Dildo: Różnice pomiędzy wersjami

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From Claude J. Summers’ The Queer Encyclopedia of the Visual Arts, “The  English word “dildo” is first recorded around 1592, in a poem by John Nashe.  John Donne in his licentious elegies also refers to dildos. In the eighteenth century, Fuseli drew a woman wearing one.”<ref>http://jessnevins.com/blog/?p=4</ref>
From Claude J. Summers’ The Queer Encyclopedia of the Visual Arts, “The  English word “dildo” is first recorded around 1592, in a poem by John Nashe.  John Donne in his licentious elegies also refers to dildos. In the eighteenth century, Fuseli drew a woman wearing one.”<ref>http://jessnevins.com/blog/?p=4</ref>
<gallery caption="Fallusy" widths="200px" heights="200px" perrow="4">
Plik:Almanach_Dildo_XVIII.jpg|Dildo znalezione w klasztorze, ([[XVIII]] wiek)
</gallery>


== Bibliografia ==
== Bibliografia ==
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Wersja z 13:04, 22 maj 2012

From Philip S. Rawson’s Primitive Erotic Art: “”In Europe through medieval times, even into the eighteenth century, it was customary for dildos (called ‘love gods’ or ‘love birds’), which were roughly shaped as phallic-headed birds, to be sold openly in markets.”[1]

From Claude J. Summers’ The Queer Encyclopedia of the Visual Arts, “The English word “dildo” is first recorded around 1592, in a poem by John Nashe. John Donne in his licentious elegies also refers to dildos. In the eighteenth century, Fuseli drew a woman wearing one.”[2]

Bibliografia