Bohuslav Brouk: On Pornophilia

Those who conceal their sexuality despise their innate abilities 
without ever having risen above them. Though they reject human 
mortality, they arc incapable of liberating themselves from the 
lugubrious cycle of life - made possible and guaranteed by the 
genitals -  to achieve the immortality of the mythical gods. And 
though they have created the illusion of their own immortality, 
thereby ridding their behavior and even their psyche of any 
sexual character, they will never eliminate the corporeal proof 
of their animality. The body will continue to demonstrate 
mortality as the fate of all humans. It is for this reason that 
any reference to human animality so gravely affects those who 
dream of its antithesis. They take offense not only at any 
mention of animality in life, but in science, literature, and 
the arts as well, as this would disturb their reveries by 
undermining their rationalist airs and social pretensions. By 
imposing acts both excremental and sexual on their perception, 
their superhuman fantasies are destroyed, laying bare the vanity 
of their efforts to free themselves from the power of nature, 
which has, in assuming mortality, equipped them with a sex and 
an irrepressible need to satisfy its hunger.

There is nothing as intensely dispiriting for those who have 
sublimated the substance of the body than their animality 
spontaneously making its presence felt. Just consider how the 
signs of uncontrollable shits deject the hero during a triumphal 
campaign, or how painfully the nabobs bear their sexual 
appetites towards their despised inferiors.  Nothing but the 
body pulls these haughty folk back to animality, disillusioning 
their superhuman self-confidence. The bodily processes they are 
unable to shake free of have become their Achilles heel, whose 
sensitivity has been superbly exposed by pornophiles.

The nature of pornophilia is at heart militant and sadistic. 
Through their activities pornophiles attack any mode of 
non-animality used by people to elevate themselves over 
pornophiles. In pointing to human nature, they sweep away all 
pretensions of human inequality while at the same time 
proceeding from a new criterion: the creation of new castes 
distinguished not by social standing but by vital potency.  
Pornophilia thus collapses the illusions the exalted harbor of 
their divine nature while exposing their physical decrepitude, 
the inferiority that they have brought upon themselves through 
their contempt for the body. The body is the last argument of 
those who have been unjustly neglected and ignored; it 
demonstrates beyond debate the groundlessness of all social 
distinctions in comparison to the might of nature. With the body 
pornophiles not only abolish social barriers, through the vigor 
of the non-incapacitated body they also elevate themselves above 
those who scorn them in return. From this perspective 
pornophilia could, above all, serve as a potent weapon for the 
socially weak, the materially and culturally oppressed, who 
might, in this context at least, assert their strength and 
significance through the potency of their undegenerate body. It 
is therefore understandable that those who succumb to 
pornophilia are of a more revolutionary bent than those mired in 
the prejudices of the moribund bourgeoisie.

Pornophiles use sadistic methods to attack the inflated psyches 
of the ruling peacocks. Finding their dreams frustrated, those 
thus attacked counter in like manner with a sadistically 
motivated prudishness, a puritanical persecution of the 
"depraved". One can discover for oneself the reason for the 
emergence of pornophilia: When in the company of these flatulent 
snobs one will have the overwhelming urge to disrupt their 
prevailing idiotic idyll by roaring "shit, piss, fuck" and so 
forth.

The primal reason for employing obscenity cannot be disguised 
even in the primitive expression of those barbarians who to this 
day draw the familiar diamond-shaped pattern and phallus on the 
walls of a metropolis. If the sadistic impulse of their displays 
is not directed at the socially conceited, it is aimed at women, 
at their inferior, memberless sexual organ, threatened with 
punishment by the penises represented in colossal drawings and 
sculptures. Present-day pornophilia - whose psychological value 
lies in the manifestation of obscene works and expression, not 
in their anxious concealment - has, however, become a weapon 
even against those of the same sex, unjustifiably inflated 
though they might be. In other words, it tends towards 
misanthropy rather than misogyny.

Inasmuch as the biological consequences of one´s sex ultimately 
adversely affects pornophiles as well - as even they, too, 
prefer to deny their mortality - the predilection towards 
pornophilia assumes a particular characteristic that camouflages 
the general unpleasantness of being reminded of one´s animality. 
In this specific context, a work of obscenity may serve as a 
surrogate to sexual gratification, as a direct sexual charge. If 
of an artistic nature, it retains its militancy, albeit in an 
especial sense. The sadistic character of pornophilic works, 
particularly those that are works of art, is of course usually 
latent, hidden in the authors subconscious, without it ever 
reaching the level of consciousness proper; a similar meaning is 
apparent in the vehement aversion puritans show towards it. The 
true motives for their actions are as unknown to pornophiles as 
they are to puritans, and they are therefore erroneously 
interpreted. The sadism evident in pornophilic works naturally 
should not in any way impact on its aesthetic evaluation, and as 
a drive it isn´t any more peverse than the impetus to reproduce 
the obligatory genres.

