Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
303
A second reason, however, I suspect, why Earth girls make such astoundingly desirable slaves, is their background.
8
304
In their native environments they encounter few but psychologically and sexually crippled men, men whose merest intuitions of their blood rights are likely to be productive of conditioned, internally administered shocks and anxieties, or externally administered sanctions of censorship, suppression, ridicule and denunciation, imposed by those who are perhaps only a bit more rigid and fearful than themselves.
8
305
In such a world, largely the ideological product of superstition and hysteria, it is difficult for manhood to exist, even dormantly.
8
306
Accordingly, when an Earth female finds herself translated to gor, she finds herself, for the first time, in the presence of large numbers of men to whom nature and power are not anathema.
8
307
Moreover, she is likely to find herself belonging to them.
8
308
Beyond this, of course, the culture itself, for all its possible defects and faults, is one which has been constructed to be congenial to the natural biological order, and neither antithetical to, nor contradictory of it.
8
309
The culture has not suppressed the biotruths of human nature but found a place for them.
A second reason, however, I suspect, why Earth girls make such astoundingly desirable slaves, is their background.
In their native environments they encounter few but psychologically and sexually crippled men, men whose merest intuitions of their blood rights are likely to be productive of conditioned, internally administered shocks and anxieties, or externally administered sanctions of censorship, suppression, ridicule and denunciation, imposed by those who are perhaps only a bit more rigid and fearful than themselves.
In such a world, largely the ideological product of superstition and hysteria, it is difficult for manhood to exist, even dormantly.
Accordingly, when an Earth female finds herself translated to gor, she finds herself, for the first time, in the presence of large numbers of men to whom nature and power are not anathema.
Moreover, she is likely to find herself belonging to them.
Beyond this, of course, the culture itself, for all its possible defects and faults, is one which has been constructed to be congenial to the natural biological order, and neither antithetical to, nor contradictory of it.
The culture has not suppressed the biotruths of human nature but found a place for them.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter )