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"The Control Book" by Peter MastersPosted by Tanos on Tue 17 Apr 07, 5:38 PM to the Internal Enslavement blog Peter Masters had an outline of this book on his website since the early 2000s and if you're really curious some of these versions are still there on the Internet Archive site. However, he's now produced a printed edition, published by Jack Rinella in March 2007, and this review is based on that expanded version. I'm going to cut to the chase and say I really liked The Control Book. It doesn't have lots of details about the "culture" of D/s: instead it spends its time on the psychology of control itself, and reads more like a short textbook or scientific monograph than the kind of chatty BDSM manuals that are usually put out. When it came out in March and I added it to The Slave Register's books listing, I was a bit unsure whether to classify it as an M/s book, and it is in fact written in terms of dominants and submissives. However, Peter Masters' (P.M. from now on) private M/s definitions are very realistic and he aims for a level of understanding that's needed to practice M/s in a way that's not always essential for other types of D/s:
The rest of the book's Introduction lays out the framework of evolution,
archetypes and the conscious / subconscious / unconscious
division of the mind that P.M. assumes for
for the subsequent chapters. If you've read
my recent essay on IE and
Evolution you'll see why I liked the book from the start This tripartite conscious / subconscious / unconscious division, like the parent / adult / child of Transactional Analysis, the neo-mammalian / paleo-mammalian / reptilian brain of Maclean's Triune Brain, and the superego / ego / id of Psychoanalysis, are all clusters of modules in terms of Evolutionary Psychology: they correspond to some universal aspects of the mind provided by the genetic make-up of humans, that do some identifiable set of tasks. These models are just ways of sign-posting the mind (fundamentally it's all just neurons that we're trying to understand by assigning what they do to concepts that we can work with), but they do correspond to patterns of what the human mind does and by understanding those patterns, we can better predict human behaviours, and in the case of submissives, control them. P.M.'s summary of what he's after introduces the idea of control-sensitivity:
Central to the book is a model for how control is transferred from the submissive to the dominant (and maybe back again):
and subsequently:
and even:
(If these sound like computer handshaking protocols, then don't be surprised as P.M. has a background in computer networks.) All of these steps are given a page or more, and P.M. describes processes with overlaps of control and no control vacuums. (eg taking control prompts the submissive to relinquish it, not vice-versa.) It may also sound rather self-consciously "worthy" of P.M. to talk about carefully ending D/s, but, like rewards, it's something that needs to be thought through with the same care as obtaining control in the first place and P.M.'s discussion isn't just empty platitudes. The chapter on management applies these ideas to a long-term relationship itself, with sections on explicitly planning (do you both want the same type of relationship?) and ongoing re-evaluations, for example. The short section on rituals applies the same kind of analysis and clarity to these components of D/s - for example, the clear statement that "rituals are about symbols", and his stressing of the importance of ritual:
I've briefly mentioned in a previous post the four-parts he identifies in a dominant's structure:
Each of these provide for continuation of control even when the dominant isn't present:
All of the chapters include "things to think about" sections, with questions prompting further reflection or discussion, and the final chapter is a set of long, open ended questions which serve as discussion topics. From my point of view, there were only a couple of notable omissions in the book: I think a discussion of reactance would have been very relevant, although the idea of "control stress" (p68) sounds like an intuitive version of reactive stress; and although the ownership section talks about ownership becoming real when submissives feel owned, some more detail about the necessary conditions for Internal Enslavement (security etc) would have rounded out the coverage of this type of control.
As I said, I've been very impressed by
The Control
Book and I was glad to see that the early web drafts have matured into
an important contribution to the psychology of D/s and M/s.
Edited Wed 18 Nov 09, 12:34 PM by Tanos |
Possession. Ownership. Consent. Responsibility. Respect. House. Service. Dignity. Authenticity. Rituals. O&P (Ownership & Possession) is a new structure built from familiar D/s and M/s concepts, defined by the O&P Manifesto. There are O&P discussion groups on Informed Consent in the UK, on TSR, and on Fetlife. The O&P Wiki contains articles about O&P and related D/s, M/s, and BDSM topics. You can also follow O&P on Twitter and on Facebook. |
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