Erotic

In Greek Mythology, Eros is the god of love, known by the Romans
under the name of Amor. Eros was the son of the goddess of beauty
and love, Aphrodite, and Ares, the Greek god of war; thus, bow
and arrow were in his blood from the outset.
In the Modern Greek language erotic
means devoted love. In German and in French this definition does
not quite fit. Erotic can be connected with love but also has a
physical component which is often associated with sexual aspects.
It also has an intellectual component: Eroticism is something one
has to be aware of, something for the literate, for lovers – conscious
sex, so to speak, that is more than just the physical act of sex
between two or more persons. In English the word “sex” is also used
to denote gender, and this ambiguity of meaning has led to the use
of the word erotic to describe those aspects which in German could
be described as sexual or pornographic. In the English language
therefore, the word erotic always has an indecent component, whereas
in German and French it has more of an intellectual aspect.
Eroticism is expressed by the body.
In Morocco , Kenya and the Brazilian rain forests where their cultures
do not know the word erotic, I translated eroticism as a feeling
one becomes aware of as one enters the adult world. This feeling
is dependent upon a stimulus. The stimulus must be sufficient to
trigger an erotic reaction: it must exceed a certain level so that
a reaction is perceivable, for example an increased flow of energy
and/or blood to certain parts of the body. Increasingly in this
age of television, computer, video and cinema, the stimulus is very
often visual e.g. a particularly attractive person or a part of
their body. Erotic reactions can however also result from music,
touch, smell, speech or memory.
The person who reacts to the erotic
stimulus is immediately confronted with the question of how to deal
with it: should it be accepted and experienced or should it be suppressed?
The decision has to do with the control over one's own body as well
as the control exercised by other people such as one's partner or
society. In history, the control a woman had over her body was increasingly
dominated by the question of sexual abstinence, whereas the control
a man exercises over his body is manifold. Man in general embodies
control or power – not every man, but most men still more than most
women. Whether it is in sport, fighting, hunting, making or intellectual
exercise many men exert control and power over others and/or over
their bodies daily.
In a matriarchy, the woman is highly
valued as the source of fertility and life. The family is centred
around the mother. Only after private ownership began to be differentiated
from communal ownership and other people's property became desirable
– i.e. as systematic livestock herding became more widespread as
it did relatively early in the middle east – did the question of
paternity of a child become relevant due to the question of inheritance.
One's possessions should be passed onto one's own child, and property,
as far as livestock and land was concerned, was passed onto male
descendents. Just as nature became subordinated to private ownership,
i.e. livestock and grazing land, the same applies to the body, to
begin with the woman's body. A man needed to ensure that a woman
only bore his own children.
Our body is for ourselves the most
personal primordial nature that we know – the body is pure nature.
If our relationship to our body changes, then so does our relationship
to nature. The moment that woman, and with her her body, became
subject to ownership, she became an object. In man's expanding control
over nature, the woman became as much an object as the earth, trees,
mountains and animals. With her, others became increasingly forced
to carry out unpleasant tasks. Slavery and serfdom became commonplace
and with it war.
When we think of the expulsion from
paradise as described in The Bible we remember the Tree of Knowledge.
Knowledge makes people equal to God and God punished the people
for this: Man should toil by the sweat of his brow; Woman should
bear children under pain. When the white settlers in North America
saw the women of the indigenous people happily working in the field,
it appeared so unbearable to them that the only solution for them
was to extinguish that culture.
The expulsion from paradise is not
only about the realisation, understanding and knowledge that man
gained and the more equal relationship to God, but the expulsion
from paradise also changed man's relationship to nature. Whereas
in paradise harmony with nature enabled the healing powers of nature
to be harnessed, the process of exploitation of nature transformed
naturopathy to a science. And science is power. Women and shamans
were not part of this science and, fearing competition, thousands
of years of knowledge were banned and burnt.
Democracy, the enforcement of majority
rule over domination by a minority, put an end to arbitrary exploitation.
The process of democratisation in the world is not yet complete
and there are many forces unwilling to submit their privileges without
resistance. The democratic rule of law established a system in which
it is possible to live in peace with one another, and this provides
a better chance for common sense to prevail over egotistical forces.
Democracy offered and still offers women an equal chance to take
part in society.
However, only the birth control pill
and legal abortion first brought women full liberation. A woman
can direct her own life – she can decide if, when and with whom
she wants to have children. In this respect it is not surprising
that the US government exerts force on development organisations
working with their US-Aid development agency, so that they promise
not to actively propagate the birth control pill or its distribution.
Without signing this agreement they do not receive monetary support.
This government is still unwilling to give up its power over women's
choice and their bodies. Instead of respecting nature they seek
to dominate nature through exploitation.
Democracy offers women respect. It
helps provide them with statutory protection against violence. She
may earn her own upkeep and that of her children and is therefore
freed from dependency upon others. She changes from object to subject,
from dependency to active participation.
As more women began to actively take
part in working life, woman enters into competition with man. She
cannot expect to be welcomed with open arms. After all she lays
claim to privileges which for thousands of years have been male
privileges and have become part of their nature. Woman does not
yet exercise equal rights in all areas of decision-making and influence,
whether in committees, the media, politics or instruments of the
state. The gradually increasing influence of women in a democracy
can be supported by solidarity between women and between those men
who do not feel threatened by the increased participation of women
in society.
Private ownership formed the basis
upon which exploitation of nature became a principle. Connected
with this and in parallel stereotypes began to form: what do we
associate with a woman when we see or hear her? What do we associate
with a man? These are subconscious processes informed by an age
of tradition. When we allow stereotypes to direct our behaviour
we do not react to the actual person but to an idea of them as given
by a stereotype. Stereotypes dominate our perception. With the increased
participation of women in the male domain, these stereotypes no
longer fully apply and become a burden and an obstacle. This can
be grasped as a chance for everyone.
If
we are able to better respect reality, we can better respect nature.
An increased interest in all aspects of reality enables women to
contribute their knowledge of reality, to introduce their experiences,
to add their knowledge. A holistic approach can increasingly replace
exploitation, not just out of necessity but also because a majority
may come to believe in it. And what is particularly motivating is
the fact that every single one of us is able to make a contribution
in this process. Everyone is important.
