scoreopf.blogg.se

Bonk roach
Bonk roach












bonk roach

That is just one of the many curious findings Mary Roach writes about in her new book, Bonk: The Curious Couple of Science and Sex, which examines the history of research on copulation. Roach bravely tries one out, while pursuing the cheery notion that masturbation might be good for your health.Eliminating polyester from your wardrobe may be a smart move if you're looking to attract a mate. If "clitoral erectile insufficiency" really exists, a female equivalent of the penis pump might help, by increasing blood flow to the clitoris.

bonk roach

She tackles treatments for impotence – everything from pumps and penile prostheses to Kegeling – as well as research into what might be the female equivalent of male erectile dysfunction. At one point, in the interests of science and reportage, she and her husband Ed try to have sex while being scanned by a researcher wielding an ultrasound wand. She visits Topco, a sex-toy manufacturer, where she's shown an array of plastic penises, vaginas and anuses, modelled on plaster casts of top porn stars. On this roller-coaster ride, Roach is soon off investigating whether orgasm boosts fertility, which entails a visit to a crack Danish pig unit where farmers sexually stimulate sows during artificial insemination to boost fertility rates. "It wasn't until the past half century that lab-based science embraced the pursuit of better, more satisfying sex." Yet even today, there's the unspoken assumption that "people study sex because they are perverts," says Roach. All are premised on the conviction that human sexuality is as worthy of scientific study as "sleep or digestion or exfoliation".

bonk roach

In her quest for the latest insights, Roach visits sex research labs in London, Cairo, and Taiwan as well as the US.

bonk roach

While she's sympathetic to scientists' desire to demystify sex and to help people with sexual problems, her sense of the ridiculous supplies regular doses of comic relief. Keenly attuned to what she calls the "cringe factor", she manages to describe the nitty-gritty of genitalia in action without making you wish she hadn't. Californian reporter Mary Roach puts her quick wit to good service in this entertaining romp through sex research, past and present.














Bonk roach