Register Now!
Link To: Home
 
featured personal

search articles

media blogs

  • scanner
    scanner
  • screengrab
    screengrab
  • modern materialist
    the modern
    materialist
  • 61 frames per second
    61 frames
    per second
  • the remote island
    the remote
    island
  • date machine
    date
    machine

photo blogs

  • slice
    slice
    with
    transgressica
  • paper airplane crush
    paper
    airplane crush
  • autumn
    autumn
  • brandonland
    brandonland
  • chase
    chase
  • rose & olive
    rose & olive
Rose & Olive
Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other’s lives.
Scanner
Your daily cup of WTF?
Date Machine
Putting your baggage to good use.
The Modern Materialist
Almost everything you want.
Autumn Sonnichsen
A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Chase
The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Hooksexup's TV blog.
61 Frames Per Second
Smarter gaming.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Slice
Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: Transgressica.
Paper Airplane Crush
A San Francisco photographer on the eternal search for the girls of summer.
Brandonland
A California boy in L.A. capturing beach parties, sunsets and plenty of skin.

new this week
Very Hard to Please by Giovanni Cervantes
Whiplash girlchild in the dark. /photography/
Dating Advice From . . . Screenwriters by Kathryn Savage
Q: What are the cons of making a sex tape? A: Reading the Xtube reviews. Those folks can be harsh!
Dating Confessions by You
"Unbelievably smitten, but completely unable to read you. Can't you just give me a sign?"
Q&A: Daniel Bergner by Jack Murnighan
The author of The Other Side of Desire on exploring the far reaches of sexuality. /dispatches/
Slice by Transgressica
Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: Transgressica. /photography/
Miss Information by Erin Bradley
My boyfriend versus my bisexuality. /advice/
Horoscopes by the Hooksexup staff
Your week ahead. /advice/
Snipped by Karen Dietrich
Would my husband's vasectomy rejuvenate our sex life? /personal essays/
 DISPATCHES

  Send to a Friend
  Printer Friendly Format
  Leave Feedback
  Read Feedback
  Hooksexup RSS
A foot fetishist, a female sadist, a child molester and an amputee "devotee" — these are the protagonists of Daniel Bergner's new book The Other Side of Desire, an exploration into various atypical forms of "lust and longing." In what could have been the worst kind of leering anthropology, Bergner instead finds compassion, sympathy and even commonality. He calls the stories in the book "autobiographical," and the book makes clear that its subjects will provide all of us with convex mirrors reflecting our own sexual desires and practices.

Even amid the sometimes-destructive impact of what sexologists call "paraphilias" — sexual "disorders" that most of society (and this interviewer too, accidentally) often call deviant — Bergner also envies the intensity of feeling that accompanies them.


promotion
Bergner's book is an exploration of the people, stories and science behind paraphilias. It raises the questions of where our desires come from and what to do with them once they're there, but Bergner (and the scientists he cites) know that there are no easy answers. An adapted excerpt from his book entitled "What Do Women Want?" appeared recently as a cover story for the New York Times Magazine, but, like The Other Side of Desire as a whole, it's more concerned with exploring our questions about sexuality than with resolving them. Anecdote, authorial intuition and scientific research all tell us that sex might just be as big a mystery as we always thought it was.

I sat down with Bergner the other day and got him talking on his hunches about nature versus nurture, on whether porn hurts or helps, on what inspired or scared him and on the redemptive power of love. More about Daniel and his work can be found at danielbergner.com. — Jack Murnighan

"There was an almost immediate effect on me after spending a weekend among them."
Sex and sexuality tend to prompt so much gawking, I was impressed that your book moved beyond the anthropological and became quite intimate.
I feel like these stories are autobiographical, though that may sound strange to say. They are about states of longing, and they are about people fighting cultural constraints, cultural codes. Even for the most mainstream of us experience those things — think about the monogamous rules of marriage. Dismiss Freud if you like, but we all have an erotic layer, a powerful force inside us, a central force. And whatever we do with it — push it to the side, tamp it or live with it consciously — we are dealing with constraints and codes. Here are four really dramatic examples, and I felt in their stories a way to get to something, to some deeper understanding.

You continually address the question of inherency — nature versus nurture. Do you think that people are born quote-unquote deviants, with hardwired inclinations, or are they triggered culturally or experientially?
How we come to be who we are sexually was a question I wanted to address, not only by spending time with scientists but by telling stories. I spent time with scientists who were going so far as to take MRI images of the brain and literally point to distinctions in certain areas that they felt were correlating to differences in erotic direction. But the impact of culture is also clear in large and small ways. At the other end of the extreme of the debate is a really interesting set of studies by an anthropologist who spent time in Papua New Guinea and watched young men grow from homosexual relationships to heterosexual ones according to a sort of cultural script. His research points to the malleability of who we are sexually. On a much more personal note, I spent time in a lot of alternate sexual worlds with people who just see sex differently than I do. There was an almost immediate effect on me after spending a weekend among them: I would begin to see as they see. It wasn't a complete change — I'm still basically the vanilla guy that I am — but it does have its effect. You can feel how we're affected by our surroundings.


           






RELATED ARTICLES
Sex Sells, But Who's Buying? by Emily Farris
How a billion-dollar industry faces the recession.
Dear Sean Hannity by Steve Almond
I'm attracted to you.
This Too Shall Pass by Caitlin MacRae
Why California's gay-marriage ban is history.
Obama in the History Books by Ken Mondschein
Our resident scholar looks back from 2026.
Everyone Pays For Sex by Kate Carraway
But how much? We asked nine people to keep track for a month.
Am I A Gold-Digger? by Emily DePrang
I asked some friends to render judgment.
promotion


partner links
Important Things with Demetri Martin
Wednesdays 10:30/9:30c
The Other Side of Desire
Four Journeys Into the Far Realms of Lust and Longing
VIP Access
This click gets you to the city's hottest barbells.
The Position of The Day Video
Superdeluxe.com
Honesty. Integrity. Ads
The Onion
Cracked.com
Photos, Videos, and More
CollegeHumor.com
Belgian Nun Reprimanded for Dirty Dancing
Fark.com
AskMen.com Presents From The Bar To The Bedroom
Learn the 11 fundamental rules to approaching, scoring and satisfying any woman. Order now!
sponsored links

Advertisers, click here to get listed!


advertise on Hooksexup | affiliate program | home | photography | personal essays | fiction | dispatches | video | opinions | regulars | search | personals | horoscopes | retroHooksexup | HooksexupShop | about us |

account status
| login | join | TOS | help

©2009 hooksexup.com, Inc.