Bad sex Truth, pleasure, and an unfinished revolution

Nona Willis Aronowitz, 1984-

Book - 2022

"From Teen Vogue sex and love columnist Nona Willis Aronowitz, a blend of memoir, social history, and cultural criticism that probes the true meaning of desire and sexual freedom in today's age. At thirty-two years old, everything in Nona's life, and in America, was in extreme disarray. Her marriage was falling apart. Her nuclear family was slipping away. Her heart and libido were suffering from overexposure. Embroiled in an era of fear, reckoning, and reimagining, her assumptions of what "sexual liberation" meant were suddenly up for debate. It was in that moment of personal and political sea change that Nona turned to the words of history's sexual revolutionaries-including the writing of her late mother, earl...y radical pro-sex feminist Ellen Willis. At a time when sex has never been more accepted and feminism has never been more mainstream, Nona asked herself: What, exactly, do I want? And are my sexual and romantic desires even possible amid the horrors and bribes of patriarchy, capitalism, and white supremacy? Bad Sex places Nona's intimate history alongside her family history and other stories stretching back nearly two hundred years: those of ambivalent wives and unchill sluts, Free Lovers and radical lesbians, sensitive men and woke misogynists, women who risk everything for sex, who buy sex, reject sex, have bad sex and good sex. The result is a brave, bold, and vulnerable exploration of the enduring barriers to sexual freedom. This book lays bare the triumphs and flaws of contemporary feminism and also helps shine a light on universal questions of desire"--

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Subjects
Published
[New York] : Plume [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Nona Willis Aronowitz, 1984- (author)
Physical Description
321 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 291-321).
ISBN
9780593182765
  • Introduction
  • 1. Bad Sex
  • 2. Status Bump
  • 3. I Want This
  • 4. The Vulnerability Paradox
  • 5. The Vulnerability Gradient
  • 6. An Old Male Revolt in a Hew Disguise
  • 7. In It for the Dick
  • 8. The Fallow Period
  • 9. Fire Needs Air
  • 10. The Real Experts
  • 11. Good Sex
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bad Sex Essentials: A Selected Bibliography
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Journalist and culture critic Aronowitz published writing about sexual exploration, nonmonogamy, and feminism; she had been raised by a radical-feminist music-critic mother and a sociology professor father. No one was more surprised than the author when she found herself, at 32, exiting a suffocating and sexually unsatisfying marriage. This is her captivating road map to understanding how this could have possibly happened. She entwines her own experiences with a meticulous analysis of society and culture to explore the larger systems (white supremacy, capitalism, the patriarchy) and smaller trends (revenge porn, hookup apps, secretly misogynist activism) that encourage intimacy to fail. The result is an exquisitely researched, joyfully conversational take on sexual oppression and sexual revolutions throughout history, as well as a deeply heartfelt memoir. She references books, movies, and elections that changed sexual history--how they affected her personally and how they effected change in politics or culture. Aronowitz's endearing commitment to journal keeping offers readers exactly what she was thinking and feeling while navigating nonmonogamy, hot affairs, divorce, casual sex, betrayal, grief, and existential disbelief, often all at once, over the last decade. This genuine and generous emotional offering is sure to make readers feel seen and heard, too.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

For people burned out by everything from political assaults against gendered and sexual bodies to online dating and reality television, Aronowitz's title will surely elicit a laugh, a sigh, and a sense of recognition. The subtitle, though, is what takes the book from the personal to the polemical--the text delivers as much of the promised truth, pleasure, and revolution as it does depictions of what is bad about the current state of sex. Her chapter titles (which include clever nods to current practices related to status, desire, and the changing guises of patriarchal power structures) do not provide a linear trajectory but help readers move from "bad sex" to "good sex," with the extensive analysis of historical information, rhetorical tricks, gendered traps, and much more. For some, Aronowitz's prose style may feel too conversational. The danger of this is that it may also feel antiquated before the subjects she covers are socially addressed and no longer in need of a compendium like this. VERDICT Arnonowitz's chatty tone and corpuscular language explodes myths in ways that will help readers clearly recognize the lies they've been fed. Highly recommended.--Emily Bowles

