245 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
245 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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SEXUAL COMMUNISM A SUCCESS
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from _The Stiffest of the Corpse: An Exquisite Corpse Reader_
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, ed. by Andrei Codrescu, San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1988.
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AUREA VENERA IGNOTA: THE ONEIDA COMMUNITY
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AND COITUS RESERVATUS
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by Sam Abrams
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Although there are timid dissenters beginning to publish, the official
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glib, grad school opinion of the American communal experiments of the
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19th Century remains, as it was enshrined in Parrington's _Main
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Currents_, that they failed. And hearing the great Shaker song "The Gift
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To Be Simple" used as television theme music, one is tempted to agree.
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The supposed failure is predicated on the short term of the experiments,
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but was Kitty Hawk a failure because the flight lasted only twelve
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seconds?
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There is one particular case -- the Oneida Community -- that, although
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not without ironies, to my mind clearly establishes the success of the
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experimental movement. As Kitty Hawk established that mechanical flight
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is possible, so Oneida proved that the abolition of selfishness is
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possible.
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"We have admitted from the beginning that our free principles in regard
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to property, labor, and love could not be carried out without the actual
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abolition of selfishness; so our success has been avowedly staked on the
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answer to the old question: Can we be saved from sin in this world?
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And the world looking on has predicted our downfall. But we have
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succeeded." (2nd Annual Report of the OC Association, 1850)
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The summary of John Humphrey Noyes, the founder, after the breakup: "We
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made a raid into unknown country, charted it, and returned without the
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loss of a man, woman or child."
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The success of the OC was long masked by the domination of one book,
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Robert Allerton Parker's _A Yankee Saint_, a book (much like Duberman's
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on Black Mountain) which has many scholarly virtues, hut which (again
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like Duberman) omits the essential . In Duberman the lacuna is ART; in
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Parker it is JOY. Only in 1970, when the elderly Constance Noyes
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Robinson, a descendant of the OC stirpicults (eugenic experiments),
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published her volume, did it become possible to form a full image of the
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OC.
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And the key phenomenon is JOY. Hundreds of people for twenty-five years
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in deed and in speech in paradise, then, there. Datum: none of the 100+
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children who came of age during the experiment left; they all stayed,
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many returning to the community after college.
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"My maternal Grandmother who had been one of the dissidents at the
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breakup, told me, in her old age, that there had never been such
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happiness as they knew in the old Community. I believe this was an
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honest testimony...Most of the principle facts of this history I have
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known, some of them from early childhood, but the new and overmastering
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impression I gained...from reading the story...as the Oneida Communists
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told it, is of all-pervading happiness." (Constance Noyes Robinson in
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the preface to Oneida Community, An Autobiography, Syracuse University
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Press, 1970).
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Anyone who reads through the selection of original writings from the
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Community that constitutes her hook, or spends some time with the great
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collection of Oneida publications at the Dartmouth Library, cannot
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escape that impression. As the Bloomie's smoked salmon counter is the
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epicenter of consumption in the western world, so the Oneida Community
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was the highpoint of happiness.
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Two hundred and fifty folks happily engaged, in the full glare of
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publicity, in a radical economic. social and sexual experiment. "BEFORE
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HEAVEN AND EARTH WE TRAMPLE UNDERFOOT THE DOMESTIC AND PECUNIARY
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FASHIONS OF THE WORLD!" They published detailed accounts. During all
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the twenty-five years of the community, they issued a weekly newspaper,
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which included scrupulous reports of their experiments in all aspects of
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life, in economics, child rearing and breeding, politics, work roles,
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music, diet, clothing, and most famously, sexual practices and
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relationships.
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The extent of their openness is hard to believe. They invited a hostile
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gynecologist to come investigate what he called "one of the most
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artificial sexual mal-relations known in history," allowed him free
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access, answered his questions with admissions that even shock today,
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for instance, telling him that sexual relations for females usually
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began by eleven years of age.
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They invited visitors and almost every distinguished person who passed
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their way (e.g., Henry James) accepted their invitation to examine "an
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association established on principles opposed at every point to the
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institutions of the world". No wonder that Anthony Comstock (who
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boasted of having burnt in his career 160 tons of books) established the
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Society for the Suppression of Vice specifically for the suppression of
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the OC. Yet open and openly, opposed by politicians and clergymen and
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freelance bigots like Comstock, in the midst of Victorian America, they
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survived for twenty-five years, and were happy.
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Before turning to the specifics of their sexual experiments, which is
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where the focus for further research should fall, I will cite just one
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example for the sake of the flavor of the OC. John Humphrey Noyes beat
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Thoreau, whose _Essay On Civil Disobedience_ is dated 1849, by fifteen
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years in declaring his personal independence, on the same grounds that
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Henry David resigned, from the United States. The OC, from its
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formation, stated that "so Long as our government stood with one foot on
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the neck of the slave and with the other trampled the rights of the red
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man, we had no sympathy with it. The Community for many years previous
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to the breaking out of the rebellion asserted their independence of the
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government and in heart and spirit disclaimed allegiance to it."
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The sexual innovations of the OC were rooted in their religious
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heterodoxy. They subscribed to the perfectionist heresy that consists
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essentially of the belief that the second coming of Christ has already
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occurred and thus we are living in paradise. We only need to conduct
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ourselves according to the "ordinances of heaven" in order to realize
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that we are living in paradise. The name 'perfectionism' signifies that
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humans are capable of achieving perfect sinlessness in this world.
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Noyes became converted to this view in 1834 and rapidly emerged, between
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activities in the Underground Railroad and the publicity fuss evoked by
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Greeley's publication of his personal declaration of independence, as
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one of the movement's leaders.
