This fascinating, appalling, and entertaining survey of the facts, myths, customs, and feelings surrounding menstruation...

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THE CURSE: A Cultural History of Menstruation

This fascinating, appalling, and entertaining survey of the facts, myths, customs, and feelings surrounding menstruation through the ages is the rare book that makes one glad to live in the 20th century. The authors show how biology and psychoanalysis have been used right up to the present to rationalize the most ancient male superstitions about menstruation (it spoils food, blasts crops, threatens the penis, weakens the woman, and makes her crazy), ultimately it is the plain facts provided by modern science that are liberating us from fear, barbarity, and secrecy. Their accounts of ""primitive"" superstitions and precautions which have survived into this century--such as seclusion and clitoridectomy--and their recap of the absurd and sexist theories of reproduction that lasted almost as long, will arouse the modern reader to outrage and hilarity. This book is lighter in tone and more various than Paula Weidegger's Menstruation and Menopause (Knopf, 1976). Covering tribal female puberty rites (and envious male imitations); archetypes of women's creative/destructive power in fairy tale, myth, and literature; ""red humor""; historical anecdotes from Queen Elizabeth I to Lizzie Borden; the sanitary products industry, and more, it breezily abolishes taboo and provides a colorful, informative compendium peppered with surprises.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 1976

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1976

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