What Wild Ecstasy

What Wild Ecstasy: The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution
Cover
Author John Heidenry
Cover artist Archie Ferguson
Country United States
Language English
Subject Sexual revolution
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Publication date
1997
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 448
ISBN 978-0743241847

What Wild Ecstasy: The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution is a 1997 book about the sexual revolution by John Heidenry. The book received mixed reviews. It was described as interesting and Heidenry was complimented for his discussions of figures such as Bob Guccione, Hugh Hefner, and Reuben Sturman. However, Heidenry was criticized for his research methods, and was accused of plagiarism because of the use he made of material by other writers, receiving criticism in particular from the journalist Philip Nobile.

Summary

Heidenry discusses the sexual revolution. He writes that his aim is to "provide an entertaining, informative, and perhaps occasionally even shocking popular historical overview of all that has happened in the wide world of human sexuality in the last thirty or so years, with particular emphasis on its epicenter, the United States."[1]

Publication history

What Wild Ecstasy was first published by Simon & Schuster in 1997. Later that year, it was published by William Heinemann Australia.[2]

Reception

Mainstream media

What Wild Ecstasy received positive reviews from Barbara M. Bibel in Library Journal and Alex Abramovich in Entertainment Weekly,[3][4] and mixed reviews from Genevieve Stuttaford in Publishers Weekly,[5] the journalist Robert Christgau in The New York Times Book Review,[6] and the critic Roz Kaveney in New Statesman.[7] The book was also reviewed by Donna Seaman in Booklist,[8] the political commentator Mark Steyn in The Wall Street Journal,[9] the critic Liesl Schillinger in The Washington Post,[10] the journalist Will Hermes in Utne Reader,[11] and the political scientist Jean Bethke Elshtain in The Times Literary Supplement,[12] and discussed by Janny Scott in The New York Times,[13] Jeff Garigliano in Folio magazine,[14] and the journalist Scott Stossel in The American Prospect.[15]

Bibel considered the book interesting, well-written, and entertaining. She credited Heidenry with trying to provide a balanced account of the sexual revolution that presented the views of both its supporters and opponents, and with providing an "extensive list of sources."[3] Abramobich described the book as interesting and credited Heidenry with showing that, "sex, just like everything else human, is a muddle--both tonic and poison, self-fulfilling and self-destructive, transcendent and mundane, stunning and boring."[4]

Stuttaford described the book a "breezy popular history" that was, "Exhausting, colorful, by turns tedious and entertaining". She wrote that Heidenry "disconcertingly gives equal weight to magazine pornography, swingers' clubs, flesh films and sexual minorities, as if all these pheonmena were part of a great sexual awakening", but concluded that his book was "a highly informative survey nonetheless, filled with revealing intimate profiles" and "notable for its strong opposition to homophobia and its fair-minded analysis of gay and lesbian issues."[5] Christgau criticized Heidenry for relying on secondary research, writing that "especially in the later parts of his story, he is content to collate the reporting of others." He commented that, "What is most striking about this method is that it affirms the value of déclassé journals like Forum and Penthouse, Hustler and Screw, without whose uninhibited attention this material might have been lost to history." Christgau noted that there had been complaints from writers whose work Heidenry relied on, but believed that "he adds something to what he appropriates." He also wrote that, "There is a warmth to his book that is rarely apparent in the sex magazines".[6]

Kaveney credited Heidenry with providing useful discussions of the careers of Bob Guccione, Hugh Hefner, and Reuben Sturman and praised his "good index and thorough notation of sources." However, she criticized him for focusing almost exclusively on the United States, for relying on "urban legends and the self-promoting inflations of prosecutors and propagandists" in his estimates of the profits of the pornography industry, for failing to fully discuss scandals involving right-wing organizations, and for ignoring the "sex wars" within feminism. She described his account of the sexual revolution as "handy if over-simplified chronology", but wrote that, "The analysis is simplistic - all liberation leads to human liberation, the road to excess to the palace of wisdom and so on."[7] Garigliano reported on accusations against Heidenry made by the journalist Philip Nobile, who claimed that Heidenry had used passages from Forum and Penthouse in What Wild Ecstasy, as well as Heidenry's response to the accusations.[14]

Scott wrote that Heidenry had been accused of plagiarism by numerous authors, who wrote to Simon & Schuster to complain that he had taken "dozens of phrases, descriptions and ideas" from their work. Scott questioned whether Heidenry was actually guilty of plagiarism. She suggested that the portions of his writing that were similar to those of other writers were insufficiently unique to constitute plagiarism. According to Scott, while Philip Nobile wanted Simon & Schuster to recall What Wild Ecstasy, it declined to do so, arguing that the parallels consisted only of "purely factual" statements "available for all writers to use", although it did offer "to change future printings, crediting four articles Mr. Heidenry left out of his sources list." Scott also wrote that, "Heidenry said he decided to keep his source notes succinct because he was writing not for scholars but for the general public".[13]

Academic journals

What Wild Ecstasy received a mixed review from Sharon Ullman in The Journal of American History. Ullman believed that Heidenry made good use of his background as a magazine editor and wrote with "verve". She credited him with providing extensive material on Alfred Kinsey, William Masters, Virginia E. Johnson, Bob Guccione, Hugh Hefner, Larry Flynt, Reuben Sturman, and Marco Vassi. However, she criticized the "rather simplistic narrative thread" of his book, describing it as a "mess". She wrote that, "Heidenry is difficult to follow as people appear, events suddenly happen, and few connections are drawn." She maintained that his real interest was pornography, and that he neglected other topics; she described his chapter on homosexuality as "a dry twenty-page civil rights discussion", and also accused him of giving insufficient attention to women.[16]

References

Footnotes

Bibliography

Books

  • Heidenry, John (1997). What Wild Ecstasy: The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution. Kew: William Heinemann Australia. ISBN 978-0743241847.
Journals

  • Abramovich, Alex (1997). "The week". Entertainment Weekly (381).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Bibel, Barbara M. (1997). "Book reviews: Social sciences". Library Journal. 122 (5).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Christgau, Robert (1997). "The pleasure seekers". The New York Times Book Review.   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Elshtain, Jean Bethke (1997). "Danger in paradise. (cover story)". The Times Literary Supplement. 26 (4914).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Garigliano, Jeff (1997). "War of the words". Folio. 26 (9).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Hermes, Will (1997). "Mixed media: Books". Utne Reader. 81.   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Kaveney, Roz (1998). "Books". New Statesman. 127 (4380).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Schillinger, Liesl (1997). "40 years of fooling around". The Washington Post. 120 (129).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Seaman, Donna (1997). "Sex Talk". Booklist. 93 (14).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Steyn, Mark (1997). "The morning after". The Wall Street Journal. 229 (70).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Stossel, Scott (1997). "The rules (Book Review); What wild ecstasy (Book Review); The Janus report on sexual behavior (Book Review); Sex in America (Book Review); Last night in paradise (Book Review); Sexual ecology (Book Review)". The American Prospect (33).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Stuttaford, Genevieve (1997). "Forecasts: Nonfiction". Publishers Weekly. 244 (6).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Ullman, Sharon (1998). "Book reviews: Social sciences". The Journal of American History. 85 (2).   via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
Online articles

  • Scott, Janny (April 14, 1997). "Publishers Wonder if Workaday Prose Can Really Be Plagiarized". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
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