In this provocative expose, Anita Phillips intelligently rescues masochism from the clinical discourses that have named it a pathological sickness and returns it to a context of diverse human experience and artistic expression. What emerges is a fresh and fascinating modern view of longing, curiosity, and eroticism.
There were parts of Phillips book that were quite good, esp. the beginning portions that focused on history or in providing context for a wide angle lens on what masochism might entail from the expected kink whether sexual or not to an understanding of concepts of ascetic and mystical practices of pain and suffering as identification with The Passion. Her highlighting of sports as often having masochistic elements (boxing, football, even running) where pleasure and pain are intermixed were unexpected and interesting metaphors. These parts of the book were well handled. Her broad use of literature and psychology supported much.
Where the book fell down for me is that parts of it, at 18 years out, felt very dated. I was using a university scholastic copy and am unaware of whether a more updated edition is available, but so much has changed legally and in sociological views in that time that many of the middle chapters bore a view of LGBTQ individuals or of "masculinity" that has clearly undergone vast shifts in the broader culture. There is also very decidedly the mark of this being written by and more geared for a UK audience as some of the political and social examples don't hold up as well from my American perspective. Definitely was a mixed bag of stronger and weaker sections and thus a more mixed review.
I'm really quite confused about what Anita Phillips was trying to do with this book. It started off okay enough, with her mentioning Venus in Furs and the historical psychological analysis of masochism, but then she started twisting and turning and going really nowhere.
The few brief good points she brings up (which is why I rated this book two out of five stars as opposed to one) is lost in the garble that she fills the pages with. She emphasis the need for consent in BDSM relationships (despite stating repeatedly that sadist get off only on non-consensual violence) and that people in consensual BDSM relationships shouldn't be prosecuted by the law. The rest... well, she just dribbles on.
Phillips talks about art, gender and society without really mentioning masochism. I'm not entirely sure what her point was half the time. She talks in circles all the time, and I wonder if she's hoping to confuse the readers into agreeing with her. The editor really should have pulled her up on it.
This review is much better than I could hope to achieve, and I recommend it. I can't recommend this book, though.
Many individuals casually use the word "masochist" to describe themselves and their situations, but the word has been quite morphed from its original meaning into something "silly" and/or "sexually deviant". The book tells the history of masochism and attempts to redefine its "true" meaning to readers. Very interesting read on sexuality and the history of this quality. Funny to read about how society tried to adopt something in the complete incorrect context and pass it off as the truth.