In pornophilic works of art the sex is liberated from its 
biological function. Interpreted purely in terms of pleasure 
without its reproductive consequences, sex does not attack the 
animality of the conceited per se but the relative inferiority 
of their animality. The artist does not provoke the puritan for 
his transience, his mortality, which the artist suffers as well, 
but for his impotence, his sexual inadequacy, which he has 
brought on himself by leaving his sexus to degenerate through a 
foolish desire for superhumanness. By excluding the biological 
aspects of sex and excrementation from its content, pornophilic 
art does not conceal the sadistic nature of its unpretentious 
obscenity; rather, it merely curtails the manner in which its 
militancy is projected. In pornophilically motivated art, 
therefore, the conceited are being combatted through sex´s 
pleasure principle instead of through its biological purpose- in 
other words, what this art primarily attacks is imperfect 
humanity, not the imperfect divinity of the conceited. One could 
ridicule the desire for immortality for its baneful consequences 
alone, i.e., sexual degeneracy. Thus art mitigates the sadism of 
pornophilia only in its exploitation of sex´s biological 
function, which is as unpleaant to pornophiles as it is to 
pornophobes.

Yet pornophilic tendencies are found even in those who are 
targeted; they are particularly fond of it as kitsch, the 
purpose of which is sexual titillation. This mode of trash 
pornophilia completely suppresses the sadistic impulses found in 
pornophilic art. As a result pornophilia is rendered accessible 
precisely to that caste of people against whom it is essentially 
directed. Pornophilia has a corrupting influence solely on those 
puritans who persecute its militancy and sadism; they have 
imputed to it the same meaning as their pornographic literature 
and pictures carefully hidden away in closed drawers until 
required for that occasional arousal (which as a rule their 
shabby wives can no longer produce). The only thing this sort of 
trash pornophilia does not need is a public, in fact, it resists 
one as any number of people, and not only puritans, find it 
difficult to reach orgasm in the presence of others.

Divesting ourselves of all prejudices, we should evaluate 
pornophilic works strictly on their artistic value. If anyone 
should think that obscene content in itself detracts from the 
value of a work of art, then we might just as well reject 
Strindberg´s or Tolstoy´s art for its misogyny. Pornophilia 
cannot be reproached for being pathological as it is a disease 
of a similar order to any other manifestation of culture, no 
different even than the sadistic puritanism of its opponents. If 
pornophilia can be considered a work of art, it is as much a 
cultural phenomenon as "humanitarian" art, and if it limits 
itself purely to expressing the libido without any connection to 
other cultural or economic values, then it is no more neurotic 
than the trite expressions of compassion; its pathological 
manifestations in erotomania and coprophilia are similar to the 
anthropophilia evident in the masochism of martyrs. Our 
humanity, culture, and civilization are nothing more than a 
useful way to utilize neurotic conflicts. So until our 
pathologies give rise to works of value we simply cannot be 
taken to task for having this nature. The sublimation of the 
neurotic libido is creative, while the normal libido leads only 
to playfulness. Both libidos, therefore, participate in the 
creative process that is motivated by obscenity. The neurotic 
libido determines the work´s content while the normal libido 
gives it its mode or form. If the normal libido looks for a 
surrogate to instant gratification, it will use obscenity to 
create kitsch, but if its demands are sublimated, then the 
result is art.

The titillating, kitchified mode of pornophilic themes has no 
other value and function than that of artificial dolls designed 
for onanism (ipsatio). Such works are limited to the sexual act 
in and of itself and are incapable of disengaging from the 
atmosphere of the recess without ceasing to perform their 
function, which is founded on the illusion of a real partner and 
coitus. On the other hand, the artist whose work is not bound to 
reality sees no need to have naked girls urinate into a chamber 
pot when he could offer them an alpine valley instead. An 
ejaculation need not become a yellow stain on the bedding - it 
can be transformed into a bolt of lightning and used to cleave a 
Gothic cathedral. A lovers´ bed can be replaced by the cosmos 
and the globe inserted under a woman´s buttocks. And from her 
pudenda the artist then has a sun emerging, the most marvelous 
of miscarriages.

The artist not bound by the rational coordination of 
perceptions, actual proportionality and syntax releases the 
sexual organ from its biological function of procreation, which 
is perhaps too painfully evoked by pornographic kitsch when its 
titillating function ceases through the orgasm it has produced. 
Artistic pornophilia can never be glossed by irony and cynicism 
as real or reproductive sexuality stuck to the bed sheets.

