xssve
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2007
- Posts
- 5,854
It's the first thing I do remember when I think about this story:A parallel comes to mind: Poe's Pit and the Pendulum, which is not really a story so much as it's a fascinating situation. I doubt anyone remembers how it ends.
There was a discordant hum of human voices! There was a loud blast as of many trumpets! There was a harsh grating as of a thousand thunders! The fiery walls rushed back! An outstretched arm caught my own as I fell, fainting, into the abyss. It was that of General Lasalle. The French army had entered Toledo. The Inquisition was in the hands of its enemies.
Talk about emotional release.
I think in sense, this is dynamic involved in sex stories: emotional release through an external agent - which may be expressed as physical release - as opposed to some other psychological change or growth in your character, though they aren't mutually exclusive by any means.
In terms of Five act theory, it occured to me that the climax of Lolitia occurs when Humbert Humberts wife is killed - the remainder of the novel is denoument, the failure inherent in HH and Lolitas attempt to turn an erotic fetish into a neurotic attachment.
Eroticism is often at it's peak when it remains diffuse, sexualized but unrealized - when that erotic energy is sublimated into the sexual act, the result is often anticlimactic and less satisfying than the delicious torture of erotic tension.
The book would have been orders of magnitude more controversial had he decided to go the other way with that and make their sexual union more satisfying than the erotic one. I think I like the way he did it, it's more evocotive of the dynamic itsef:, i.e., it generates enourmous erotic tension but denies a satisfying release - it's literary orgasm denial.
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