Vagina dentata: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:VaginaDentata-GoddessCafe.jpg|thumbnail|right|200px|Image taken from Goddess Cafe]]
Latin for "toothed vagina".
Latin for "toothed vagina".


Often crops up as a sexist projection onto women's bodies of men's fear of women's sexuality. Devouring mothers and all that.
Often crops up as a sexist projection onto women's bodies of men's fear of women's sexuality. Devouring mothers and all that.
A common motif in certain cultural legends and myths. For instance, the Navajo's story of "Snapping Vagina" included a vagina dentata that produced lightning. Apache and Navajo stories featured women who killed men with their toothed vaginas; the heroes could destroy them by destroying their teeth.<ref>See Carolyne Larrington, ed., ''The Feminist Companion to Mythology'' 1992, ISBN 0-04-440850-1.</ref>


Sometimes appears in fiction as an instance of fantastical biology, or a science-fictional body modification or device.
Sometimes appears in fiction as an instance of fantastical biology, or a science-fictional body modification or device.
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[[Image:SonetteEhlers-RapexFemaleCondom.jpg|thumbnail|right|200px|Sonette Ehlers with a screenshot and a prototype of the Rapex, a female condom. (Photo: Reuters, taken from Robyn Dixon, "[http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/controversy-in-south-africa-over-device-to-snare-rapists/2005/09/01/1125302683893.html?oneclick=true Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists]", Sept. 2, 2005.)]]
[[Image:SonetteEhlers-RapexFemaleCondom.jpg|thumbnail|right|200px|Sonette Ehlers with a screenshot and a prototype of the Rapex, a female condom. (Photo: Reuters, taken from Robyn Dixon, "[http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/controversy-in-south-africa-over-device-to-snare-rapists/2005/09/01/1125302683893.html?oneclick=true Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists]", Sept. 2, 2005.)]]


The development of a real-life version (the "Rapex", invented by Sonette Ehlers in 2005) inspired criticism that they would be useless against rape committed with the help of foreign objects; might enrage rapists and incite further violence; or might expose victims to blood-borne contagions should their attackers' skin break. Ehlers said she had been inspired to invent it after meeting a woman who had been raped who told her, "If only I had teeth down there."<ref>Dixon, Robyn (September 2 2005). "Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists".</ref>
The development of a real-life version (the "Rapex", invented by Sonette Ehlers in 2005) inspired various criticisms:
# that they would be useless against rape committed with the help of foreign objects;  
# the use might enrage rapists and incite further violence;  
# they offered revenge not deterrence;
# they might expose victims to blood-borne contagions should their attackers' skin break.  
Ehlers said she had been inspired to invent it after meeting a woman who had been raped who told her, "If only I had teeth down there."<ref>Dixon, Robyn (September 2 2005). "Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists".</ref>


== Examples ==
== Examples ==
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== External Links ==
== External Links ==
* Leonard Cassuto. "Repulsive Attractions: 'The Raft,' the Vagina Dentata, and the Slasher Formula." in Kathleen Margaret Lant & Theresa Thompson, eds., ''Imagining the Worst: Stephen King and the Representation of Women.'' (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1998), pp. 61-78.
* Creed, Barbara. The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis. London: Routledge, 1993.
* Grosz, Elizabeth. "Animal Sex: Libido as Desire and Death," Sexy bodies: the strange carnalities of feminism (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 278-299.
* Horney, Karen. "The Dread of Women," International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 13 (1932), 348-60.
* Otero, Solimar. "'Fearing Our Mothers': An Overview of the Psychoanalytic Theories Concerning the Vagina Dentata Motif", ''American Journal of Psychoanalysis'', Sept. 1996, v. 56 n. 3, pp. 269-288.
* Raitt, Jill. Article on "vagina dentata," Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 48 (1980), 415-431.
* [[Barbara Walker]]. [[The Woman's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets]]
* [http://goddesscafe.com/yoni/dentata.html Vagina Dentata] at The Goddess Café, Yoni Temple
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagina_dentata Wikipedia entry about vagina dentata]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagina_dentata Wikipedia entry about vagina dentata]


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<references/></div>
<references/></div>


[[Category:Body themes]][[category:Fictional technologies]][[Category:Sexuality themes]]
 
 
 
[[Category:Body themes]]
[[category:Fictional technologies]]
[[Category:Sexuality themes]]

Revision as of 15:20, 10 March 2007

Image taken from Goddess Cafe

Latin for "toothed vagina".

Often crops up as a sexist projection onto women's bodies of men's fear of women's sexuality. Devouring mothers and all that.

A common motif in certain cultural legends and myths. For instance, the Navajo's story of "Snapping Vagina" included a vagina dentata that produced lightning. Apache and Navajo stories featured women who killed men with their toothed vaginas; the heroes could destroy them by destroying their teeth.[1]

Sometimes appears in fiction as an instance of fantastical biology, or a science-fictional body modification or device.

As a rape deterrent, it rather rests on the presumption that men will have access to women's bodies anyhow, and that they will go far enough for a device located in the vagina to make any difference, thereby circumscribing women's inevitable position as victims.

Sonette Ehlers with a screenshot and a prototype of the Rapex, a female condom. (Photo: Reuters, taken from Robyn Dixon, "Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists", Sept. 2, 2005.)

The development of a real-life version (the "Rapex", invented by Sonette Ehlers in 2005) inspired various criticisms:

  1. that they would be useless against rape committed with the help of foreign objects;
  2. the use might enrage rapists and incite further violence;
  3. they offered revenge not deterrence;
  4. they might expose victims to blood-borne contagions should their attackers' skin break.

Ehlers said she had been inspired to invent it after meeting a woman who had been raped who told her, "If only I had teeth down there."[2]

Examples

Fantasy

Science-Fiction

Other

  • Piero Schivazappa's "Femina Ridens" (transl. "Frightened Woman", 1969); misogynystic millionaire kidnaps and tortures a woman; he creates a vagina dentata doorway.

External Links

  • Leonard Cassuto. "Repulsive Attractions: 'The Raft,' the Vagina Dentata, and the Slasher Formula." in Kathleen Margaret Lant & Theresa Thompson, eds., Imagining the Worst: Stephen King and the Representation of Women. (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1998), pp. 61-78.
  • Creed, Barbara. The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis. London: Routledge, 1993.
  • Grosz, Elizabeth. "Animal Sex: Libido as Desire and Death," Sexy bodies: the strange carnalities of feminism (New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 278-299.
  • Horney, Karen. "The Dread of Women," International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 13 (1932), 348-60.
  • Otero, Solimar. "'Fearing Our Mothers': An Overview of the Psychoanalytic Theories Concerning the Vagina Dentata Motif", American Journal of Psychoanalysis, Sept. 1996, v. 56 n. 3, pp. 269-288.
  • Raitt, Jill. Article on "vagina dentata," Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 48 (1980), 415-431.
  • Barbara Walker. The Woman's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets
  • Vagina Dentata at The Goddess Café, Yoni Temple
  • Wikipedia entry about vagina dentata

References

  1. See Carolyne Larrington, ed., The Feminist Companion to Mythology 1992, ISBN 0-04-440850-1.
  2. Dixon, Robyn (September 2 2005). "Controversy in South Africa over device to snare rapists".