Tarzan And Shame Of Jane Guide

Consensual BDSM fiction includes safewords, negotiation, and aftercare. The Shame of Jane usually lacks all three. It conflates “shame” with degradation, not with exploration of taboo within a safe framework.

Read Burroughs for cultural literacy, skip The Shame of Jane entirely. If you want a deconstruction of the Tarzan myth, try Greystoke (film) or Tarzan: The Lost Adventure (collaboration with Joe R. Lansdale). tarzan and shame of jane

Avoid unless you are researching historical porn parodies or have a very specific niche interest. For ethical, well-written Tarzan-inspired erotica, seek out modern works (e.g., The Jane Journals by indie authors) that center consent and character. Final Comparison Table | Aspect | Tarzan of the Apes (1912) | The Shame of Jane (1990s parody) | |--------|-----------------------------|--------------------------------------| | Literary value | High for adventure genre, low for social ethics | Minimal—exploitative and poorly written | | Gender portrayal | Outdated but Jane has some wit | Jane is a sexual object, no agency | | Readability | Fast-paced, dated language | Low—repetitive, cliché-ridden | | For modern audiences | Historical curiosity with warnings | Not recommended | Read Burroughs for cultural literacy, skip The Shame

Good literary erotica requires psychological depth, tension, and mutual desire. The Shame of Jane typically replaces these with stock power fantasies. The “shame” is supposed to be titillating, but without genuine character agency, it reads as abuse dressed in loincloth. Avoid unless you are researching historical porn parodies