tencrush: (ninja teaboy)
tencrush ([personal profile] tencrush) wrote2009-01-17 08:39 am
Entry tags:

So...

Apparently, yesterday was International Fetish Day. Who knew? Seriously, who knew? I'm international, and I've got quite a few fetishes, but I was unaware of this event. Next time, people, when instigating International Days for things we should be aware of and support, Advertise Moar. Speaking of advertising, here's my belated contribution to International Fetish Day, which also goes to show that advertising just isn't as fun as it used to be. Or marriage, for that matter.




In other news, I am disappointed that no one in the US who loves me has even vaguely offered to send me tasteless Obama memorabilia yet. What does a girl have to do?



Honestly, you people.
off_coloratura: (honeymoon's over)

[personal profile] off_coloratura 2009-01-18 08:33 am (UTC)(link)
Feminism is GOOD. Being treated as an equal by your partner and being able to CHOOSE what role you want to play in your relationship, as opposed to having it decided for you by society, is also GOOD.

Going hand in hand with the whole "spanking your wife" thing back then was the view of women as overgrown, capricious children, and that was why the blase attitude towards the husband keeping them in line by spanking them, and all the winky cartoons and ads and movie references. And sure, maybe some found it sexy. But all I can think of is how much that societal inequality made it tacitly ok for men to abuse women. I don't call that fun.
off_coloratura: (Ianto fetish)

[personal profile] off_coloratura 2009-01-18 09:01 am (UTC)(link)
Sorry for the overreaction; I'm a bit oversensitive on this, I think maybe because of that one "Kiss Me Kate" promo picture I was in that strangers were getting off on.

I think it's clearly meant to be comic exaggeration; stale coffee would not warrant a spanking even in the fifties (unless you were Ianto Jones, of course. Don't trifle with his coffee.)

I've seen it a lot, referred to jokingly, as a comic situation, in stuff from this time period. In "Kiss Me Kate," for instance, she's being a brat, he has had it, she's outraged and the situation is meant to be funny. Also, perhaps it was subtextual for naughty goings-on, a way to get around the Hayes act, "it can't hurt that much" sort of thing.