Before the Sexual Revolution

Elizabeth Taylor wrote before the sexual revolution, and as a result her understanding of sexuality is a lot less prim, prudish and mechanistic than ours. Her writing is the polar opposite of crude but she still conveys a whole philosophy of sexuality that is wider, deeper and greater than whatever we ended up with after the 1960s.

There’s a short story in the collection titled mischievously, if a tad blasphemously, “For Thine Is the Power” that explains the whole mechanics of overheated, unloved women making #MeTootie accusations. Obviously, nobody called them that then but the phenomenon always existed. The story appears to be Taylor’s first ever published work, and it’s incredible to see such a mature portrayal of sexual confusion from a beginning writer.

Then there’s a story of another overexcited young woman who imagines that her 7-year-old student is trying to seduce her. There are no crude, physiological descriptions but the story makes it very clear what creates the unhealthy dynamic and where it can lead.

2 thoughts on “Before the Sexual Revolution

  1. I learned about Elizabeth Taylor from Kingsley Amis, who was her biggest champion – as well as an outspoken critic of modern feminism, for which he was labeled a misogynist, fascist, etc. I love Taylor’s novel Angel.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Anonymous Cancel reply