Sunday, September 1, 2019
Theme of Sexuality in Andre Brink ‘s Other Lives
Brinkââ¬â¢s Other Lives: A Rewriting of history through eroticism The dissident writer's preeminent role, as Brink sees it, is to ââ¬Å"explore and expose the roots of the human condition as it is lived in South Africa: (.. ) With the fundamentals of human experience and relationshipsâ⬠(Mapmakers 152).That is to say, he aims, through narrating and referring to kinships, mainly sensual ones, at unveiling the racial practices of the past apartheid system which is, according to Merriam Websterââ¬â¢s Dictionary and thesaurus, defined as ââ¬Å"a former policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination against non-European groups in the Republic of So. Africaâ⬠in doing so, he makes use of erotic scenes between black and white people of both sexes. This essay tackles Brinkââ¬â¢s choice to make use of erotic fiction as an inventive way of writing history.Also, it deals with sexuality, in this particular novel, which stands as an epitome for racial, colonia l and political relationships between black and white people, as well as the numerous interpretations of the coitus either through symbolism or feminism or psychoanalysis. According to Brink ââ¬Å"the authorââ¬â¢s reinvention of history would involve a choice between two kinds of concepts, two ends on a sliding scale: namely, history as fact and history as fiction. He opts for fiction in this novel to rewrite the history of South Africa: ââ¬Å"In forthcoming novels I shall be trying to get more and more of an imaginative grasp on reality, to invent historyâ⬠, so that he lays naked the remainders of the post-apartheid system in an innovative style, skillfully inserting here and there several incidents, including sexual relations, that may be real or even personal, encompassing and resuming the aftermaths of the colonial experience. Brinkââ¬â¢s answer to the inevitable question:â⬠Why re-sort to fiction?Why reduce history to storytelling? â⬠is summarized in Rus sell Hobanââ¬â¢s famous dictum:â⬠We make fiction because we ARE fiction. ââ¬Å"Brink elaborated on this idea explaining that ââ¬Å"Whether one composes a c. v. for a job application, or reviews a day or week or year or a life traversed, or relates a crucial experience to someone else, or writes a letter, or describes an event-however one sets about it, it is inevitably turned into narrative. â⬠The will to power, to dominate the other race and prove oneself to be superior has its links with sensuality and chauvinism.At first reading, some sexual acts in the novel seem to be scenes of pure passion, but then, they turn out to be mere longing for annihilation. For instance, In the second part Mirror, when Steve, a black man, is provoked by the utterances of the seductive young white woman named Silke telling him ââ¬Å"your skin, I like very much how it feel, how it lookâ⬠he becomes infuriated since he considers her words as a racial Remarque that echoes past memo ries of racial insults that he heard earlier in the novel such as ââ¬Å"jou ma se swart poesâ⬠(=your motherââ¬â¢s black cunt) and ââ¬Å"these kaffirs think they own the bloody placeâ⬠.Consequently his reaction may be depicted as an attempt to free the rein of his wrath and avenge himself on the white race embodied in Silke, by conducting violent sexual intercourse saying that ââ¬Å"for the first time I become aware of what is happening inside me. Not passion, not lust, not ecstasy, but rage . A terrible and destructive rage. â⬠Moreover, racism is deeply rooted in social institutions such as marriage. As A. J. Hassall argues:â⬠In Brink's South Africa blacks and whites are seen as natural equals separated only by the uncompromising racism of the whites.In all his books Brink explores sexual relationships between blacks and whites and he portrays them as natural sexual partners who might be natural political and social partners if only the Afrikaner establi shment would allow it. â⬠This is perfectly illustrated in the example of the love relationship between a white man and a black woman in the first part The Blue Door, David Le Roux and Embeth, which is, even after the apartheid regime, still considered as a taboo kinship, completely rejected by Davidââ¬â¢s family; ââ¬Å"why should we allow our lives to be dictated by the unreasonable reasonableness of my family?If we love each other.. â⬠as David puts it. Added to its consideration as a racist