Category Archives: BLOGGERY: politics, religion & brain purges……

Erotic Award for Secular Medical Forum

Here’s an encouraging article from The National Secular Society:

“Beating off stiff competition, Dr Antony Lempert, co-ordinator of the Secular Medical Forum, was voted ‘Academic of the Year’ in the 2010 Erotic Awards.

He was presented with his prize, a winged golden member, at the Erotic Awards ceremony in Central London on 30th April. He then spoke at a public rally in Regent’s Park on Sunday 2nd May. He said: “At its heart it is a battle waged by those with religiously motivated demands against individual autonomy and consent. The battlefield chosen by the religious bodies is often the genitalia and other people’s sexual freedoms. It has only been by engaging the religions on their own sexual territory that I accidentally find myself working towards a less constrained, less damaged more erotic society. I am delighted to find myself in this camp.”

The Erotic Awards celebrate people working towards sexual freedom around the world. Dr Lempert was given the award in recognition of his work for the Secular Medical Forum to prevent religious bodies from interfering with other people’s bodies. The SMF campaigns for accurate and informative sex and relationship education for children and against childhood ritual genital mutilation. They have argued in favour of condom and abortion services advertising on television and have challenged pharmacists’ rights to refuse to dispense emergency contraception.”

Original article here.

Up Pompeii?

This weekend, hundreds queued for a night of titillation at Pompeii. The ancient Roman city, buried by a volcanic eruption in 79AD, has been the site of many spectacular archaeological finds over a number of centuries, and its erotic art is no exception. In a special after-dark exhibition, the ancient suburban baths staged a special “sound and light” show to display its 16 pornographic frescoes to visitors. Only small, select groups have been allowed to see the artwork during the last decade but now, for the first time since the frescoes were discovered 50 years ago, larger groups of adult visitors are being welcomed for the special evening viewings – which are expected to become a regular feature throughout this summer. Graphic images of orgies, open bisexuality and nude deities were common in Pompeii, but the paintings found at the baths are the most tantalisingly explicit so far. Learn more about Pompeii here.

Rubber Dolls

Rubber dolls are designed to be physically flawless creatures. This is a fetish and lifestyle that has seen a lot of publicity this year as a result of the “Rubber Doll World Rendezvous” in Minneapolis. Enthusiasts encase themselves from head to toe in latex to transform their faces and bodies. The majority of rubber dolls are male underneath, but the most popular costume theme is an exaggerated version of the female form, with padded or inflatable breasts and hips and a tightly corseted waist. Latex masks are normally worn to give the doll’s face a look of almost cartoonish perfection.

While traditional drag queens satirise the most extreme facets of femininity, rubber dolls embody and celebrate it. South Africa’s “Sunday Independent” recently published an interesting article on rubber dolls, and an interview with latex craftsperson and rubber doll, Spirit:

“Psychologically it can be very confusing, yet you get to a stage of not caring what people think. It must have been like that with masking throughout the past. Many tribes and civilisations have done it through the ages, even masked balls by the gentry. This is just another form of changing one’s appearance. Behind the mask you are invisible and that, in turn, gives freedom to be what you want. Being shy, I find the freedom exhilarating. Then the attention, if you are good at dressing, is another appeal. We all want to be liked, so an ordinary person like me, who does not stand out in a crowd, can now be the centre of attraction. This has taken me all over the world. I have invitations to events and parties; this could not happen unless I was seen as a drawcard. So many want to be like me, but fail because of body shape or the ability to find doll clothes, which are not that easy to find because dressing as a doll is a new phenomenon… I’m meeting lovely new friends from a completely different background, who are perceived as somewhat weird but, in reality, have a better grasp of the world’s ugly face.”

Read the full article here.