The Kama Sutra, a Hindu treatise on …

Years: 172 - 183

The Kama Sutra, a Hindu treatise on the art of love composed in Sanskrit sometime between the first and fourth centuries CE, is widely considered to be the standard work on human sexual behavior in Sanskrit literature written by Vātsyāyana, an Indian philosopher in the Cārvāka tradition.

A portion of the work consists of practical advice on sexual intercourse.

Partly a marriage manual, the text imparts such specific sexual information as the arts of scratching, biting, and pinching.

Vatsyayana discusses women, courtship, and the place of erotic pleasure in the urbane life of a man or woman of leisure in the Kama Sutra.

The Indian woman, whose duty it is in her culture to appear alluring to her lover, also uses cosmetics and perfumes to pay homage to the body.

The Kama Sutra advises women to learn the arts of tattooing and of "coloring the teeth, garments, hair, nails, and bodies."

Historian John Keay states that the Kama Sutra is a compendium that was collected into its present form in the second century CE. (Keay, John [2000]. India: A History. New York: Grove Press.)

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