Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
856
How strange, and pernicious, I thought, that a woman should be made to feel guilty about being feminine, truly feminine, radically feminine! What a tribute this was to the effectiveness of contemporary conditioning techniques! In the world from which I came sexuality was not an ingredient but an accessory.
How strange, and pernicious, I thought, that a woman should be made to feel guilty about being feminine, truly feminine, radically feminine! What a tribute this was to the effectiveness of contemporary conditioning techniques! In the world from which I came sexuality was not an ingredient but an accessory.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #856)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
853
I was somewhat embarrassed, to be sure, by these feelings.
3
854
Then it suddenly seemed absurd to me that I should be embarrassed, or should feel guilty or ashamed, about these feelings.
3
855
I think I then realized, perhaps for the first time, fully, the power of the conditioning devices to which I had been subjected.
3
856
How strange, and pernicious, I thought, that a woman should be made to feel guilty about being feminine, truly feminine, radically feminine! What a tribute this was to the effectiveness of contemporary conditioning techniques! In the world from which I came sexuality was not an ingredient but an accessory.
3
857
Here, on the other hand, I suspected, men and women were not the same.
3
858
Indeed, it seemed that here I would be expected to assume certain postures and attitudes, and genuinely feminine ones, perhaps merely because I was a woman.
3
859
In this world it seemed that sexuality, and perhaps a deeply natural sexuality, was an ingredient, and not a mere accessory.
I was somewhat embarrassed, to be sure, by these feelings.
Then it suddenly seemed absurd to me that I should be embarrassed, or should feel guilty or ashamed, about these feelings.
I think I then realized, perhaps for the first time, fully, the power of the conditioning devices to which I had been subjected.
How strange, and pernicious, I thought, that a woman should be made to feel guilty about being feminine, truly feminine, radically feminine! What a tribute this was to the effectiveness of contemporary conditioning techniques! In the world from which I came sexuality was not an ingredient but an accessory.
Here, on the other hand, I suspected, men and women were not the same.
Indeed, it seemed that here I would be expected to assume certain postures and attitudes, and genuinely feminine ones, perhaps merely because I was a woman.
In this world it seemed that sexuality, and perhaps a deeply natural sexuality, was an ingredient, and not a mere accessory.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 3)