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Real Live Nude Girl: Chronicles of Sex-Positive Culture

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Hop on the express train to sexual enlightenment with sex educator and self-avowed whore Dr. Carol Queen. Whether writing about the joys of being spanked into erotic bliss, performing in a red-light district peep show, partaking of the pleasures of the new safe sex clubs, or lobbying for the pro-pornography platform, Queen is an enthusiastic advocate for sexual pleasure.

215 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1997

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About the author

Carol Queen

44 books112 followers
Carol Queen is an American author, editor, sociologist and sexologist active in the sex-positive feminism movement. Queen has written on human sexuality in books such as Real Live Nude Girl: Chronicles of Sex-Positive Culture. She has written a sex tutorial, Exhibitionism for the Shy: Show Off, Dress Up and Talk Hot, as well as erotica, such as the novel The Leather Daddy and the Femme. Queen has produced adult movies, events, workshops and lectures. Queen was featured as an instructor and star in both installments of the Bend Over Boyfriend series about female-to-male anal sex, or pegging. She has also served as editor for compilations and anthologies. She is a sex-positive sex educator in the United States.

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5 stars
224 (42%)
4 stars
165 (31%)
3 stars
95 (18%)
2 stars
30 (5%)
1 star
13 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for K.
331 reviews2 followers
August 11, 2017
Made me realize I'm an unpaid sacred whore, and by that I mean the kind of love I exchange with men is a lot like the expansive, ritualized, circumscribed, creative, affectionate, un-shockable, divorced-from-the-rest-of-reality, mothering, but not-the-kind-you-bring-home-to-mama love of a devoted prostitute. Do I wish this were not the case? I don't know. Like a diagnoses, sometimes a name, a description of the shape of reality, is enough. I've always been fascinated with the lives of courtesans, concubines, and sex workers in general. I struggle with "traditional" relationships and am not at all sure I want what I'm supposed to want from romance. I love sex and feel my intimacies are profound, but I also feel I'm lacking in something important, never having been deemed an appropriate partner for a long-term stable relationship. In the face of what's expected of me, I feel like I am an incomplete woman and therefore less human because I have failed at securing a mate, and privately I feel like a powerful sad witch. There's a lot more to explore in that tension than belongs here, but this is the beginning of my response. I recognized much of my relationship to and feelings about sex in this book and I can't thank Carol enough for being bold enough to write it and being articulate enough to make it worth reading.
Profile Image for Robin.
222 reviews8 followers
August 28, 2009
No matter what your sexual proclivities, Carol Queen probably describes something you never thought of. This book pushed my boundaries. It made me reconsider my own assumptions about sex and the ways that I have espoused sex-negative messages from the dominant culture.
Profile Image for Incognita.
4 reviews
June 25, 2013
I met Carol back in May of 1997 at DreamHaven, she autographed this copy for me. It had honestly been a while since I popped it open, and immediately my book fell open to her epitaph of Bob Flanagan, aka the man known as the Super Masochist from the RE: Search books, a man who succumbed to cystic fibrosis and who did a lot of performance art centered around the transformative power of pain.

The kind doctor was seriously dropping science vis-a-vis sex positivity back in the 1990s. It still floors me how forward thinking and amazing she is, and here, sixteen years later, there's Pussy Riot, and Femen, and the conversation's still going in the right direction, and rape culture is a part of the national dialogue, and it gives me hope.

This woman, along with Susie Bright, and Pat Califia, and others, were pretty inspirational to me.
Profile Image for Erin.
16 reviews11 followers
February 23, 2008
This was a fascinating read. I have been passing it amongst friends since I finished it. A great reminder that our culture in the US restricts sexual freedom and that there is no such thing as "normal" in the world of sexuality.
Highly recommended. ;-)
Profile Image for Chloe Scotney.
4 reviews1 follower
July 19, 2020
RLNG is a text written in 1990’s America, so I was expecting that in 2020 England, there may be sufficient cultural disparities that I would have to navigate throughout this book. However, there is a plethora of issues present in these pages that are still eating away at our cultural sexual construct today.

