Vagina dentata

From Freepedia

Vagina dentata is Latin for toothed vagina. The myth of the vagina dentata in the Western world was popularized chiefly by Sigmund Freud, who found that it neatly meshed with his theories concerning castration anxiety.

Freud bestowed this name on the phenomenon, inspired by a number of legends about women with vaginas which were supposed to contain teeth or other weapons, and with which they were supposed to be able to murder or castrate their sexual partners. The motif is contained in a number of myths from Asia, especially Southeast Asia, where various sorts of penis panic are endemic.

Barbara Walker has speculated that this myth gave rise to the depiction of the opening of Hell as a giant mouth in medieval Europe. The tale is frequently told as a cautionary tale warning of the dangers of sex with strange women.

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Examples in popular culture and literature

One adaptation of this myth within a Western context comes from the motion picture Liquid Sky, in which one of the protagonists is said to have been given the power to kill her lovers by extraterrestrials.

In Slick Rick's song "Indian Girl", he has sex with a woman and then looks in her vagina after to see miniature tribesmen with spears. His penis, however, is unharmed.

An example can be found in the book Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson. In Snow Crash, the teenage girl "Y.T." mentions several times (usually when she sees a man sexually aroused by her) that her "dentata" will protect her from rape. It's clear that if she is to engage in consensual intercourse, she needs to take it out. But we don't get any details until late in the book, when she forgets to take it out:

"...a very small hypodermic needle slipped imperceptibly into the engorged frontal vein of his penis, automatically shooting a cocktail of powerful narcotics and depressants into his bloodstream."

A brief mention of this myth is in Stephen King's book Christine.

An urban legend that circulated during the Vietnam War concerned prostitutes who, working with the Viet Cong, were supposed to have implanted glass knives or razor blades into their vaginas, which they used to injure GIs (however, see below).

In Yoshiaki Kawajiri's Yoju Toshi (known in English as Wicked City), the hero narrowly avoids castration when the Spider Woman demon attempts to take a bite during a bout of sex.

In Neil Gaiman's novel American Gods a young African witch girl claims to have a toothed vagina.

A more bizarre version of the vagina dentata appears in artist H.R. Giger's designs for the titular creature from the film Alien.

There is also a depiction of this in the books by Julian May set in the Pleistocene Era (The Saga of Pliocene Exile) in which some of the Firvulag females were so equipped.

A character encounters a vagina dentata up close and personal in K. W. Jeter's novel Dr. Adder.

The web comic strip Queen of Wands included a musical tribute sung to the tune of Hakuna Matata to the phenomenon.

In the South American Indian Toba-Pilaga myth of "the origin of women" a group of women with toothed vaginas appear from the sky and steal the men's meat from their roofs, though eventually the men "get the better of the toothed vaginas", as do the men in a similar Wichí myth. (Lévi-Strauss, 1975)

There is a vagina dentatis theme throughout the novel "Christopher Unborn" by Carlos Fuentes. Indeed the state of Mexico surgically implants jewel-encrusted teeth into the vagina of a young girl chosen to be the country's new iconic figurehead. Later in the novel a suitor successfully couples with her by wearing a wooden condom.

In the popular list of "50 REASONS WHY RETURN OF THE JEDI SUCKS" [1] on the internet, the 50th and final reason is "The Sarlaac Pit as Freud's Vagina Dentate", though whether the Sarlacc Pit is intended to be as such hasn't been confirmed, and probably unlikely.

Vaginas with actual teeth

In rare instances, teeth may actually be found in a vagina. Dermoid cysts are formed from the outer layers of embryonic skin cells. These cells are able to mature into teeth, bones, or hair, and these cysts are able to form anywhere the skin folds inwards to become another organ, such as in the ear or the vagina. The actual vagina is of course not able to bite.

Anti-rape condom

In 2005, inventor Sonette Ehlers unveiled the "rapex", an anti-rape female condom the inside of which is lined with microscopic barbs that hook onto the rapist's penis and can only be removed surgically. In an article about the Rapex condom, Ehlers says that she was inspired to invent the device after meeting a victim who told her "If only I had teeth down there." [2]

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