Why Fifty Shades of Grey Matters: On the social consumption of sin as spectacle & its exploitation in the marketplace

Vanessa Redgrave in Ken Russells The DevilsI've run across a number of erotica writers who've said they haven't and won't be reading Fifty Shades of Grey. In all honestly, this blows my mind. You can try to dismiss it, as many critics have, by calling it 'mommy porn'. You can deplore its writing style - lord knows, even die-hard fans don't attempt to defend the poor quality of the prose. But you can't ignore the fact that it has now sold over 20 Million copies in the US. In the UK it became the fastest selling novel of all time.

As writers in this genre, it is important for us to interrogate its success and to try and understand what it means for the genre, for levels of explicitness in mainstream fiction, and for the way publishers are going to inevitably behave in the light of it.

I have a theory.

Less than three years ago, some very prominent writers and agents in the publishing world told me, flatly, that there was no market erotica. It was unsaleable. It was a niche product that held little interest for them and would tick along at its own obscure pace. You can put sex in your murder mystery, or your sci-fi novel, or your romance, they said. But a straight-up erotic novel, with sexual desire as a central theme, was simply not saleable.

But they were wrong. I think that the rising levels of explicit sexuality in film, television, and the ubiquity of porn on the web meant that there was a large mainstream audience whose tolerance for and interest in fiction with heavy erotic content had been growing for years. And it is a comment on just how out of touch mainstream publishers have been with their market that, with a very few exceptions that were associated with individual authors, they did not cotton onto it. Many, many well written erotic novels, with good character development and credible plots, came across their desks and they slush-piled them.

Along comes Fifty Shades of Grey. A novel that started off as Twilight fanfic, and gained a considerable devoted audience within that context. Its author, E.L. James, is a retired television executive who had some advantages over most erotica writers. She knew a lot about the media landscape and the concept of 'audience'. She understood her own work as 'marketable property'. My guess is that she had a keen sense of how to pitch the work just right to convince publishers that they should reconsider their ambivalence toward erotica. But mostly, I think she had an instinctive understanding of how a mainstream public needed to find engagement with kinky sex, while providing them with a moral escape clause.

Fifty Shades of Grey does an interesting dance with the explicit. It revels in the details of the taboo of BDSM while seeming to condemn it. Like the torrid pseudo-journalistic pieces written about Tiger William's illicit affair, it whispers to a rather creepy corner of the mainstream psyche which has a propensity to enjoy the titillation inherent in a sin while, at the same time, censuring Mr. Williams for being such a faithless bastard.

And many, many readers love this. They can masturbate furiously to the scenes played out in the Red Room of Pain, while waiting for the heroine to cure Mr. Grey of his perversions.

I am reminded of the masses who enjoyed the spectacle of the Salem Witch Trials or denunciations of heretics during the Spanish Inquisition.

"She consorted lewdly with the Devil!" the inquisitor proclaims, partly for the judges but loudly enough to entertain the masses. He lovingly details the proof of her perfidy. The women gasp and feel a quiver between their thighs right before they all scream, "Burn the witch!" If you've never seen Ken Russell's "The Witches", based on the historical events of the trials of the witches in Loudun, France, in 1634, you should. He understood and then illustrated the eroticism and hypocrisy that plays out in these sorts of public discourse on morality and sin with an insight that few others have.

I don't think a large portion of mainstream society has evolved much since then. And for erotica writers, who usually situate themselves firmly in the sex-positive camp, this is very hard to comprehend. We write novels about how erotic experience and the exploration of new sexual territories helps us grow as individuals. For us, sex in a doorway. Very often our themes are about revelation, completion, redemption through experience. Not through shame or rejection or closing down our sexual options.

From the point of view of mainstream publishers, Fifty Shades of Grey is simply a very successful product. In the last year, in the editorial boardrooms in London and New York, large publishers have spent time analyzing the success of the novel and figuring out how they can get on the bandwagon. They may not be risk-takers when it comes to new literary product anymore, but they're damn good post-game quarterbackers. The moral dynamics that underlie FSOG will not have escaped them, nor will the poor quality of the writing.

If you had hoped to produce a 'better written Fifty Shades': "Thirty Shades of Grammar" or "Eighty Shades of Character Development" or "Twenty-Six Shades of Plot", I don't think your efforts are going to be appreciated. Publishers have proof that the vast majority of people who have bought, read and enjoyed the series simply don't care about the quality of the writing. In fact, its very hamfistedness may play a subtextual role in convincing the reader of Anastasia's innocence and her genuine desire to cure the perverted Mr. Grey.

