Today's Guardian reports psychologist Susan Quilliam's opinion that romantic fiction typically depicts:
"... the heroine being rescued from danger by the hero, and then abandoning herself joyfully to a life of intercourse-driven multiple orgasms and endless trouble-free pregnancies in order to cement their marital devotion"
and that Romance consequently promotes an unrealistic and dangerous set of sexual expectations in its readers.
(The full report's here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jul/07/mills-and-boon-sexual-health-problems )
She says that "a huge number of the issues that we see in our clinics and therapy rooms are influenced by romantic fiction" - including, among other things, her finding that idealized descriptions of sex in romance novels lead to their readers failing to use condoms in real life in order to allow themselves to be "swept up" in the sexual moment.
More generally, Plato decided to comprehensively ban poets from his ideal republic on the grounds that all fiction is bad for us.
Any thoughts? Does fiction - and especially romantic fiction - lead readers into false expectations in their daily lives?
- polynices
"... the heroine being rescued from danger by the hero, and then abandoning herself joyfully to a life of intercourse-driven multiple orgasms and endless trouble-free pregnancies in order to cement their marital devotion"
and that Romance consequently promotes an unrealistic and dangerous set of sexual expectations in its readers.
(The full report's here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jul/07/mills-and-boon-sexual-health-problems )
She says that "a huge number of the issues that we see in our clinics and therapy rooms are influenced by romantic fiction" - including, among other things, her finding that idealized descriptions of sex in romance novels lead to their readers failing to use condoms in real life in order to allow themselves to be "swept up" in the sexual moment.
More generally, Plato decided to comprehensively ban poets from his ideal republic on the grounds that all fiction is bad for us.
Any thoughts? Does fiction - and especially romantic fiction - lead readers into false expectations in their daily lives?
- polynices
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