Skip to content The Open University
  1. Platform
  2. Blogs
  3. Society Matters
  4. Line up for the Erotic Awards

Line up for the Erotic Awards

cartoon by Catherine Pain
As a regular writer for the Society Matters blog I'm very pleased to announce that my book Rewriting the Rules – which I've frequently written about here – has been nominated for an award. This was very unanticipated so I'm stoked about it.  

What was even more unanticipated was the kind of award. Something from the psychology or psychotherapy world might have been expected, but I have been short-listed for an 'erotic award'!

For those who are not familiar with them, the Erotic Awards, initially called the Erotic Oscars, have been running since 1994. They were founded by Tuppy Owens Tuppy_Owens who is a sex therapist who campaigns particularly on issues of disability and sexuality, and the whole event raises funds for the charity, Outsiders, for disabled people and their relationships. My book explores the complicated and contradictory rules on relationships that we are subjected to in 21st century relationships.

Awards are presented presented to campaigners, films, writers, artists, publications and sex-workers, as well as to academics, like me. The Erotic Awards are an annual 'celebration of sexual creativity and diversity' with the goal of helping society become more open about sex and more accepting of sexual diversity.

The other academic finalists are Brooke Magnanti and Sue Newsome. Brooke Magnanti is a biological scientist who recently wrote the book The Sex Myth to counter prevailing myths about sex, sexuality and sex-work. Brooke also wrote the best-selling Belle de Jour series of books which were adapted for a BBC series featuring Billie Piper. I've met Brooke at a couple of events that I've been involved with and she is an extremely friendly and approachable person, as well as somebody who has done a lot of good challenging assumptions about sex and sex-work. 

The other nominee, SueNewsome, is involved in a conference which I'm putting on for COSRT later this year. She is a sex coach, educator and therapist who is also involved with SHADA (the Sex and Disability Alliance) and does very important work in this field.  

I'm guessing that my own work was nominated because, like Brooke's, part of its aim is to challenge assumptions and myths about sex and relationships. Also, one aspect of Rewriting the Rules is to counter conventional psychological work which often tries to explain less common sexual and relationship practices – instead of seeking to discover what can be learnt from people in diverse sexual and relationship communities.

This is important to me because it moves away from the idea that there are normal ways of doing things, and that any other way is strange and problematic, towards the idea that there is a great variety of possible sexual and relationship experiences and understandings possible, and that it is worth tuning in to those which work best for us, as well as reflecting upon the ethics of different possible practices and identities. 

However I'm up against two very impressive co-nominees who both certainly deserve the award. We will see what happens on the night!
Meg Barker 17 May 2013

Meg Barker is a registered psychotherapist with the UK Council for Psychotherapy. She  

  • organises the conference programme for the College of Sexual and Relationship Therapists (COSRT) as well as being on the editorial board of their journal and writing for their website
  • co-organises the Critical Sexology Group which presents open interdisciplinary seminars on sexuality in London three times a year
  • co-edits the Taylor & Francis journal Psychology & Sexuality with Darren Langdridge and is on the editorial boards of Sexualities, Porn Studies, the Journal of Popular Romance Studies, and the European Journal of Ecopsychology.

Catch her Youtube presentations90 second lecture on sex therapy and introduction to bisexuality research in the UK

 

The views expressed in this post, as in all posts on Society Matters, are the views of the author, not The Open University.

Cartoon by Catherine Pain

2
Your rating: None Average: 2 (5 votes)

Tweet As a regular writer for the Society Matters blog I'm very pleased to announce that my book Rewriting the Rules – which I've frequently written about here – has been nominated for an award. This was very unanticipated so I'm stoked about it.   What was even more unanticipated was the kind of award. Something from the psychology or ...

Not on Facebook? Comment via platform

Cartoon of Dick Skellington

About Society Matters

Provocative, relevant, current: for the last decade Society Matters magazine has been informing, engaging and annoying social sciences students in equal measure.  Now, its move online has given us the chance to bring its lively mix of analysis and opinion to a wider audience.

Society Matters online started in October 2010 and has, so far, covered a wide range of issues and topics ranging from inequality and the big society to arms sales and foreign policy. All can be seen by scrolling down from the top of the Society Matters front page.

We have also illustrated many of these posts with the work of our two illustrators (see below). Serious analyses have been interspersed with posts on a less weighty issues which show both human folly and innovation.

Society Matters continues to be edited by its original creator, Dick Skellington. Dick, pictured above, was previously a programme manager in the social sciences faculty, walks the talk through an active involvement in the affairs of his home town of Stony Stratford, Bucks, and finds light relief through writing poetry and the occasional stage appearance in local productions.

Since many years at the coalface of journalism have taught us all that sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words Dick is aided and abetted by resident illustrators, Gary Edwards and Catherine Pain – both former OU students.

Catherine has drawn and painted all her life, and when she is not pillorying public figures for Society Matters paints animal portraits, works in stained glass and produces alphabet teaching posters for children. Her work is in several galleries in and around her current home in Cambridgeshire and her publications include an illustrated cookbook sold on behalf of the National Trust, a colouring book for small children, Alphabet for Colouring, and The Lost Children, a story for older children. Her website is at catherinepain.co.uk

Gary has written two best-selling books about his travels all over the world watching Leeds United FC, Paint it White  and Leeds United - The Second Coat. His third title No Glossing Over  will be published by Mainstream in September 2011. He has not missed a Leeds game anywhere in the world since February 1968 and married his wife Lesley at Elland Road.

Specialising in wall murals, Gary also holds diplomas from the London Art College, The Morris College of Journalism, has a Diploma in Freelance Cartooning and Illustration and is a contributing cartoonist for Speakeasy, an English-speaking magazine in Paris. During the 1970's and 1980's he collected  hearses and is a long time member of the Official Flat Earth Society as well as the Clay Pigeon Preservation Society.

Please note: The opinions expressed in Society Matters posts are those of the individual authors, and do not represent the views of The Open University.