28107
Author: Charles Pickstone
File Type: epub
Overview In this fascinating new inquiry into contemporary culture, Charles Pickstone, a priest, argues that the pervasiveness of sex in our society mirrors religions former glory. Indeed, according to Pickstone, sex has usurped religions position on the spiritual pedestal. In this time of increasing secularization, our traditional views of sex have fallen by the wayside. The religious right bemoans our so-called hedonism as a retreat from religion and values. Yet Pickstone challenges the belief that we have lost our spirituality and have become a world of lost souls damned for eternity. His book provides a sober and lucid response to our concerns about where our society is headed. Pickstone clearly demonstrates how we often describe sex in metaphors of natural, and even supernatural phenomena The earth moves, oceans swell, and storms rage. Moreover, Pickstone argues, we find in both sexual and religious passion the same transcendence of self that constitutes a spiritual experience. Barriers break down as we are transported to another reality of ecstasy and heightened experience.**From BooklistCurious about our all-consuming interest in sex, Pickstone--a vicar and an art critic--began studying the complex mythology of sexuality and concluded that sex has taken on many of the functions once performed by religion. That is a richly provocative thesis, and Pickstone, whose sound judgment, wit, love of intellectual adventure, and deep regard for human nature are palpable, approached his research with equal measures of meticulousness and enthusiasm. His basic argument is that the steady secularization of religion has all but eliminated avenues of heightened spiritual experiences and that the intrinsically human need for transcendence and ecstasy has been channeled into our visions of sexuality. That has engendered much conflict, romanticization, and frustration. Pickstone examines each facet of obsession in his deft analysis of the portrayal of sex in art, literature, philosophy, psychology, and pop culture, offering fresh and intriguing perspectives on the link between spiritual and sexual development, sex and nature, sex and the concept of holy matrimony, and sex as paradise and hell. Donna SeamanFrom Kirkus Reviews An oddly pinched view of the eternally provocative combination of religion and sex that does little justice to either, especially the latter. That sex is the new religion of the 20th century is reasonable enough as a casual observation, but Pickstone, an Anglican vicar, attempts to show such a general statement to be literally true. Reading often like a letter home from a Victorian autodidact transported into the late 20th century--and not always even that far--The Divinity of Sex, while proclaiming sex to be the new opiate of the people, engages with it only on a curiously abstract and conventionally idealized level. Spurning any investigation of actual sexual practices and attitudes, Pickstone mixes together material drawn from an unrepresentative sample of literature (especially D.H. Lawrence) and popular culture with snippets of secondhand psychology meant to represent society at large. From this grab bag of examples he draws a string of generalizations. By turns self-consciously open-minded and censorious, these observations culminate in a vague and sober call for a proper appreciation of the codesacredness of sex. In the service of this thesis, distinctions between love and sex, or between relating to another person and to some transcendentcodeother, are routinely elided. Worse, as practically any concern with existence, identity, consciousness, or even our corporeal nature is defined as essentially ``religious, most modern activities turn out to be new religions--including sports, art, fashion, dance, and environmentalism. The books own evidence, especially its strongest point about the importance of the body in the post-religious imagination, simply makes it increasingly clear that secularization marks a change in self-perception much more fundamental than a new faith in sex (and that sex has always had a charged relationship with religion). Exhausting a useful metaphor, Pickstone inadvertently leaves the impression that within this momentously changed worldview, sex is probably just sex, and spirituality something else entirely. -- 1997, Kirkus Associates, LP.
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1 year ago
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application/epub+zip
English