Lovers in Naples. Credit: Salvatore Laporta/Kontrolab//LightRocket/ Getty

Pity poor Neil Ferguson. For the past few months he’s been acclaimed — and denounced — as the most influential scientist in the UK. Now he’ll forever be Prof Pantsdown for breaching the lockdown instructions he’d issued to the rest of the nation. Even so, I feel sorry for him. Yes, he’s a total raging hypocrite, but so are countless thousands given half a chance. Almost all the doctors I know ignore half the health advice they issue to their patients – especially the part about recommended daily units of alcohol. A US university-based study into morality found that books on ethics (presumably borrowed by those studying moral philosophy) were more likely to be stolen from libraries than any other volumes on philosophy.
But we small islanders are never more at home with our own hypocrisy than when it concerns our sex lives. I’ve known married relationship counsellors warn clients against the perils of conducting love affairs, while having a string of lovers themselves. One tale that best demonstrates our wayward attitude to sexual mores involves my publican mother. When I was editing the Erotic Review magazine in the late 1990s (a job that raised eyebrows) my mum bumped into a church-going neighbour while walking in the local woods. In the course of conversation the woman said to mum, “I’m so sorry about Rowan, that all sounds dreadful”.
My mother replied she wasn’t the least bit embarrassed and was happy I was doing what I loved. At which point the neighbour, without missing a beat, said, “Actually, I was thinking of taking out a subscription for my husband.” Most middle-class Brits main concern when discussing sex is to give the appearance of conforming to societal norms. If the rules are suddenly relaxed within a friendly and discreet setting your average upright person may confide eye-popping misdemeanours.
The contradictory messages about sex are also apparent in people’s reactions to the BBC drama Normal People. It was announced this week that there had been 16 million downloads of the series in its first week on iPlayer. The pre-publicity and reviews all focused on the intense portrayal of sexual intimacy, which presumably helped boost the ratings.
Yet a number of comment pieces — and myriad threads on social media – expressed discomfort or shock at the unbridled coupling. One newspaper headline announced, “The sex scenes in Normal people give me the ick.” Which, in the stubbornly enduring spirit of Mary Whitehouse, is a bit like settling down to watch a dramatisation of The Kama Sutra and declaring yourself astonished there’s so much rumpy-pumpy.
If I hear there’s graphic violence in a film or TV series, I tend to opt not to watch it. Yes these sexually-tormented viewers of Normal People nobly struggle on, through every erotic last erotic frame. (Btw the director Lenny Abrahamson has pointed out the two stars were semi-clad in almost every sex scene, so clever cutting and camerawork gives you the sense it’s more explicit than it actually is.)
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