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It had long been one of the most cherished tenets of perfectionism that
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among the "ordinances of heaven" group marriage or free love was one of
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the most important, and Noyes' followers urged him to put this into
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practice. But although he experimented with other heavenly ordinances of
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communal living, he long resisted endorsing except in theory any sexual
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experimentation.
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Noyes married in 1834. It was within this marriage that he achieved his
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most profound and startling insights, which led directly to the
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discovery that made the Oneida Community possible and which implies most
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significant possibilities for us today. As might be expected, from the
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very first days of their marriage, John and Harriet shared views on
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women's liberation that would be considered advanced now. For instance,
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on their wedding day they posted a notice in the kitchen to their
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friends that said since the "practice of serving three meals daily
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subjects females almost universally to the worst kind of slavery. " they
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would serve only breakfast and for the rest their friends could help
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themselves.
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By the sixth year of their marriage, they were living in an economically
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communist but sexually monogamous commune, and Harriet had undergone one
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extremely difficult live birth and four extremely difficult stillbirths.
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Noyes decided to abstain from sex until he had solved the problem of
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birth control. He saw that in the primitive medical conditions of his
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time, sex without birth control was a form of murderous exploitation of
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women by men. It is easy for us to forget nowadays that until quite
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recently pregnancy and giving birth were not merely painful but always
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life-threatening and often fatal. He and Harriet agreed that celibacy
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was better than further risking her life. For Noyes, to decide was to
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publish, and not the least daring of his publications was his
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denunciation of sexual relations without contraception as "a
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relationship...in which, at every level of society, husbands become the
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blandly unconscious murderers of those they love and had pledged
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themselves to protect."
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Noyes had a second insight, without which he might have been content to
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follow the Shaker example and accept celibacy, but having had it, he was
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driven on to his great discovery. The second insight was not new. Poets
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have understood it since at least Catullus. But Noyes was the first
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that I know of to express it in logical and expository, as opposed to
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lyric, form. (His peculiar American charm was, of course, that he was a
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pragmatic rationalist and religious enthusiast. I suppose I have to
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give Parker credit. His title, _Yankee Saint_, neatly sums that up.)
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This second point was the "dividing the sexual relationship into two
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branches, the amative and the propagative, the amative or love
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relationship is the first in importance."
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With these two principles, he set himself to the task, in 1844 in Putney
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Vermont, of discovering how "the benefits of amativeness can be secured
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and increased and the expenses of propagation reduced to such limits as
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life can afford."
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He well understood how much was dependent on his quest. Success would
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allow, to mention just one of the freedoms he sought, that "childbearing
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be a voluntary affair."
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And he succeeded completely, so that fourteen years later, the Oneidans
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could boast "our principles accord to woman a just and righteous freedom
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in this particular, and however strange such an idea may seem now, the
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time cannot be distant when any other idea or practice will be scorned
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as essential barbarism."
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How Noyes discovered what he did is still a complete mystery to me. What
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he found was a method of fucking, closely related to certain Tantric
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practices, which he called Male Continence and which scholars of sex in
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the OC have called _coitus reservatus_. Male Continence was, and I
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define it minimally, for its precise definition is one of the matters
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which I am writing to encourage, a method in which the act of fucking is
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prolonged for hours without ejaculation.
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"I experimented on this idea and found that the self-control which it
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requires is not difficult; that my enjoyment was increased; that my
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wife's experience was very satisfactory, as it had never been before;
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that we had escaped the fears and horrors of involuntary propagation.
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This was a great deliverance."
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The discovery of this method was central to the creation of the Oneida
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Community as a complex marriage. The method was particularly well
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adapted to a group marriage, since it had to be taught and practiced.
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Young boys practiced with women past menopause and young girls with
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older men who were experts. With this key bit of wisdom in place, the
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Oneida experiment became possible, and as anyone who looks into
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Robinson's hook must see, successful.
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"Do you really practice free love?" And Noyes replied, "Is there any
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other kind?"
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"Never has a couple eloped from the Oneida Community... The discipline of
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the passions is more radical here than with the Shakers, inasmuch as
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total abstinence is often more practicable than moderation...We wonder
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at the fact and still it is true. A hundred young folks have passed the
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age of temptation at the Oneida Community, and yet there has never been
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an elopement." (The Oneida Circular, 1869.)
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So the first topic I call to your attention for further investigation is
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the success of the OC. Yet another, of immediate pertinence, of huge
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potential, is WHAT EXACTLY IS MALE CONTINENCE. The publications of
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Oneida, although, as you can tell from my quotations, of tremendous
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frankness, leave this point ambiguous -- DID MEN WHO PRACTICED MALE
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CONTINENCE HAVE ORGASMS WITHOUT EJACULATION? Early students of the OC's
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sexual practice took the answer to be no, and the Karezza movement of
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the 1920s elaborated theories on the great benefits of sex without
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orgasm for either gender.
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However!
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Several of the physicians and sexologists who have studied the OC refer
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to their fucking practice as _coitus reservatus_ and Kinsey in the
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_Human Male_ volume defines _coitus reservatus_ as ORGASM WITHOUT THE
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EMISSION OF SEMEN BY ADULT MALES WHO DELIBERATELY CONTRACT THEIR
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GENITAL MUSCLES. The Kinsey survey found five males in their sample of
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4,102 who practiced this technique at the time of the survey in the
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1940s.
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In 1974 1 inquired of both the Kinsey and the Masters and Johnson
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institutes. At that time neither of them were investigating
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this phenomenon nor did they know of anyone who was. Masters wrote me
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that he thought the technique might be most helpful, but noted that an
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"essential part of the technique was training the younger men with
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postmenopausal females. To date, that is a relatively insurmountable
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obstacle."
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