Are There Any Modern Reviews Of Onanism By Tissot Worth Reading?

2026-01-05 15:49:07 227

3 Answers

Paisley
Paisley
2026-01-06 03:51:52
I recently read a Tumblr thread where people treated 'Onanism' like a retro wellness guru’s hot takes—imagine Tissot as the Goop of the Enlightenment. One poster overlaid his advice with memes, like a 'distracted boyfriend' meme labeled 'Tissot ignoring actual diseases to blame everything on masturbation.' Another review in a history forum dug into how his ideas seeped into early psychiatry, influencing Freud’s later guilt trips. The contrast between modern irreverence and sober analysis makes the book weirdly fun to revisit—it’s either a cautionary tale or comedy fodder, depending who you ask.
Hazel
Hazel
2026-01-09 21:56:56
I stumbled upon a few contemporary takes on Tissot's 'Onanism' while digging into historical perspectives on medical ethics, and some really stood out. One review from a medical humanities journal dissected how Tissot’s 18th-century warnings about 'self-pollution' mirrored societal anxieties of his time—comparing it to modern debates around screen addiction or vaping. The writer linked it to Foucault’s ideas about bodily control, which gave it this eerie relevance. Another blog post by a sex educator tore into the text’s pseudoscience but praised its unintentional comedy, like the claim that masturbation could cause 'hollow eyes' or 'palpitations.' It’s wild how much it says about fear-mongering then and now.

What stuck with me was a podcast episode where historians joked about recreating Tissot’s 'cures' (think cold baths and horseback riding) as a parody wellness challenge. It made me realize how these old texts become Rorschach tests—we either laugh at them or project our own biases onto them. For a deep dive, I’d recommend tracking down that journal article if you’re into academic snark, or the podcast for a lighter take.
Sabrina
Sabrina
2026-01-11 12:25:07
A friend tipped me off about this satirical zine that 'reviewed' 'Onanism' as if it were a modern self-help book, complete with fake Amazon ratings ('1 star: ruined my adolescence'). It was hilarious but also low-key insightful—like pointing out how Tissot’s obsession with 'vital fluids' wasn’t far off from today’s biohackers chugging celery juice. Later, I found a Substack essay comparing his work to Victorian-era anti-masturbation devices, arguing both were about profit disguised as morality. The writer dragged out receipts showing how Tissot’s publisher made bank selling 'revised editions' to paranoid parents.

Honestly, the most memorable critique was from a queer studies prof who framed 'Onanism' as accidental gay literature—since Tissot fretted so much about 'unnatural acts,' he basically wrote a manual for what not to do at a secret 1700s orgy. The takes out there range from scholarly to unhinged, but they all agree: the book’s legacy is a mix of cringe and cultural fascination.
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