Kama Sutra is well known in Western culture, but it is not known that there are many other pornographic books in the past. Around the world, a perfect culture has an integrated gender-science-spiritual connection. A healthy life consists of a strong sexual life, usually combining breathing, exercise, ecstatic intimate skills, and "sacred" communication. And lifestyle improvements have promoted longevity.
From the earliest records, Japanese, Chinese, Persian, Arab, Indian, Nepalese, Egyptian, South Pacific Islanders and even many Native American tribes have well-designed institutions to encourage and promote High sexual behavior. Good, rich sex has many benefits. These books are about making love books, including couples' guides on kisses, strokes, love positions, attitudes, moral obligations, and more. Let's explore some of these cultures and "books." They developed it and continued to inform us even today.
Kama Sutra
A man named Vatsyayana wrote Kama Sutra in India between 200 and 400 AD. It was originally a verbal tradition and went through several iterations before it was written in the form of a maxim. Or short ' slang ' which introduces the art of love and relationship between young men and women. The original Sanskrit version has been translated many times, but its first translator was Sir Richard Burton, an adventurer and scholar living in Victorian England. He traveled, researched and translated many pornographic manuals, but today we rarely have his original translations, because at the time of his death [1890], his conservative wife burned the remaining translations and original manuscripts he had worked on. Only these few people survived.
Perfume garden
The Fragrant Garden was written in the 16th century by Sheikh Nefzawi in Arabic and translated by Sir Richard Burton. He completed the translation one day before his death. It includes many papers of different sizes and shapes of the penis and vagina [lingam and yoni in Sanskrit]. Accordingly, it details 35 types of languages and 38 types of yonis. Mainly written for men, it entrusted them to ask the woman to give her a happy guide. It also contains various types of teaching stories, using humor to earn points and includes many places to interact.
Ananga Ranga
Ananga Ranga was created in India in the 16th century by a man named Kalyana Malla and first translated by Sir Richard Burton. Although Kama Sutra was written for men and women, Ananga Ranga was written for her husband, not necessarily their wife. Middle-aged people in India are subject to more repression and strict punishment, and their wives belong to them. At this time in history to her husband. Ananga Ranga details ethics and ethics, temptation techniques, sexual behavior, hygiene, rituals and sexual spells, aphrodisiacs and other pornographic concepts. It pays special attention to the woman's learning to control her pelvic floor muscles to improve her husband's and her own experience.
The secret of the jade bed room
During the 28 years of Sui Dynasty, many porn books were written in China. Returning to Taoism has promoted prolific writing, including recipes for remedies, exotic positions, and counseling for love. These books include: the secret methods of ordinary girls, the gender handbooks of dark girls, the recipes of plain girls, the secret prescriptions of bedrooms, the principles of parenting and the secrets of the jade room. As with many societies that include pornography in their cultural heritage, the choice of words for books and lovers is symbolic. Jade Stalk means a man's forest tooth, and jade garden means a woman's yoni. Taoist practices such as ejaculation mastering and breathing exercises are widely disseminated and are considered to be health benefits and sexual aids.
Ishimpo
Ishimpo is a detailed medical manual that originated in Japan. Part of it is the erotic teaching manual for the culture, because in most Asian cultures, sex and health are intertwined. Similar to those in India and other parts of Asia, it describes sexual behavior between men and women as an important force in controlling the universe. It expresses the importance of using love as a force in nature that keeps the earth healthy and life around the sky and body. Taoism from China has an impact on books and culture.
Pillow book
In addition to the instruction manuals mentioned above, China, Japan and most oriental cultures have so-called "pillow books". These books are used by couples as erotic stimulants and as a reminder of the enormous potential of humanity. The 1001 "Arab Night" story translated by Sir Richard Burton is such a book. When a couple gets into chaos in terms of sex and sex, they can use them. Pillow books are decorated with beautiful erotic images, poems, writings and suggestions, and couples can share the passion.
In the past fifteen years, the availability of sexual behavior and erotic education books has become even greater. DVDs, books, audio programs and a growing number of seminars have spurred interest in expanding knowledge and investigating new, primarily stimulating practices. Teachers from many different traditions are emerging to provide these teachings to others. Even though the baby boomer generation has increased the sexual appeal of the strikers of the 1960s, the next generation has come up with the energy to investigate and re-examine the benefits and experiences of great sexuality. As the principles of mind/body/spirit promote today's enthusiasm for health, wisdom and consciousness, sexual tolerance is seen as the energy power behind the movement.
Orignal From: Kama Sutra and Beyond - sacred texts in ancient culture
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