Queen’s discussion around how absexuality infiltrates in a political sense is still so prevalent and worrisome. Like her, I have historically viewed pornography as something that “insults my politics, my intelligence and my sense of the erotic”. But what Queen does is challenge this deeply-held assumption, querying if feminist thinking and sexual liberation have to be juxtaposed.

I particularly enjoyed the chapter that ventured into the deficit present in hetero social structures; how they lack a parallel to the queer subculture (one that has such an open dialogue around sex).

I would recommend this book to anyone with strongly held beliefs or assumptions around sex work or who is simply curious about dipping their toe into the world of sexual taboo.
Profile Image for Coleen Singer.
Author 13 books18 followers
October 12, 2013
Another fabulous release from pioneer sex-positive educator, activist and author, Carol Queen.
I always enjoy her "shooting from the hip" style which imparts a great deal of valuable information in a fast-paced and light-hearted manner.

The publisher description pretty much sums it up, saying "Hop on the express train to sexual enlightenment with sex educator and self-avowed whore Dr. Carol Queen. Whether writing about the joys of being spanked into erotic bliss, performing in a red-light district peep show, partaking of the pleasures of the new safe sex clubs, or lobbying for the pro-pornography platform, Queen is an enthusiastic advocate for sexual pleasure."

I would recommend that book to anyone that is simply tired of "talking about sex" as a rather boring and academic monologue, or pushing some sort of post modern feminist agenda!
Profile Image for Tobi.
Author 17 books55 followers
August 26, 2007
An array of essays written by Carol Queen. Includes experience in the sex industry, queer theory, and comes up with a name for the sexual compulsion of conservatives who get off by condemning queers.
Profile Image for Jason Carpenter.
229 reviews28 followers
February 15, 2018
I thought this was a pretty amazing book. It had a very mind-opening effect on my view of sex. The author makes a defense for things like sex work and sexual fantasies that are viewed as immoral or just weird by most of society. She also addresses the history of various groups' views on these sorts of things, as well as the struggles of bisexuals to find a place of belonging. Carol Queen has helped me feel more secure about some of the curiosities I have had about sex and sexual fantasy and has made me interested in discovering more perspectives that, like hers, isn't always socially acceptable.
Profile Image for Xavier.
419 reviews1 follower
December 5, 2018
Very sex positive but there are a lot of generalizations. The observations are good and thought-provoking and I definitely agree with the idea that a lack of sexual education is extremely harmful to our youth and even people who have been having sex for years, including medical doctors!

My issue with this style of writing is that it feels like a stream of consciousness where statements seemingly come from thin air. The middle piece where she's describing her sex work was what I was expecting the entire book to be, but still good stuff all around.
Profile Image for Renetta Neal.
201 reviews7 followers
January 28, 2019
Mind expanding and such an open honest sharing....... I would say not for the narrow minded but then I think perhaps it is especially for them actually!
Profile Image for Rae.
11 reviews
November 12, 2022
4.5 stars.

