Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
1594
On Gor, there is very little sexual frustration, save, I suppose, in the case of freewomen, among whom, I gather, it is not uncommon, if not rampant.
On Gor, there is very little sexual frustration, save, I suppose, in the case of free women, among whom, I gather, it is not uncommon, if not rampant.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #1594)
Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
1591
They took so much for granted.
2
1592
I thought of the loveliness of female slaves.
2
1593
Certainly Gorean men relished them; and yet I wondered if they sufficiently appreciated the value and availability of such goods, if they realized how different things might be, if they realized how fortunate they were.
2
1594
On Gor, there is very little sexual frustration, save, I suppose, in the case of freewomen, among whom, I gather, it is not uncommon, if not rampant.
2
1595
But on Gor, sexuality, on the whole, is open, biologically informed, honest, joyful, and fulfilling.
2
1596
The civilization of Gor is emergent from nature, not an ugly, high, dark wall erected to keep her at bay.
2
1597
I wondered if Gorean men could even conceive of a world where sexuality was supposedly shameful, where sex and guilt were pathologically intermingled, where children were raised to suspect and fear their own bodies, where the most natural urges and impulses of human beings were denounced, where guilt, pain and misery were approved devices of social control, where the sexes were taught to distrust one another, and were set against one another.
They took so much for granted.
I thought of the loveliness of female slaves.
Certainly Gorean men relished them; and yet I wondered if they sufficiently appreciated the value and availability of such goods, if they realized how different things might be, if they realized how fortunate they were.
On Gor, there is very little sexual frustration, save, I suppose, in the case of free women, among whom, I gather, it is not uncommon, if not rampant.
But on Gor, sexuality, on the whole, is open, biologically informed, honest, joyful, and fulfilling.
The civilization of Gor is emergent from nature, not an ugly, high, dark wall erected to keep her at bay.
I wondered if Gorean men could even conceive of a world where sexuality was supposedly shameful, where sex and guilt were pathologically intermingled, where children were raised to suspect and fear their own bodies, where the most natural urges and impulses of human beings were denounced, where guilt, pain and misery were approved devices of social control, where the sexes were taught to distrust one another, and were set against one another.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 2)