Betty Dodson
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Betty Dodson (August 24, 1929Template:SpndOctober 31, 2020) was an American sex educator. An artist by training, she exhibited erotic art in New York City, before pioneering the pro-sex feminist movement. Dodson's workshops and manuals encourage women to masturbate, often in groups.
Early career
Dodson went to New York City to train as an artist in 1950, and lived on Manhattan's Madison Avenue from 1962.<ref name="GuardMay14">Template:Cite news</ref> In 1959, Dodson married Frederick Lief, an advertising director; they divorced in 1965.<ref name="GuardMay14"/> Dodson's quest for "sexual self-discovery" began after her divorce.<ref name="GuardMay14"/> Dodson held a first one-woman show of erotic art at the Wickersham Gallery in New York City in 1968.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1987, her Ms. magazine memoir and instructional series, Sex for One, was published. Random House later published the work broadly, and it was translated into 25 languages.<ref name=":0" />
Dodson criticized Eve Ensler's The Vagina Monologues, which she believed has a negative and restrictive view of sexuality with an anti-male bias.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Dodson earned a degree from the unaccredited Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Sexuality for her research work on sexuality.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Workshops and coaching
Dodson became active in the sex-positive movement in the late 1960s.<ref name="barbarajlove2006">Template:Citation</ref>
From the 1970s onwards, she organised Bodysex workshops. Bodysex is a practice developed by Betty Dodson to help women connect with their bodies and erogenous zones, heal shames, improve pleasure perception, and promote self-love. In the workshops, women were guided to explore their bodies and masturbate together to learn, with guidance, how to have an orgasm as a woman alone and with a sexual partner.<ref>Carlin Ross, Betty Dodson: Betty Dodson Bodysex Basics. Betty Dodson Foundation, 24 February 2017. ISBN 978-0578190723.</ref> Her two-hour sessions featured 15 naked women, each using a Hitachi Magic Wand to aid in masturbation.<ref name="winks1997">Template:Citation</ref> Dodson used the Magic Wand, a mains-powered vibrator, in demonstrations and instructional classes to instruct women regarding self-pleasure techniques.<ref name="christophertrout">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="westheimer">Template:Cite book</ref> She provided a Magic Wand to each woman for these sessions.<ref name="dodson1996">Template:Cite book</ref> She recommended women put a small towel over their vulva in order to dull the sensation of the vibrator and prolong the pleasurable experience.<ref name="kmkemp2003">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The essence of her method was to provide vaginal and clitoral stimulation at the same time.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Dodson taught thousands of women to achieve orgasm using this technique.<ref name="winks1997" /> Her technique became known as the Betty Dodson Method.<ref name="piastruck">Template:Cite journal</ref>
A study conducted in 2007 tested the "Betty Dodson Method" in group therapy with 500 previously anorgasmic women. Of the 500, 465 (93%) had orgasms during therapy, while 35 (7%) did not.<ref>Hatim A. Omar, Pia Struck, Søren Ventegodt: "Clinical Holistic Medicine: Teaching Orgasm for Females with Chronic Anorgasmia using the Betty Dodson Method". The Scientific World Journal, Volume 8, 27 August 2008.</ref> In a 2021 study, the female techniques for pleasurable vaginal intercourse taught by Dodson ("Angling, Rocking, Shallowing, Pairing") are again described by women.<ref>Devon J. Hensel, Christiana D. von Hippel, Charles C. Lapage, Robert H. Perkins: "Women's techniques for making vaginal penetration more pleasurable: results from a nationally representative study of adult women in the United States". PLOS ONE, 14 April 2021.</ref>
Later career
Dodson published a memoir, Sex by Design, in 2010.<ref name="GuardMay14"/>
In 2014, she stated that she considered herself a fourth-wave feminist, stating that the previous waves of feminist were banal and anti-sexual, which is why she has chosen to look at a new stance of feminism, fourth wave feminism. In 2014, Dodson worked with women to discover their sexual desires through masturbation. Dodson said her work has gained support from an audience of young, successful women who have never had an orgasm. This includes fourth-wave feminists – those rejecting the anti-pleasure stance they believe third-wave feminists stand for.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Dodson died on October 31, 2020, at the age of 91, from cirrhosis in a Manhattan nursing home.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":0">Template:Cite news</ref>
Bibliography
By others
References
External links
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- 1929 births
- 2020 deaths
- 21st-century American women
- American memoirists
- American relationships and sexuality writers
- American sex educators
- American women memoirists
- Artists from Wichita, Kansas
- American feminist artists
- Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality alumni
- Educators from Manhattan
- Sex-positive feminists
- Writers from Wichita, Kansas