SEXUALITY DEFINED: JUDEO-CHRISTIAN INFLUENCES - THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION - THE SEXUAL CUSTOMS AND BELIEFS OF VICTORIAN AMERICAN SOCIETY

It is impossible to determine the total impact that views had on the sexual customs and beliefs of Victorian American society. However, several effects are clearly apparent. For one, a whole new language structure was devised in order to eliminate any reference to sexuality in "polite company." Ordinary speech was overhauled such that "breasts" became "bosoms," "legs" became "limbs," and even "underwear" was now referred to as "unmentionables." And, of course, no decent individual would employ terms and expressions which described the sex act or biological functions under any circumstances. Every form of art and human communication was censored in order to remove "offensive" stimuli. All literature, from the Bible through Shakespeare to contemporary novels, was censored (or bowdlerized, after Thomas Bowdler, the self-professed guardian of Victorian morality). Ancient art was concealed or transformed, for example, by placing fig leaves over strategic locations, etc. As late as the 1930s and 1940s (and even up to the present time although in a much more moderate manner) various censoring agencies were employed to eliminate any material of questionable taste from public view, with the definition of what constituted questionable taste left to the discretion of the censor. As we shall see in a later chapter, this led to what we might consider today ridiculous extremes. For example, movie scenes showing even a husband and wife sleeping in bed together were prohibited by the Hays office, a movie censoring agency. And when Clark Gable as Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind (1939) uttered the word "damn," the production studio was fined, although the scene was permitted to remain.

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Men's Health-Erectile Dysfunction