While a different world might have long ago achieved a 
transvaluation of art, the elaboration of sexuality has been 
impeded by the censorship of puritans who are incensed by 
obscene content insofar as it portrays healthy sex, whereas 
their sexuality is pitifully derelict under their flies. They 
are aware, even if unconsciously, of their sexual inferiority, 
and as their rumps are deformed by hemorrhoids as well, they 
envy the formidable penises and clean backsides of others. What 
galls them to a far greater extent than pornophilic kitsch are 
works of art of obscene content, for here the artist has 
extended the reign of his sexuality over the entire world. 
Pornophilic kitsch keeps to the recess. The artist, on the other 
hand, has expanded throughout the world. He pisses a sea, shits 
a Himalayas, gives birth to cities, masturbates factory 
chimneys, etc. Nothing is sacred to him, and the associations he 
makes are, above all, sexual.

His pansexuality carries a double meaning: the first attacks 
puritan impotence and the second frees sex from its procreative 
function. Here sex is comprehended in a purely aesthetic sense, 
voluptuously. The artist´s pleasure, facilitated by the libido, 
is not dampened by common veracity. The erotic scenes thus 
created do not stand or fall through an oppressive banality, 
although the banality and insipidness of sexual gratification 
cannot be eliminated by perverse infatuations. These, too, are 
dull and banal. The libido needs a space to play in, a space 
that diverts the senses from the dismal postcoital condition and 
deters those rational speculations poisoning one´s pleasure. Our 
eroticism must be rid of its depressing connection to plump 
wives and conjugal beds under which a chamber pot is lurking.

Nevertheless, as poetry is the art of finding the exotic in the 
mundane, there is no need to discard our inventory of the banal, 
only banal situations. This can be achieved only through a 
subjective evaluation of things and actions, liberating them 
from their customary sequencing. Poetry negates reality´s 
biological and economic meaning; annulling its rationalist 
context, it creates a new syntax that gives the old content new 
meaning, a new narrative. In this way the vapid, the graceless, 
becomes the exceptional, the emotive. Poetry is the art of 
discovering mundane life´s emotive perspective. The art of 
living is the art of where and when to have a cup of black 
coffee, or in the sexual arts, where and when to have an orgasm. 
If puritans would like to call this a disease, then we shall 
help them. It is simply a matter of being partial to situations.

From the world of dreams and hallucinations the modern artist 
enters the world of the most demented lunatics who are exhausted 
by the wayward adventure into which their reason has led them. 
Having renounced his reason, the artist is satisfied with the 
adventure that has freed his libido by liberating his senses. 
The adventure of reason, of rationality, is pathologically 
closed off by a psychosis that negates the intellect and by an 
autism that exempts one from rationally evaluating one´s 
intuitions and behavior. The freed libido may autonomously 
reveal itself during this pathological state. Psychosis puts an 
end to the ravages of neurosis through negation, by gradually 
inhibiting menial and bodily functions. If psychosis is limited 
only to the negation of reason and does not inhibit perception, 
movement, and so on, then the natural channels for our 
emotional, aesthetic, and irrational actions and perceptions 
will eventually surface.

The world the mad have entered through a numbness of mind the 
artist has attained through a soundness of mind, and has thereby 
adopted a natural, purely hedonistic stance towards the real 
possibilities of what might be utilized for his art. If ancient 
art is analogous to neurosis, then modern art is analogous to 
the creations of psychosis.  The artist of today has emerged 
from the world of dreams, hallucinations, alcoholic deliriums, 
and violent, sweat-soaked, symbolic phantasms to a valuation 
that is unaffected and purely emotive, and a perception of the 
real that spontaneously creates phantasms of the kind ancient 
art could scarcely imagine. Modern poetry has magically fanned 
out over all landscapes like the dreamlike atmosphere of an 
atelier. It has enabled the artist to disregard the 
socio-economic values of life in favor of a thought and 
perception that are solely focused on pleasure. The liberated 
senses and psyche are thus able to see the entire world in its 
full emotive nature, evanescent though this might be. 
Pornophilia as a work of art offers the pleasures of life far 
removed from pedestrian concerns. Having prudently rid our 
animality of its bleak vision, the artist emancipates the acts 
of the body from their biological purpose, leading us to revel 
in delight in a manner that is only allowed us by nature. 
Asceticism, any sort of renunciation of our sexuality, is 
indefensible. As each person comes into the world at the end of 
an umbilical cord only inevitably to become dust, we should take 
pleasure from everything our abilities allow us.


Postface to Emilie Comes to Me in a Dream (1933) by Jindrich 
Styrský, published in Edition 69 (Prague: Twisted Spoon Press, 
2004, pp.  109 - 119, transl. by Jed Slast.)