Home Son Incest

Home Son Incest




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Home Son Incest
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^ "Entertainment | Brookside's two decades of trauma" . BBC News. 2002-10-10 . Retrieved 2014-08-21 .

^ Cooper, Lorna. "Brookside: Trevor Jordache – Soap villains: is Karl Munro the baddest baddie?" . Tv.uk.msn.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-21 . Retrieved 2014-08-21 .


Incest as an either a thematic element or an incidental element of the plot, can be found in numerous films and television programs.

Instances of incest between siblings.

Sometimes, two characters do not know about their blood relationship when they enter a sexual or romantic relationship, or one of them knows while the other does not.

The practice of cousin marriage remains legal in many countries.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Incest is found in folklore and mythology in many countries and cultures in the world.

Tales involving incest, especially those between siblings, have been interpreted as representing creation myths, because at the beginning of time the only way to populate the earth would have been through incest. Such incestuous unions are often used to argue the original divinity of figures that have been diminished or euhemerized into human form. [1]

The pattern of a mother-goddess coupling with a young male deity was widespread in the entire pre-Aryan and pre-Semitic cultural zone of Orient from southwest Asia to the eastern Mediterranean. In this pattern, the Mother, like a goddess of fertility, was often accompanied by a young male deity who was both her son and later her husband after his father's demise: Astaroth with Tammuz , Kybele with Attis , etc. Often from sexual unions with their son-husbands, some goddesses bore numerous offspring. [2]

In Greek mythology , Gaia (earth) had 12 children with her own son Uranus (sky) . [3] In some versions, one of their daughters, Rhea coupled with the young Zeus , Rhea's youngest son. [2] The Titans were not the only offsprings Gaia had with her son, Uranus. She also bore him the Cyclopes, Brontes, Steropes, and Arges. Uranus with his mother Gaia then further produced three monstrous giants, the Hecatonchieres. [3]

In Egyptian mythology , Geb challenged his father's, Shu's, leadership, which caused the latter to withdraw from the world. Geb either forcefully copulated with his mother, Tefnut, or she willingly became his chief queen. [4]

Horus, the grandson of Geb, had his own mother, Isis, become his imperial consort. [5]

The goddess Hathor was simultaneously considered to be the mother, wife, and daughter of the sun god Ra . [6] Hathor was also occasionally seen as the mother and wife of Horus . [7]

As studied by Griaule and Parin, the Dogon have the deity Amma who created the Earth. The Earth bore sons and she committed incest with her first son, resulting in her giving birth to the evil bush spirits. [8]

In the Shakti worship of ancient India , the Mother-Goddess is usually equated with Mahādevī , the wife of Shiva , but in some texts she is also mentioned to be his mother. That is to say, being simultaneously the wife and mother of Shiva. She brought Shiva into being through parthenogenesis , but brought forth multiple other deities through sexual union with him. [9]

Pūsan is the wooer of his mother. Nirukta 10.46 indicates that Purūravas unites with his mother, Vāc. In one Tamil myth, Pārvāti, the mother of Skanda, relieves his lust by taking the form of the girl he desires to seduce. Ganeśa, the older son of Pārvāti, closes her vulva with his trunk to stop her from giving birth. [10]

This is a common motif that is employed in order to overcome the taboo against incest. It happens when either one or both of the relatives do not recognise each other. [11]

In Parthenius of Niacea's Love's Woes, one of the many tales featuring incest, recounts the story of Periander, whose mother Cratea (Krateia) told him of a married woman who was desperately in love with him. However, this lady had conditions and they were that they could only meet in a room with no light, and he could not make her to speak to him. He accepted them and told Cratea to facilitate a nighttime encounter with this woman. Their first silent encounter was so pleasurable that Periander requested his mother to setup a meeting again and again. They would have an erotic relationship under the cover of darkness, enjoying making love in the evenings before he let her return to her husband's home. Periander, falling in love and wishing to make her his own wife, wanted to converse with her and look upon her face. [12] However, Cratea continued to protect her identity. [13] As in all such stories, one day he concealed a lighted lamp in his bed chamber. Then after he delighted in her, he exposed the lamp and was horrified to discover his lover to be his own mother, who was sleeping unclothed beside him. Periander was deeply traumatized by the fact that his own mother had tricked him into incest, and he became mad. Seeing the state Cratea brought her son to, cried and begged him for forgiveness. She confessed that she had long had an untameable passion for him. Unable to conquer her desire, she had to resort to this deception. She tried to kill herself as an atonement, but Periander intervened and stopped her. The tale ends with Periander forgiving his mother and them continuing their secret affair. [14] [15] [16]

In a Greek cautionary myth about incest, a young man, Neophron, was interested in sleeping with his mother, Timandra, and so was secretly jealous when another young man, Aegypius, showed attention to her. To Neophron's great relief, Timandra would always reject the other younger man's advances. However, one day Neophron learnt that his mother had allowed Aegypius to debauch her, thereby becoming one of his many mistresses. Heartbroken and furious, he plotted revenge against Aegypius by tricking him into lying with his very own mother, Bulis, who Aegypius believed to be Timandra, in a proverbial (or mythological) "dark chamber". Similar themes of incestuous entrapment or of unwitting incest often recur in Greek folklore. [14] [17] [18]

A couple of African tales have this motif where a mother (the queen) gets rid of her son's wife (the prince's wife) and puts on the wife's clothes to have sexual intercourse with her son. [19] [20]

In a tale from Uganda, a youth called Uken was having a playful argument with his mother. "Now you are old, mother," said he. "But was I not a girl once too?" countered his mother, "surely if I dressed up the men young as you would look at me still! "Really, mother," answered Uken, "you who are all old now, who do you think would look at you?" Now when his mother heard what he said, his words sank deep in her heart. The next morning Uken was exchanging promises with a girl friend, and the girl promised that she would come to him that night. Meanwhile, Uken's mother wanted to disprove her son's earlier opinion of her. She stripped off all her old skin and there she was with complexion as clear as long ago when she had been a girl. Then she went to her son's sleeping place, and waited for him, wanting to see his reaction. She waited and waited but sleep began to overwhelm her and overwhelmed her it did. By the time the youth came back from his walk it was night. He found his mother asleep on his sleeping place. She looked so young and beautiful from head to foot, glistening with the oil she had used to anoint her body, and wearing beads of many kinds.' There she was lying on his sleeping place. So when her son came and entered the hut his eye lit up at the thought that perhaps the girl who had made him promises had really come. And so he lay with his mother that night. At first light his mother went out and left him on the bed. She had never intended for this to happen nor did she think her son knew he had spent the night sleeping with his mother as if he was her husband so she decided she would take this secret to her grave. She returned to her hut and put on her old skin. Then when morning came Uken got up and went to his mother's hut to ask her for food, and once again made some comment about her old age. Hearing that, she could not help herself and said "Your mother, your mother, did you know that just a few hours ago you were enjoying the night with this old lady?" Uken was shocked, and knew it to be true as he realized the moans and sighs of his woman last night matched the voice of his mother. Mortified and embarrassed, never again did he disrespect his mother's appearance. [21]

In a Nupe tale, a man gave his mother money and told her to use it to get for him a wife. While she was out searching, a man she owed money to took the amount her son gave her. With no other means, she returned home and when he asked her for his wife, she assured him that his wife would come some other day, not today. Since then, every day he would keep asking for the whereabouts of his wife. After many days, the mother knew he was no longer believing her lies so she told him that his wife would come that night. She washed herself and put on fresh clothes.
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