attitude, Steveââ¬â¢s degradation of the white woman Silke may be read, as an act of political defiance, nevertheless, it fits only too well into the traditional master narrative of colonialism (ââ¬Å"Natives have a rape-utation,â⬠says Modisane, 1986), as well as the master narrative of sexism: the male who, in order to justify his aggression against and his ââ¬Å"possessionâ⬠of the female, blames her for provoking the attack, and for ââ¬Å"deserving what she ge tsâ⬠ecause of her innate libidinal provocation. This is best illustrated in Steveââ¬â¢s words to Silke ââ¬Å"if this is what youââ¬â¢re after, this is what youââ¬â¢re going to get. Fucking little white bitch. â⬠Speaking of colonialism, Mellor suggests that men are attempting to penetrate mysterious foreign regions where they do not rightfully belong.Ninaââ¬â¢s hair color turning into black, and the repetitive use of the words ââ¬Å"darkâ⬠and ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠in the final paragraph depicting Derek ââ¬Å"press[ing] [his] face into the fragrant and fatal darkness between her legsâ⬠calls to mind the notion of the exotic land reduced to the symbol of the female pubic hair which testifies for the mysterious south African jungles which should be discovered by white colonizer Derek. Feminists object to the depiction of women, in any respect, as a degraded sex, Objectified and reduced to serve the basic function of shoring up a man's ego.This machism o attitude is evident in Derekââ¬â¢s utterances:â⬠Come what may, Nina Rousseau, youââ¬â¢re going to end up in my bed. â⬠Symbolically speaking, it is widely known that white women represent power, so the more that you have of them the more you absorb that power into yourself. They also, of course, represent repression, so the more that you defile them the more you are fighting the battle and winning as Nicol puts it.This idea brings to mind Steveââ¬â¢s state of mind when copulating Silke, putting it into words: ââ¬Å"now it is turning into pain, she becomes terrified â⬠¦ while I feel myself growing in strength and rage. â⬠This is further illustrated in Modisaneââ¬â¢s words:â⬠Through sex, I proved myself to myself. I am a manâ⬠¦ When the trance of sex had passed and the pleasure exhausted itself out of my system there remained only the anger and the violence to repeat and indulge myself into a more lasting satisfactionâ⬠¦ Furthermore, th e stereotypes of the ââ¬Å"chaste white womanâ⬠and the ââ¬Å"potent black manâ⬠who acts violently, with or without a reason, are challenged by Brink. The recurrent image of the black male is that of a virile man including the assertion of one of the crudest myths of sexist racism, the size of the black penis and his manhood to which it is alluded in Steveââ¬â¢s discourse: â⬠bloody black stud (=virile)â⬠. This racial cliche is set off in contrast with that of the white womanââ¬â¢s spiritual superiority and ââ¬Å"absolute purenessâ⬠as Steve puts it.The terms in which the white woman is broadly described are based on an archetypal image borrowed from Camoens: ââ¬Å"the symbol of purity and light, saintly flesh, raped, violated by the brutal force of a dark continentâ⬠. In order to criticize this cliche, Andre draws an image of the impure Silke who surrenders herself to Steve pleading him to ââ¬Å"fuck [her]â⬠. Psychologically speaking, L acan perceives the other as the creative force in shaping the consciousness of the ââ¬Å"Iâ⬠.When joined at the hip with Sarah, David ponders ââ¬Å"you are my wife, but who are you? Who am I? â⬠He feels compelled to know her in order to know himself and apprehend his existence, in other words, as feminists assert, sexuality is the keystone of identity. To elaborate on this idea, ââ¬Å"Man's desire,â⬠according to Lacan (1977), ââ¬Å"finds its meaning in the desire of the other, not so much because the other holds the key to the object desired, as because the first object of desire is to be recognized by the other. Steve is inventing himself through the Other, Silke, who is, herself, a projection of his consciousness: his own identity, the raison dââ¬â¢etre of his actions and of his life, depends on the girl's approval and affirmation. Accordingly, he desires her so he can be recognized by her, and since ââ¬Å"she is looking at [him]. She is seeing [him]. As [ he is] now. As [he is]. But there is no shock or disapproval in her faceâ⬠, meaning that she does acknowledge him, he realizes his true identity.Contrary to