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When we talk about sex, we talk about women as mysterious,
deceptive, and - above all - untrustworthy. Women lie about
orgasms. Women lie about being virgins. Women lie about who got
them pregnant, about whether they were raped, about how many people
they've had sex with and what sort of experiences they've had - the
list goes on and on. Over and over we're reminded that, on dates,
in relationships, and especially in the bedroom, women just aren't
telling the truth. But where does this assumption come from? Are
women actually lying about sex, or does society just think we are?
In Faking It, Lux Alptraum tackles the topic of seemingly dishonest
women; investigating whether women actually lie, and what social
situations might encourage deceptions both great and small. Using
her experience as a sex educator and former CEO of Fleshbot (the
foremost blog on sexuality), first-hand interviews with sexuality
experts and everyday women, Alptraum raises important questions:
are lying women all that common - or is the idea of the dishonest
woman a symptom of male paranoia? Are they trying to please men, or
just trying to trick and trap them? And what affect does all this
dishonesty - whether real or imagined - have on women's
self-images, social status, and safety? Through it all, Alptraum
posits that even if women are lying, we're doing it for very good
reason--to protect ourselves ("My boyfriend will be here any
minute," to a creep who won't go away, for one), and in situations
where society has given us no other choice.
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