vagina dentata
English
editEtymology
editFirst attested 1908, from Latin vagina + dentata (“toothed”); popularized chiefly by Sigmund Freud.
Noun
editvagina dentata (plural vaginae dentatae or vagina dentatas or vagina dentata)
- The mythical toothed vagina; often related to castration anxiety.
- 2005, Barbara Creed, Phallic Panic: Film, Horror and the Primal Uncanny, Melbourne Univ. Publishing, →ISBN, page 86:
- This notion also associates the vampire more directly with the primal uncanny. The long quotation that Moretti uses from Marie Bonaparte's writings on Edgar Allen[sic] Poe includes reference to the mythical vagina dentata, the ‘strange’ notion that the vagina ‘is furnished with teeth, and thus a source of danger in being able to bite and castrate’.
- 2006, The Pervert's Guide to Cinema, Slavoj Žižek (actor):
- My relationship towards tulips is inherently Lynchian. I think they are disgusting. Just imagine. Aren't these some kind of, how do you call it, vagina dentata, dental vaginas threatening to swallow you?
- 2013, B. Fahs, M. Dudy, S. Stage, The Moral Panics of Sexuality, Springer, →ISBN:
- Perhaps one of the most recognizable and acknowledged contemporary images of vagina dentata appears in Ridley Scott's Alien (1979). […] Indeed, Gieger[sic] himself wanted the creature to be an embodiment of the fear of rape, making it a perfect match for the film.
Further reading
edit- vagina dentata on Wikipedia.Wikipedia