a great introductory read to a lot of sex related topics/sex positivity. bit too many insensitive uses of schizophrenia however.
Profile Image for okyrhoe.
301 reviews84 followers
August 18, 2009
This is a challenging read, and I recommend it to anyone who thinks that they -so far- have an open mind.
Carol Queen presents her socio-political views in a personal, frank, and yet thorough manner (there are several pages of bibliographical references). I appreciate her positive view of sexuality, and her efforts to empower women, even if it is through a radical line of reasoning.
For a while I am tempted to go along with her unorthodox views on "sex work." But I fear that Dr. Queen is not taking into account the conditions of that line of employment for women beyond the borders of the U.S., conditions which are far more prevalent and far more problematic than the idealized ones she seems to have personally experienced, and which shaped her views presented in this series of essays. It's like capitalism - it functions to a satisfactory extent in the U.S. and Europe, but can often be an inefficient (and cruel) system when exercised elsewhere.
Yet reading this book has got me thinking, and I am now more willing to consider somewhat radical views of the conflict/controversy over sex as a commodity.
6 reviews
December 26, 2013
Read Queen for her candor, or not at all. I seriously debated whether or not I should include this book, because I find certain essays in it incredibly irritating. First off, she positions herself as a super-enlightened, progressive sexual thinker, but has absolutely no problem mocking straight men in downright cruel ways (ways that, if a man said the same about a woman, would earn him the unadulterated wrath of progressives). I don't take kindly to hypocrites, and Queen definitely qualifies, but you have to be impressed by her honesty in revealing her sexual tastes, some of which tend toward the extreme.
430 reviews
January 12, 2011
Awesome book, both theoretical and a memoir. I learned about "erotophobia" and "whorephobia," the existence of the sacred prostitute, and how exhibitionism can inspire someone to be a sex worker. I think it's really cool that Queen has both the practical knowledge of sex & sex work, as well as a doctorate in sexology. The only other person I know of with a comparable experience is Annie Sprinkle.

I would probably have given this book 5 stars if I didn't really dislike the essay on "absexuality," in which Queen's argument is based on unsupported arguments.
Profile Image for Sheryl.
190 reviews3 followers
August 29, 2007
I really loved this book and I don't seem to have my copy anymore!
It's a memoir of sorts of my favorite sex positive crusader, Carol Queen. She talks about her bumpy journey through various sexual identities, mirroring my own so closely sometimes that it makes me jump!
Very entertaining, frank, real writing. Read everything by her you can!
Profile Image for Loreldonaghey Donaghey.
152 reviews9 followers
August 25, 2010
Lots of interesting points of view. Our culture is uptight about sexuality. But, she could have been a little less crass and lewd and her point might have been better made. And it made me sad that the only thing she could say about her mother's death was that she wondered what her reaction would have been to her coming out.
Profile Image for Valissa.
1,248 reviews18 followers
January 11, 2017
"As I grew, I took lovers the way I devoured books: hungrily, expectantly, looking for information as much as pleasure."

"But the hunger that sexuality creates gnaws more in the brain than between our legs, and I would like to make a meal of that."
Profile Image for Rooks.
160 reviews
July 24, 2012
I'm not rating this three stars because I didn't like it, or because Carol Queen isn't an enjoyable and amusing author. I did and she is. I just . . . wasn't quite set on fire by it, and it's a bit dated. Absolutely a fun, interesting, and worthwhile read, though.
Profile Image for Ed Bierman.
96 reviews4 followers
December 27, 2012
Marvelously well written and inspiring this series of essays on sex-positive culture is a classic must read on the topic.. I was especially inspired by the chapter on pornography and the new age man and being true to ones desires.
Profile Image for Mark Farley.
Author 22 books21 followers
June 23, 2013
Carol Queen is a resounding expert on sexual freedom and the politics surrounding the still taboo culture in America. This is a smart and clever memoir that will turn your head and change your mind. Great anecdotal arguements and points that will dismiss the righteous.
Profile Image for Suzyn.
191 reviews38 followers
October 28, 2014
It is best read as a 1990's historical peice, and yeah, she goes a little far with the temple prostitutes thing, but well worth reading for Queen's perspective on where gender and sexuality was five minutes before the internet changed everything.
7 reviews
Want to read
May 25, 2007
I need to finish reading this actually...
Profile Image for Dana.
63 reviews
October 8, 2007
Reminded me of books I used to read for psych/sociology classes in college. Not quite what I expected but I enjoyed her view of the world.
1 review
Read
September 10, 2008
it was educheional cuzz i know more thing and i know how 2 eat a gril out
17 reviews7 followers
June 11, 2010
This book offers insight into most aspects of sexuality and its roll in our daily lives as well as culture at large. Some frustrating topics and opinions stated, but worth a look.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

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