Silkeââ¬â¢s sexual attraction to Steve, he notices his catââ¬â¢s repulsion. The widely known meaning of the hissing or scratching cat in dreams, is that this person ââ¬Å"feels rejected by women or that his current relationships with women are strained or that he feels the women in his life are unappeasable, not to be trusted, overbearing, or just downright mean in which case the dream may mean it is time to reassess his relationships. â⬠à This is exactly the case with Steve and the female cat Sebastian which ââ¬Å"draws her slender back into an arc and hisses at [him]. This may be explained by the fact that, when metamorphosed into a black man, Steve falls a prey to self-depreciation and speculates his wife Carlaââ¬â¢s rejection of his new ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠self. So, when he realizes the impossibility o f achieving any human or even nonhuman connectedness, he chooses to seek release through the powerful emotion created by the suffering of Silke, an emotion which simultaneously produces his sexual arousal. This can be proved psychoanalytically in Bersaniââ¬â¢s work analyzing Freudââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Three Essays on the Theory of Sexualityâ⬠in which he dentifies a counter argument running through Freudââ¬â¢s essays that ââ¬Å"sexuality [is] notâ⬠¦originally an exchange of intensities between individuals, but rather a condition of broken negotiations with the world, a condition in which others merely set off the self shattering mechanisms of sadomasochistic jouissanceâ⬠Regarding Derekââ¬â¢s unsatisfied and unstoppable longing for the sadistic Nina, The last erotic scene of the novel, when he gets stuck between her thighs, seems to be quite predictable, inasmuch, death will be the consummation of his passion.Bersani explicates Freudââ¬â¢s theory of the death d rive by arguing that ââ¬Å"if sexuality is constituted as masochism, the immobilization of fantasmic structures can only have a violent denouementâ⬠¦ masochism is both relieved and fulfilled by deathâ⬠.Isidore Diala refers to Andre Brinkââ¬â¢s viewpoint about the writerââ¬â¢s role in the post-apartheid South Africa, saying that:â⬠The dissident writer must awaken the Afrikaner to a sense of his potential for greatness and struggle aiming at liberating the blacks from oppression by whites, but also a struggle for the liberation of the Afrikaner from the ideology in which he has come to negate his better self. â⬠Main References: -ââ¬Å"Reinventing a Continent (Revisiting History in the Literature of the New South Africa: A Personal Testimony)â⬠By Andre Brink 2-ââ¬Å"Constructing Connectedness: Gender, Sexuality and Race in Mary Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankensteinâ⬠by Jessica Hale 3-ââ¬Å"CONCEPTUALIZING SEXUALITY: FROM KINSEY TO QUEER AND BEYONDâ⠬ 4-ââ¬Å"An Ornithology of Sexual Politics: Lewis Nkosi's Mating Birdsâ⬠by Andre Brink 5-ââ¬Å"Andre Brink and Malrauxâ⬠by Isidore Diala -ââ¬Å"PORNOGRAPHY ( VS) EROTIC FICTION (aka Why I Continue To Do What I Do)â⬠By Jess C Scott, 9 Mar 2011 ââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬â [ 1 ]. In her article ââ¬Å"PORNOGRAPHY VS. EROTIC FICTIONâ⬠, Jess C Scott gives a definition of erotic literature saying that: â⬠it comprises fictional and factual stories and accounts of human sexual relationships which have the power to or are intended to arouse the reader sexually. The emphasis of each is quite different.Porn's main purpose is to make money via adult entertainment; erotic literature tells a story. Stories that are realistic. Stories that make one think. Stories that ââ¬Å"dive into the depths of navigating gender, sexuality, and the lines of desireâ⬠(blurb from m yà first erotic anthology,à 4:Play). She illustrates her viewpoint by referring to Nabokov in the same Article explaining that ââ¬Å"Mr. Vladimir Nabokov said so succinctly inà an essay onà Lolita, ââ¬Å". . . Lolita has no moral in tow.For me, a work of fiction exists only insofar as it affords me what I shall call aesthetic bliss. . . ââ¬Å"He also writes that ââ¬Å"in pornographic novels, action has to be limited to the copulation of cliches. Style, structure, imagery should never distract the reader from his tepid lust. The novel must consist of an alternation of sexual scenes. â⬠Ultimately, She draws this conclusion: Lolitaà is more than a pornographic novel. Erotic literature is more than pornographic writing. â⬠Theme of Sexuality