themselves. And there are a lot of male writers.
I don't think you're off base. I would define it as...Athalia said:Which brings me to a confession. I misquoted my SO. What he really said was "Most porn was written for men." It was I who substituted "erotica" for "porn." Since I'm new to the business, I sometimes get confused with the terminology. The usual references (dictionary, Internet, thesaurus) haven't been very helpful, and the best my research can suggest is that it's a sort of sliding scale, from "pornography" (male-oriented, visual, visceral) at one end to "romantic" (female-oriented, emotional, introspective) at the other, with "erotica" somewhere in between, containing elements of both. Am I far "off base" here?
I realize, of course, that sweeping generalizations like this one leave out a lot of women who like porn, and men who like romances.
My SO is no help. When I asked him the difference between erotica and porn, he said that if he can remember anything about the story after his orgasm, it's erotica. You see what I have to work with here.
Men are taught that they have to be pushy to get what they want - you stand around being polite, somebody else is going to grab it out from under you:What? lol doesn't it basically sum up both side of the arguement?
My SO is no help. When I asked him the difference between erotica and porn, he said that if he can remember anything about the story after his orgasm, it's erotica. You see what I have to work with here.
and amidst the women it becomes a nervous, passive voice romance leading to a very careful sex scene.
Porn = sex with just enough story to get to the sex.
Erotica = sexually charged story.
Romance = story that happens to include sex.
Romance is just porn wrapped up in enough roses, emotions, and candles that women don't realize it's actually just porn. Erotica is a story intended to be sexually stimulating; erotica is a story about sex. Porn is sex; the story exists to get it to the sex, mentioned story may only be a few paragraphs long.
In fact, your SO probably has a spot on definition. If you can remember the story after the sex, it was erotica. Spot on! (I see I was ninjaed by someone saying the same thing too. ^_^)
And well, I'm a womam who hates romance novels, so whatever. I'm just making sweeping generalizations for the sake of comprehension.![]()
Well, the "consummate lover" part, anyway, since we are talking about erotica.I dunno, seems to me that most women's erotica is still pretty much about getting swept off their feet, preferably by a guy who is a consummate lover with a lot of money - I doubt you can go wrong with that formula.