Cuckold Fiction

Dsoul

Male
Real Person
Gold Member
From
Nigeria
Personal Photos.jpg

There are some histories we write, as well there are those too frightful to ever be put down on paper. Not because they won’t be believed, but we fear what society might gleam of it. What our standing in the world, before the eyes of many becomes. Till tomorrow, we’re never going to find out who designed the Egyptian Pyramids, what the world as like before the Dawn of Man, or if a man actually walked on water.

Is the world ready to embrace Cuckold Fiction? I would say Yes. However, the publishing industry hasn’t stumbled on this mark yet. And why? The overall reason would be fear. The steps made in the field of erotica fiction has never been a straight-forward one, neither has it been overall pleasant. Especially not in the United States where there’s still a hold been placed on freedom of speech & information. Take for instance the obscenity trails that happened in the sixties on works of fiction the likes of Henry Miller’s ‘Tropic of Cancer’, D.H. Lawrence’s ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover’, Vladimir Nobokov’s ‘*******’, and many more. It could be said that there was the changing tide of the Sixties’ Sexual Revolution taking place that led to such works becoming etched in the mainstream reader’s vocabulary. Who knows. But it’s even more surprising that such works were quite more embraced by publication houses in Europe than in the States.

So, what’s the fear inherent in Cuckold fiction ever taking its place in the mainstream market? Why does it keep its head hidden in the underground, waiting for its germination era? After all, there has been the rise in erotica publications with the likes of the ‘Shades of Grey’ series. However such works are still aimed at the female population. A large portion of erotic fiction takes a large portion of feminine quality, much like transporting the characters in an Emily Bronte novel and making them rather overtly sexual. Does this mean that erotic fiction isn’t meant for men’s readership? And if it isn’t, then why?

The answer partly has to do with porn.

It is an overt assumption that porn was created for the consumption of men’s salacious sexual appetite. And why not, since one of the major differences in terms of eroticism is that men are visual creatures, unlike women who respond more toward sensual stimuli. I would disagree.

Statistics have shown that women make up the largest readers of erotic fiction. Men, too, are getting involved in the mix. Not merely for the fact of they enjoy the erotic details, but most especially they they’re attempting toward becoming more self-aware of the feminine mysticism when it comes to sex. With a man, sex is pleasurable and straight-forward: take the woman to bed, fuck her brains out, and then leave. For a women, there happens to be a lot more. There’s the intimacy. The passion. The unbridled resolve of connection the physical aspect of sex with the spiritual. This isn’t something most men won’t want to know more about, except been the creatures we are, we weren’t programmed toward thinking in that mode.

Find the rest of the article here: http://philoyok.wordpress.com/2014/04/11/damien-dsoul/

Isn't it time Cuckold Fiction becomes a mainstream stay?
 
Dsoul, when you say "cuckold fiction", what exactly are you referring? Cuckolding, as I've come to understand it, is simply the sexual misadventures of married women. It has been discussed and covered by media for ages, just not defined/referenced as cuckolding until the past few years. No doubt, surveys and studies have shown that married women now cheat every bit as often as men, and often for the same reason, the lust of sex. Here, however, I sense you may be referring more specifically to the sexual misadventures of white, married women who desire sex with black men. Certainly infidelity is cheating (cuckolding), but your indirect reference to cuckold fiction hints to referencing one particularly small area of cuckolding.

I'm honestly just trying to get a clear picture of the cuckold fiction of which you speak, is all! Please don't take my question as a challenge or effort to debate, but with my particular understanding of a word, it makes reading more difficult if the writer has his/her own definition which is different from mine. Mac
 
Back
Top