in Andre Brink ââ¬Ës Other Lives Brinkââ¬â¢s Other Lives: A Rewriting of history through eroticism The dissident writer's preeminent role, as Brink sees it, is to ââ¬Å"explore and expose the roots of the human condition as it is lived in South Africa: (.. ) With the fundamentals of human experience and relationshipsâ⬠(Mapmakers 152).That is to say, he aims, through narrating and referring to kinships, mainly sensual ones, at unveiling the racial practices of the past apartheid system which is, according to Merriam Websterââ¬â¢s Dictionary and thesaurus, defined as ââ¬Å"a former policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination against non-European groups in the Republic of So. Africaâ⬠in doing so, he makes use of erotic scenes between black and white people of both sexes. This essay tackles Brinkââ¬â¢s choice to make use of erotic fiction as an inventive way of writing history.Also, it deals with sexuality, in this particular novel, which stands as an epitome for racial, colonia l and political relationships between black and white people, as well as the numerous interpretations of the coitus either through symbolism or feminism or psychoanalysis. According to Brink ââ¬Å"the authorââ¬â¢s reinvention of history would involve a choice between two kinds of concepts, two ends on a sliding scale: namely, history as fact and history as fiction. He opts for fiction in this novel to rewrite the history of South Africa: ââ¬Å"In forthcoming novels I shall be trying to get more and more of an imaginative grasp on reality, to invent historyâ⬠, so that he lays naked the remainders of the post-apartheid system in an innovative style, skillfully inserting here and there several incidents, including sexual relations, that may be real or even personal, encompassing and resuming the aftermaths of the colonial experience. Brinkââ¬â¢s answer to the inevitable question:â⬠Why re-sort to fiction?Why reduce history to storytelling? â⬠is summarized in Rus sell Hobanââ¬â¢s famous dictum:â⬠We make fiction because we ARE fiction. ââ¬Å"Brink elaborated on this idea explaining that ââ¬Å"Whether one composes a c. v. for a job application, or reviews a day or week or year or a life traversed, or relates a crucial experience to someone else, or writes a letter, or describes an event-however one sets about it, it is inevitably turned into narrative. â⬠The will to power, to dominate the other race and prove oneself to be superior has its links with sensuality and chauvinism.At first reading, some sexual acts in the novel seem to be scenes of pure passion, but then, they turn out to be mere longing for annihilation. For instance, In the second part Mirror, when Steve, a black man, is provoked by the utterances of the seductive young white woman named Silke telling him ââ¬Å"your skin, I like very much how it feel, how it lookâ⬠he becomes infuriated since he considers her words as a racial Remarque that echoes past memo ries of racial insults that he heard earlier in the novel such as ââ¬Å"jou ma se swart poesâ⬠(=your motherââ¬â¢s black cunt) and ââ¬Å"these kaffirs think they own the bloody placeâ⬠.Consequently his reaction may be depicted as an attempt to free the rein of his wrath and avenge himself on the white race embodied in Silke, by conducting violent sexual intercourse saying that ââ¬Å"for the first time I become aware of what is happening inside me. Not passion, not lust, not ecstasy, but rage . A terrible and destructive rage. â⬠Moreover, racism is deeply rooted in social institutions such as marriage. As A. J. Hassall argues:â⬠In Brink's South Africa blacks and whites are seen as natural equals separated only by the uncompromising racism of the whites.In all his books Brink explores sexual relationships between blacks and whites and he portrays them as natural sexual partners who might be natural political and social partners if only the Afrikaner establi shment would allow it. â⬠This is perfectly illustrated in the example of the love relationship between a white man and a black woman in the first part The Blue Door, David Le Roux and Embeth, which is, even after the apartheid regime, still considered as a taboo kinship, completely rejected by Davidââ¬â¢s family; ââ¬Å"why should we allow our lives to be dictated by the unreasonable reasonableness of my family?If we love each other.. â⬠as David puts it. Added to its consideration as a racist attitude, Steveââ¬â¢s degradation of the white