(via Paris Review – Checking Out, Avi Steinberg)

Porn books and librarians have always had a passionate, mutually  defining relationship—it was, in fact, a prudish French librarian in the  early nineteenth century who coined the word pornography. So  it comes as no surprise that the sexy librarian, a fixture of the  pornographic imagination, is most at home in books. Each year, new  titles are added to the librarian-porn bookshelf. This past season’s  crop included additions like Hot for Librarian by Anastasia Carrera; Lucy the Librarian—Dewey and His Decimal by John and Shauna Michaels; The Nympho Librarian and Other Stories by Chrissie Bentley and Jenny Swallows; A Librarian’s Desire by Ava Delaney, author of the Kinky Club series; and soft-core selections like Sweet Magik by Penny Watson. The conventions of the form—the dimly lit stacks, the  librarian’s mask of thick glasses and hair tied into a bun, et  cetera—are, of course, well known. Unlike video porn, where these  conventions are typically used as a wholesale substitute for narrative,  porn books still feel the compulsion to tell a story, to make the  glasses and bun mean something. I was curious just what story  these new books were telling. What does our most current version of the  librarian fantasy say about us? To answer this question, I visited the  library.

(via Paris Review – Checking Out, Avi Steinberg)

Porn books and librarians have always had a passionate, mutually defining relationship—it was, in fact, a prudish French librarian in the early nineteenth century who coined the word pornography. So it comes as no surprise that the sexy librarian, a fixture of the pornographic imagination, is most at home in books. Each year, new titles are added to the librarian-porn bookshelf. This past season’s crop included additions like Hot for Librarian by Anastasia Carrera; Lucy the LibrarianDewey and His Decimal by John and Shauna Michaels; The Nympho Librarian and Other Stories by Chrissie Bentley and Jenny Swallows; A Librarian’s Desire by Ava Delaney, author of the Kinky Club series; and soft-core selections like Sweet Magik by Penny Watson. The conventions of the form—the dimly lit stacks, the librarian’s mask of thick glasses and hair tied into a bun, et cetera—are, of course, well known. Unlike video porn, where these conventions are typically used as a wholesale substitute for narrative, porn books still feel the compulsion to tell a story, to make the glasses and bun mean something. I was curious just what story these new books were telling. What does our most current version of the librarian fantasy say about us? To answer this question, I visited the library.

  1. laserfish5000 reblogged this from porknachos
  2. accidentallydomesticated said: Weird - same pic is currently in my queue after going through some 2 year old likes.
  3. velvetant reblogged this from abloodymess
  4. jackflaps reblogged this from abloodymess and added:
    oh right I forgot I was going to read this, thanks for reblogging it also this is totally what library school is like,...
  5. ellenbee reblogged this from abloodymess and added:
    librarians & pornography are two of my main interests so i guess i will read this
  6. abloodymess reblogged this from wearedevo
  7. wearedevo reblogged this from porknachos and added:
    This is a great article. ”I discovered that pornos caused the French Revolution, and that the Renaissance really got...
  8. minou said: Stop talking about my mom you guys.
  9. porknachos reblogged this from wooliebear
  10. rosa--sparks said: The librarians at my library do not look like this.
  11. wooliebear posted this
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