Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
171
They are flowers and, it seems, lack the senses which would enable them to understand such things as hungers and storms.
They are flowers and, it seems, lack the senses which would enable them to understand such things as hungers and storms.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #171)
Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
168
Similarly, an attempt is made, through such things as verbal abuse and ridicule, to make individuals with truly powerful sexual drives succumb to irrational guilts and shames.
14
169
"True persons," which is a euphemism for conformists to the social norms, are supposed to be "above sex," or, at least, to recognize its "relative unimportance," or to understand that it may be acceptable, if at all, only at some time, or in some "place," or other, which is never clarified.
14
170
That a given individual of strong passions could scream with the need for sexual release is something that they cannot understand or which, somehow, terrifies them.
14
171
They are flowers and, it seems, lack the senses which would enable them to understand such things as hungers and storms.
14
172
Buttercups and lions will perhaps always be mutually unintelligible to one another.
14
173
Most simply, perhaps, sexuality is regarded by the Waniyanpi as being inimical to Sameness, as being subversive of the Identity thesis so essential to its madness.
14
174
Too, in an interesting concession to putative sexual difference, sexuality, by the Waniyanpi, is regarded as being demeaning to women.
Similarly, an attempt is made, through such things as verbal abuse and ridicule, to make individuals with truly powerful sexual drives succumb to irrational guilts and shames.
"True persons," which is a euphemism for conformists to the social norms, are supposed to be "above sex," or, at least, to recognize its "relative unimportance," or to understand that it may be acceptable, if at all, only at some time, or in some "place," or other, which is never clarified.
That a given individual of strong passions could scream with the need for sexual release is something that they cannot understand or which, somehow, terrifies them.
They are flowers and, it seems, lack the senses which would enable them to understand such things as hungers and storms.
Buttercups and lions will perhaps always be mutually unintelligible to one another.
Most simply, perhaps, sexuality is regarded by the Waniyanpi as being inimical to Sameness, as being subversive of the Identity thesis so essential to its madness.
Too, in an interesting concession to putative sexual difference, sexuality, by the Waniyanpi, is regarded as being demeaning to women.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 14)