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A writer reflects on the breakdown of her young marriage and the history of feminism, sexuality, and pleasure. At 32, Willis Aronowitz, the sex and love columnist for Teen Vogue, decided to end her marriage. One of her chief complaints with the union was the "bad sex" of the title. In the wake of her divorce, she embarked on a journey to discover what good sex would look like for her as a young, liberated feminist living in the 21st century. These circumstances led the author to the "broader question of what cultural forces interfere with our pleasure, desire, and relationship satisfaction." She turned first to the work of her late mother, the "early radical pro-sex feminist" Ellen Willis. The author narrates her mother's life engagingly: her escape from a stifling early marriage, questioning of monogamy, and later marriage, on very different terms, to the author's father, a "husky hedonist" who "had a reputation as a bed hopper and had trouble managing his often concurrent love affairs." Pre-divorce, Willis Aronowitz often "cringed" at the thought of her late mother knowing that her daughter remained in an "unsatisfying partnership" out of fear of "stepping off the heterosexual conveyer belt" at an age when many of her peers were settling down and starting families. Alongside her personal experiences, the author digs into the cultural history of marriage and sexuality, mostly through the lens of feminism, with a focus on the developments of the 20th century. Near the end of the book, Willis Aronowitz describes a visit to an erotic massage therapist where she struggled to orgasm. At the time, she writes, she found it "impossible to parse out my own motivations from the din of characters in my head, ranging from girl bossy pep talks to radical feminist rallying cries." While the author is skilled at synthesizing large swaths of social theory and her passion for the subject is clear, the historical sections are less compelling than the personal elements. A courageously frank, sometimes uneven hybrid of memoir and social history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Introduction In the last few days of 2016, everything in my life and in America was in extreme disarray. I was thirty-two years old. My marriage was falling apart. My father was a year out from a massive stroke that had changed both our lives. My forays into fresh pleasures had left my heart and libido suffering from overexposure. The country was reeling after that infamous election. I was constantly sniffling--from crying, and also from the sinus infection that had rudely shown up on top of everything else. I felt at sea, and not in the placid way, in the thrash-around way. I looked at the up tissues piled on my coffee table and between the cushions of my couch, and I had a strong wish to put my former life back together again, even though some of this turmoil had been my own doing. In more hopeful moments, I'd feel the elation of dispensing with fear and inhibition. I'd be grateful for this intervention and the chance to rewrite my story. But during those few days, when self-doubt filled up the lonely void between Christmas and New Year's, I wondered: Did I really blow up a relationship that lasted a quarter of my life, just because of bad sex? What even is "bad sex"? It's a cruel descriptor, both lazy and below the belt, an indictment of everyone involved. When people heard the title of this book, they assumed I would be discussing the nuts and bolts of the sexual act: stale technique and sexual dysfunction, low libido and the orgasm gap. To me, the mechanics of sex are important but limited. I'm far more concerned with the broader question of what cultural forces interfere with our pleasure, desire, and relationship satisfaction. And I'm particularly concerned with a dilemma recognizable to many women who fuck men: sex has never been more normalized, feminism has never been more popular, romantic relationships have never been more malleable--yet we still haven't transcended the binds that make sex and love go bad. We have not, for instance, succeeded in avoiding dudes who don't notice we're having a bad time, or notice but don't seem to care, or pretend to care but actually don't. We continue to deal with guys who cross our boundaries in some way, transforming bad sex (or even good sex) into something shitty and murky and scary. We still often end up indulging men's fantasies rather than our own. We're told that being vulnerable is the key to love and lust, and yet it's easier said than done. Even the most sexually confident among us sometimes hesitate to talk about all this, because we don't want to hurt our partners' feelings or seem demanding, because we want to appear as horny as we initially advertised ourselves to be, because the length of time it takes us to orgasm will spoil the mood, because we're physically or emotionally afraid, because too much is at stake, because we're simply not sure what we want. We still seem to face unpleasant consequences, both blatant and insidious, when we do talk about certain things that, even in the most progressive circles, are still treated like TMI. Of course, sometimes bad sex, or a bad relationship, isn't anybody's fault. It may be caused by incompatibility, a dearth of attraction, an absence of chemistry. For some, this kind of neutral, blameless bad sex is a relatively small thing, certainly nothing to end a marriage over. For me, though, bad sex was the gateway that revealed all kinds of other truths. It was the thing that eventually exposed the desires I was ignoring in favor of society's expectations, which led to a break in the hum of my life, which in turn forced the questions: What, exactly, do I want? And are my sexual and romantic desires even possible amid the horrors and bribes of patriarchy, capitalism, and white supremacy? This book is about the necessity, but also the complexity and absurdity, of answering those questions. They're questions I ask myself many times throughout this story, which mostly unfolds between fall of 2015 and the end of 2020. Even with very little distance from them, I think we can all agree that these years were a wild time to be alive in America, and an even wilder time for one's life to take a sharp turn toward the unknown. This has been a time of fear and death, but also of reckoning and reimagining. It's made me curious about other times in history that vibrated with the same transformative energy. About what I could learn from revolutionaries of the past who lived through moments when the norms of sexuality changed. Which is why, during that low point in winter, I turned to my mother for advice. Not literally, because she had died a decade before, a few months after my twenty-second birthday. My mom, Ellen Willis, a writer and early radical pro-sex feminist, was deeply involved in both the sexual revolution and Second Wave feminism, movements that were at once in harmony and in conflict. Her specialty was documenting the collisions of the personal and political, particularly when it came to sex. So I thought her writing might contain. . . not answers, exactly, but empathy, or articulation, orsome sort of guidance. I chose a 1989 essay called "Coming Down Again: After the Age of Excess." "It was the best, the worst, the most enlightening, the most bewildering of times," she wrote in the essay, about the dawn of the women's movement. "Feminism intensified my utopian sexual imagination, made me desperate to get what I really wanted. . .even as it intensified my skepticism, chilling me with awareness of how deeply relations between the sexes were corrupted and, ultimately, calling into question the very nature of my images of desire." The source of my own self-doubt, I have since realized, was precisely the double-edged sword of radicalization that my mother describes. Reconciling personal desire with political conviction is, frankly, a tall order. It's chaotic, maddening, grueling, confusing, and yet essential--an exquisite mess that propels this book's zigzag pursuit of sexual liberation. Alongside my own intimate history and my family history are other stories stretching back nearly two hundred years: those of ambivalent wives and unchill sluts, freelovers and radical lesbians, sensitive men and woke misogynists, women who risk everything for sex, who buy sex, reject sex, have bad sex and good sex. These are stories of pleasure, peril, safety, freedom, and the muddy paths that connect them all. Excerpted from Bad Sex: Truth, Pleasure, and an Unfinished Revolution by Nona Willis Aronowitz All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.