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Reich Wilhelm - Adventures in the orgasmatron: how the sexual revolution came to America

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Reich Wilhelm Adventures in the orgasmatron: how the sexual revolution came to America

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One ofThe Economists 2011 Books of the Year
ABoston GlobeBest Nonfiction Book of 2011
Well before the 1960s, a sexual revolution was under way in America, led by expatriated European thinkers who saw a vast country ripe for liberation. InAdventures in the Orgasmatron, Christopher Turner tells the revolutions storyan illuminating, thrilling, often bizarre story of sex and science, ecstasy and repression.
Central to the narrative is the orgone boxa tall, slender construction of wood, metal, and steel wool. A person who sat in the box, it was thought, could elevate his or her orgastic potential. The box was the invention of Wilhelm Reich, an outrider psychoanalyst who faced a federal ban on the orgone box, an FBI investigation, a fraught encounter with Einstein, and bouts of paranoia.
In Turners vivid account, Reichs efforts anticipated those of Alfred Kinsey, Herbert Marcuse, and other prominent thinkersefforts that brought about a transformation of Western views of sexuality in ways even the thinkers themselves could not have imagined.

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FOR GABY My life is revolutionfrom within and from withoutor its comedy If I - photo 1

FOR GABY My life is revolutionfrom within and from withoutor its comedy If I - photo 2

FOR GABY

My life is revolutionfrom within and from withoutor its comedy! If I could only find someone who has the correct diagnosis!

WILHELM REICH , July 9, 1919

Perhaps the history of the errors of mankind, all things considered, is more valuable and interesting than that of their discoveries. Truth is uniform and narrow; it constantly exists, and does not seem to require so much an active energy, as a passive aptitude of soul in order to encounter it. But error is endlessly diversified; it has no reality, but is the pure and simple creation of the mind that invents it. In this field the soul has room enough to expand herself, to display all her boundless faculties, and all her beautiful and interesting extravagancies and absurdities.

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN , Report of Dr. Benjamin Franklin, and other commissioners, charged by the King of France, with the examination of the animal magnetism, as now practiced in Paris (1784)

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Contents

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Introduction

In 1909, Sigmund Freud was invited to give a series of lectures at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. On the way there from Vienna his cabin steward was reading The Psychopathology of Everyday Life , an event Freud claimed was the first indication he ever had that he was going to be famous. In the United States, the philosopher and psychologist William James and many other leading American intellectuals turned out to hear Freud talk, giving psychoanalysis official recognition, as Freud saw it, for the first time. He later wrote about what the Clark lectures meant to him: In Europe I felt as though I was despised; but over there I found myself received by the foremost men as an equal. As I stepped onto the platform at Worcester to deliver my Five Lectures upon Psychoanalysis it seemed like the realization of some incredible daydream: psychoanalysis was no longer a product of delusion, it had become a valuable part of reality.

Little did Freud know how his intellectual discoveries would transform America, which he dismissed as an anti-paradise or a gigantic mistake. Though he feared that Americans would enthusiastically embrace and ruin psychoanalysis by popularizing it and watering it down, he already suspected that his theories would in some way shake the country to the core. While watching the waving crowds from the deck of his ship as it docked in New York, he turned to his fellow analyst Carl Gustav Jung and said, Dont they know were bringing them the plague?

Well before the hedonism of the 1920s, a Freud-inspired revolution in sexual morals had begun. Greenwich Village bohemians, such as the writers Max Eastman and Floyd Dell, the anarchist Emma Goldman, who had been deeply impressed by the lucidity of Freuds 1909 lectures, and Mabel Dodge, who ran an avant-garde salon in her apartment on Fifth Avenue, adapted psychoanalysis to create their own free-love philosophy. In the radical journal The Masses , Floyd Dell warned that sexual emotions would not be repressed without morbid consequences.

Together they fashioned a cult of the orgasmMabel Dodge even went so far as to call her dog Climax. However, as Dell later admitted, their experiment was an isolated one, like that of the Oneida Community in the nineteenth century and a handful of other obscure but pervasive sexual cults. It was only after the Second World War that the idea of sexual liberation would permeate the culture at large.

When Wilhelm Reich, the most brilliant of the second generation of psychoanalysts who had been Freuds pupils, arrived in New York in late August 1939, exactly thirty years after his mentor and only a few days before the outbreak of war, he was optimistic that his ideas about fusing sex and politics would be better received there than they had been in fascist Europe. Despite its veneer of Puritanism, America was a country already much preoccupied with sexas Alfred Kinseys renowned investigations, which he began that same year, were to show. Reich could be said to have instigated the sexual revolution; a Marxist analyst, he coined the phrase in the 1930s in order to illustrate his belief that a true political revolution would only be possible once sexual repression was overthrown, the one obstacle Reich felt had scuppered the efforts of the Bolsheviks. A sexual revolution is already in progress, he declared, and no power on earth will stop it.

Reich was a sexual evangelist who held that the satisfactory orgasm made the difference between sickness and health. There is only one thing wrong with neurotic patients, he concluded in The Function of the Orgasm (1927): the lack of full and repeated sexual satisfaction (the italics are his). The orgasm was the panacea to cure all ills, he thought, including the fascism that had forced him to leave Europe. Reich sought to reconcile psychoanalysis and Marxism, thereby giving Freudianism an optimistic gloss, arguing that repression, which Freud came to believe was an inherent part of the human condition, could be shed. This would lead to what his critics dismissed as a genital utopia (they mocked him as the prophet of bigger and better orgasms). His ideas became influential in Europe, which Henry Miller, finding a new sense of purpose through sex, characterized as the Land of Fuck. Reich was a figurehead of the vocal sex reform movement in Vienna and Berlin before the Anschluss , after which the Nazis, who deemed it part of a Jewish conspiracy to undermine the continent, crushed it. His books were burned in Germany along with those of the German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld and Freud.

Soon after he arrived in the United States, Reich invented the orgone energy accumulator, a wooden cupboard about the size of a telephone booth, lined with metal and insulated with steel woola box in which, it might be said, his ideas came almost prepackaged. Reich considered his orgone energy accumulator an almost magical device that could improve its users orgastic potency and by extension their general, and above all mental, health. He claimed that it could charge up the body with the life force that circulated in the atmosphere (a force which he christened orgone energy)mysterious currents that in concentrated form could not only help dissolve repressions but also treat cancer, radiation sickness, and a host of minor ailments. As he saw it, the boxs organic material absorbed orgone energy, and the metal lining stopped it from escaping, so the box acted as a greenhouse; and, supposedly, there was a noticeable rise in temperature in the box.

Reich persuaded Albert Einstein to investigate the machine, whose workings seemed to contradict all known principles of physics, but after two weeks of tests Einstein refuted Reichs claims. Nevertheless, the orgone box became fashionable in America in the 1940s and 1950s, when Reich rose to fame as the leader of the new sexual movement that seemed to be sweeping the country. Orgone boxes were used by such countercultural figures as Norman Mailer, J. D. Salinger, Paul Goodman, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and William Burroughswho claimed to have had a spontaneous orgasm in his. At the height of his James Bond fame, Sean Connery swore by the device, and Woody Allen parodied it in the movie Sleeper , giving it the immortal nickname Orgasmatron. Bohemians celebrated the orgone box as a liberation machine, the wardrobe that would lead to utopia, while to conservatives it was Pandoras box, out of which escaped the Freudian plaguethe corrupting influence of anarchism and promiscuous sex.

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