woman Silke may be read, as an act of political defiance, nevertheless, it fits only too well into the traditional master narrative of colonialism (ââ¬Å"Natives have a rape-utation,â⬠says Modisane, 1986), as well as the master narrative of sexism: the male who, in order to justify his aggression against and his ââ¬Å"possessionâ⬠of the female, blames her for provoking the attack, and for ââ¬Å"deserving what she ge tsâ⬠ecause of her innate libidinal provocation. This is best illustrated in Steveââ¬â¢s words to Silke ââ¬Å"if this is what youââ¬â¢re after, this is what youââ¬â¢re going to get. Fucking little white bitch. â⬠Speaking of colonialism, Mellor suggests that men are attempting to penetrate mysterious foreign regions where they do not rightfully belong.Ninaââ¬â¢s hair color turning into black, and the repetitive use of the words ââ¬Å"darkâ⬠and ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠in the final paragraph depicting Derek ââ¬Å"press[ing] [his] face into the fragrant and fatal darkness between her legsâ⬠calls to mind the notion of the exotic land reduced to the symbol of the female pubic hair which testifies for the mysterious south African jungles which should be discovered by white colonizer Derek. Feminists object to the depiction of women, in any respect, as a degraded sex, Objectified and reduced to serve the basic function of shoring up a man's ego.This machism o attitude is evident in Derekââ¬â¢s utterances:â⬠Come what may, Nina Rousseau, youââ¬â¢re going to end up in my bed. â⬠Symbolically speaking, it is widely known that white women represent power, so the more that you have of them the more you absorb that power into yourself. They also, of course, represent repression, so the more that you defile them the more you are fighting the battle and winning as Nicol puts it.This idea brings to mind Steveââ¬â¢s state of mind when copulating Silke, putting it into words: ââ¬Å"now it is turning into pain, she becomes terrified â⬠¦ while I feel myself growing in strength and rage. â⬠This is further illustrated in Modisaneââ¬â¢s words:â⬠Through sex, I proved myself to myself. I am a manâ⬠¦ When the trance of sex had passed and the pleasure exhausted itself out of my system there remained only the anger and the violence to repeat and indulge myself into a more lasting satisfactionâ⬠¦ Furthermore, th e stereotypes of the ââ¬Å"chaste white womanâ⬠and the ââ¬Å"potent black manâ⬠who acts violently, with or without a reason, are challenged by Brink. The recurrent image of the black male is that of a virile man including the assertion of one of the crudest myths of sexist racism, the size of the black penis and his manhood to which it is alluded in Steveââ¬â¢s discourse: â⬠bloody black stud (=virile)â⬠. This racial cliche is set off in contrast with that of the white womanââ¬â¢s spiritual superiority and ââ¬Å"absolute purenessâ⬠as Steve puts it.The terms in which the white woman is broadly described are based on an archetypal image borrowed from Camoens: ââ¬Å"the symbol of purity and light, saintly flesh, raped, violated by the brutal force of a dark continentâ⬠. In order to criticize this cliche, Andre draws an image of the impure Silke who surrenders herself to Steve pleading him to ââ¬Å"fuck [her]â⬠. Psychologically speaking, L acan perceives the other as the creative force in shaping the consciousness of the ââ¬Å"Iâ⬠.When joined at the hip with Sarah, David ponders ââ¬Å"you are my wife, but who are you? Who am I? â⬠He feels compelled to know her in order to know himself and apprehend his existence, in other words, as feminists assert, sexuality is the keystone of identity. To elaborate on this idea, ââ¬Å"Man's desire,â⬠according to Lacan (1977), ââ¬Å"finds its meaning in the desire of the other, not so much because the other holds the key to the object desired, as because the first object of desire is to be recognized by the other. Steve is inventing himself through the Other, Silke, who is, herself, a projection of his consciousness: his own identity, the raison dââ¬â¢etre of his actions and of his life, depends on the girl's approval and affirmation. Accordingly, he desires her so he can be recognized by her, and since ââ¬Å"she is looking at [him]. She is seeing [him]. As [ he is] now. As [he is]. But there is no shock or disapproval in her faceâ⬠, meaning that she does acknowledge him, he realizes his true identity.Contrary to Silkeââ¬â¢s sexual attraction to Steve, he