On the Discovery of the Vibrator & Its Concussive Effects on Sexuality

Vibratörün Keşfi & Cinselliğe Sarsıcı Etkileri Üzerine

Vibrators are vibrating tools that add a different dimension to sexual pleasure and can be designed in different shapes. It is a revolutionary discovery as it makes it easier to achieve vaginal and clitoral orgasm.

We have compiled for you the shocking journey of discovery of the vibrator, which has been the subject of research by historians and archaeologists, but which we never learn about in schools.
The first known vibrators were invented in France in 1734 and were called Tremoussoir. In 1869, the first steam-powered vibrator was invented by doctor George Taylor, called the Manipulator, and began to be used in the treatment of hysteria.

In the 19th century , the disease “hysteria”, defined as a kind of depression in the woman's womb, was seen as a diagnosable physical disease seen only in women.

Contemporary doctors suggested that hysteria could only be treated through sexual stimulation, and many different stimulants were used, from pressurized water to various objects. In sessions lasting hours, women are laid on a table with a ball on it, doctors operate a steam machine that makes the ball vibrate with hand power, and claim to cure them by bringing them to orgasm.

With the introduction of electricity into homes at the end of the 19th century, the transformation of vibrators from steam machines to electrical devices began. The transformative effect of the Industrial Revolution found its counterpart in the field of medicine, as in many other fields, and a doctor became the inventor of the electric vibrator, claiming that the vibrations produced by small electrical household appliances could be used to sexually stimulate women. Thus, Dr. Joseph Mortimor Granville patents the first electric vibrator.

The first electric vibrator, the closest relative of today's vibrators, has the words "electronic device for personal use" written on it, and magazines talk about it as "the epitome of eternal youth, you will feel all the pleasures and excitement thanks to it."

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Vibrators, which began to find a place in advertisements in the 1920s, became very popular and subsequently their advertising was regulated on the grounds that it evoked pornography... Until the sexual revolution in the 1960s.

In 1966, Jon H. Tavel applied for a patent for a "wireless electric vibrator used on the human body" and received the patent in 1968. Thus, another update is being brought to vibrators. New models that are one-piece, multi-speed adjustable and easy to clean are coming into our lives.

Starting in the 1980s, vibrators and sex toys have become highly visible in society.

In the 90s, when vibrators began to appear on popular television channels and offline channels, their popularity increased. In Sex and the City, Charlotte becomes addicted to the rabbit vibrator; On The Oprah Winfrey Show, Dr. Laura Berman recommends vibrators to mothers to teach their children the concept of clitoral pleasure; It is starting to be sold in popular chain markets such as Target and Walmart.

But today, vibrators are still illegal in many countries and sex toys continue to be considered taboo. Even though vibrators are sold as massagers, masturbation is seen as shameful, ridiculous, and inferior to having sexual intercourse with a man. Birth control methods and sex toys for women are strictly regulated, while delay pills that improve men's sexual experience are openly promoted.

What can we say? We wish for a free life and a sex-positive future where we can share equal rights under the same sky, even though each of us is born in different lands and to different cultures.

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Source
https://www.confidentlovers.com/hysteria-why-men-invented-vibrators/
https://evrimagaci.org/histeri-nedir-artik-gecersiz-bir-hastalik-olan-histerinin-kadin-rahmi-ile-iliskisi-neydi-12563 
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-vibrator/