'Self-Help' Movement
As the seventies began, the search for self-awareness became an
increasingly mainstream concept. After the rampant consumerism of the
50's and early 60's, and the tremendous social upheaval of the last
few years, westerners believed that the solutions to their problems
lay in "finding themselves".
As a result, many self-help movements - from Werner Erhard's EST to
Transcendental Meditation (or "TM") - became extremely trendy.
America's struggle to come to terms with the thorny issues of
sexual revolution and women's liberation was reflected by books on the
best-sellers list. Dr David Reuben's Everything You Always Wanted
To Know About Sex, J's The Sensuous Woman,
Kate Millet's Sexual Politics, and Dr William H Masters
and Virginia Johnson's Human Sexual Inadequacy
were some of the books on the country's nightstands and bedside
tables.
Published in 1973, The Joy Of Sex by Alex Comfort, was much
more exciting and enlightening, and became the sex manual of choice
for liberated 70's couples. The runaway success of the book inspired a
1974 sequel, imaginatively tilted, More Joy of
Sex. |