Of course, in the over 40 million world-wide readers, some of them will wish for and seek out better written erotica. And there will be some who are emotionally and sexually honest enough to admit the BDSM in the novel was what drew them to it and felt unaccountably let down when the heroine finally succeeds in leading Mr. Grey into the vanilla light. It will not be a large percentage of them. And, consequently, there will be something upsurge in erotica sales for years to come.

But I don't believe it will be the explosion we are hoping for. I genuinely hope I'm wrong in this, but I don't think I am. Nonetheless, we may have gained a few more intrepid souls.
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Published on July 13, 2012 23:22 Tags: bdsm, fifty-shades-of-grey, public-morality, remittance-girl, spectacle
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message 1: by Remittance (new)

Remittance Girl eeek


message 2: by Lori (new)

Lori I definitely agree with you. At first I had trepidations because yes, how many times can we say it, she really did need a good editor to help her with this. Using the thesaurus and spell check on your computer document doesn't cut it. But, if I were an erotica writer, I would definitely be looking at the plot and characters of FSOG. How can a writer go wrong with 40 million copies sold? Obviously, there is a group of readers who may or may not read "higher level thinking" novels but if I was looking for an intellectual bender, it definitely wouldn't be FSOG, right? Categorize it where it belongs.

I am curious to see what comes out of academic papers as regards to FSOG. Cultural and literary theory is an interest field that could really dig into this along with WHY? is it so popular? I have grown to like the books although my first review did not reflect this because I was looking at it through a theorist's lens and being the natural editor that I am. But then I just relaxed and read it for pure pleasure. Much better. I do take offense to this being called "Mommy Porn". It brings to mind those giggly girls in the dorm room reading the "naughty" parts of Sydney Sheldon books! While the rest of us talked openly about it. Really? I feel like the "Mommy Porn" type of statement sets us back to a very prudish society.


message 3: by Remittance (new)

Remittance Girl I think we're still in a 'very prudish society.' How could it be otherwise? People are making a very great fuss over a very mediocre book packed with explicit sex scenes. And it's not as if there haven't been a lot of those around for the last 20 years or so. But none of them have had the sort of marketing machinery behind them that this one has. Which means a major publisher has never felt like putting their muscle behind an erotica book before.

I think the general public has been interested in reading explicit erotica for a while now, but haven't been aware of any.


Wicked Incognito Now Half of the women on my Facebook friends list read this series, and only admitted it on their FB wall after posting the caveat "I only read it out of curiosity" or "I liked the story, not the S&M elements" or something along those lines. The book is flying off the shelves, but it's still being read with guilt and shame.

The other half of my women friends are posting religious diatribes on the downfall of society based on the recent popularity of porn and how we must protect society from such evil influences.

Then there are my few genre reading friends, who have always gleefully and unashamedly read erotica and any other sort of book their hearts desired. We all bash the books with unreserved snark--showing a different sort of elitism, I suppose.

I would like to think that the Fifty Shades craze is tantamount to an opening up in society, but I think the way in which it's being received only shows that we're more apt to judge each other than ever before. And that society is a big bunch of zeitgeist loving lemmings. If everyone is reading The Da Vinci Code, Twilight, Harry Potter, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, or (GASP!) erotica, then that's what they'll all read.

I don't know if it's possible to find that magic formula which tips off the latest craze.

I think the general public has been interested in reading explicit erotica for a while now, but haven't been aware of any.

And even if you're aware of it, it takes a lot of dedicated digging to find the well-written stuff. If you're one who is already tied up with shame for even having the desire to read erotica, it's not likely you'll come to it easily.


message 5: by Remittance (new)

Remittance Girl Wicked Incognito Now wrote: "...society is a big bunch of zeitgeist loving lemmings."

Oh this made me laugh. Gorgeous turn of phrase!

Your comment on it being hard to find well-written erotic fiction is very well made. And I think it's fair to partially lay the blame on this at the door of the literary critics.

Erotica, as a genre, has been largely ignored by most critics - dismissed as being 'porn' in word form. It has meant that there was no exterior pressure to produce well-written works. So, I will freely admit that the literary standards of my genre aren't high. Some would say they are hardly there at all.

And perhaps one very good thing to come out of the success of FSOG may be that we begin to see the standard of writing rise. If everyone's complaining that FSOG is a badly written book, perhaps it will light a fire under the asses of erotica writers to say: I can write better than that.

It wouldn't be that hard.


Wicked Incognito Now Yes. There's definitely a positive in that. Also, more women may have discovered an interest in erotica that they weren't aware they had. If erotica gets more sales, then publishers will start supporting it with editors and marketing. It could be a good thing.

Just like the Twilight craze has led many more teens into reading and more publishers into marketing teen fiction, it's a gateway drug.


message 7: by Toni (new)

Toni Your article kicked ass! Thanks for taking the time to call it.


message 8: by Remittance (new)

Remittance Girl My pleasure. :D


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