notices his catââ¬â¢s repulsion. The widely known meaning of the hissing or scratching cat in dreams, is that this person ââ¬Å"feels rejected by women or that his current relationships with women are strained or that he feels the women in his life are unappeasable, not to be trusted, overbearing, or just downright mean in which case the dream may mean it is time to reassess his relationships. â⬠à This is exactly the case with Steve and the female cat Sebastian which ââ¬Å"draws her slender back into an arc and hisses at [him]. This may be explained by the fact that, when metamorphosed into a black man, Steve falls a prey to self-depreciation and speculates his wife Carlaââ¬â¢s rejection of his new ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠self. So, when he realizes the impossibility o f achieving any human or even nonhuman connectedness, he chooses to seek release through the powerful emotion created by the suffering of Silke, an emotion which simultaneously produces his sexual arousal. This can be proved psychoanalytically in Bersaniââ¬â¢s work analyzing Freudââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Three Essays on the Theory of Sexualityâ⬠in which he dentifies a counter argument running through Freudââ¬â¢s essays that ââ¬Å"sexuality [is] notâ⬠¦originally an exchange of intensities between individuals, but rather a condition of broken negotiations with the world, a condition in which others merely set off the self shattering mechanisms of sadomasochistic jouissanceâ⬠Regarding Derekââ¬â¢s unsatisfied and unstoppable longing for the sadistic Nina, The last erotic scene of the novel, when he gets stuck between her thighs, seems to be quite predictable, inasmuch, death will be the consummation of his passion.Bersani explicates Freudââ¬â¢s theory of the death d rive by arguing that ââ¬Å"if sexuality is constituted as masochism, the immobilization of fantasmic structures can only have a violent denouementâ⬠¦ masochism is both relieved and fulfilled by deathâ⬠.Isidore Diala refers to Andre Brinkââ¬â¢s viewpoint about the writerââ¬â¢s role in the post-apartheid South Africa, saying that:â⬠The dissident writer must awaken the Afrikaner to a sense of his potential for greatness and struggle aiming at liberating the blacks from oppression by whites, but also a struggle for the liberation of the Afrikaner from the ideology in which he has come to negate his better self. â⬠Main References: -ââ¬Å"Reinventing a Continent (Revisiting History in the Literature of the New South Africa: A Personal Testimony)â⬠By Andre Brink 2-ââ¬Å"Constructing Connectedness: Gender, Sexuality and Race in Mary Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankensteinâ⬠by Jessica Hale 3-ââ¬Å"CONCEPTUALIZING SEXUALITY: FROM KINSEY TO QUEER AND BEYONDâ⠬ 4-ââ¬Å"An Ornithology of Sexual Politics: Lewis Nkosi's Mating Birdsâ⬠by Andre Brink 5-ââ¬Å"Andre Brink and Malrauxâ⬠by Isidore Diala -ââ¬Å"PORNOGRAPHY ( VS) EROTIC FICTION (aka Why I Continue To Do What I Do)â⬠By Jess C Scott, 9 Mar 2011 ââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬â [ 1 ]. In her article ââ¬Å"PORNOGRAPHY VS. EROTIC FICTIONâ⬠, Jess C Scott gives a definition of erotic literature saying that: â⬠it comprises fictional and factual stories and accounts of human sexual relationships which have the power to or are intended to arouse the reader sexually. The emphasis of each is quite different.Porn's main purpose is to make money via adult entertainment; erotic literature tells a story. Stories that are realistic. Stories that make one think. Stories that ââ¬Å"dive into the depths of navigating gender, sexuality, and the lines of desireâ⬠(blurb from m yà first erotic anthology,à 4:Play). She illustrates her viewpoint by referring to Nabokov in the same Article explaining that ââ¬Å"Mr. Vladimir Nabokov said so succinctly inà an essay onà Lolita, ââ¬Å". . . Lolita has no moral in tow.For me, a work of fiction exists only insofar as it affords me what I shall call aesthetic bliss. . . ââ¬Å"He also writes that ââ¬Å"in pornographic novels, action has to be limited to the copulation of cliches. Style, structure, imagery should never distract the reader from his tepid lust. The novel must consist of an alternation of sexual scenes. â⬠Ultimately, She draws this conclusion: Lolitaà is more than a pornographic novel. Erotic literature is more than pornographic writing. ââ¬
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