Definition of Pruriency. Meaning of Pruriency. Synonyms of Pruriency

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Pruriency. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Pruriency and, of course, Pruriency synonyms and on the right images related to the word Pruriency.

Definition of Pruriency

Pruriency
Prurience Pru"ri*ence, Pruriency Pru"ri*en*cy, n. The quality or state of being prurient. The pruriency of curious ears. --Burke. There is a prurience in the speech of some. --Cowper.

Meaning of Pruriency from wikipedia

- artist. He is best known for extreme music released under the stage name Prurient, as well as numerous other aliases including Vatican Shadow, Rainforest...
- standards, would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest, (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive...
- utopian aesthetics – that of physical perfection", in a way that is "both prurient and idealizing". According to Sontag, fascist aesthetics "is based on the...
- Time's Arrow is an EP by the American musical project Prurient, the performing name of the artist Dominick Fernow. It was released on October 25, 2011...
- approach to deleting ****ually explicit images he believed "appeal solely to prurient interests". In mid-2003, Wales set up the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF), a...
- the dominant theme of the material, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest". This definition proved hard to apply, however, and in the following...
- scoptophilia describes the ****ual pleasure that a person derives from looking at prurient objects of eroticism, such as ****, the nude body, and fetishes...
- be considered obscene, it had to be proven by censors to: 1) appeal to prurient interest, 2) be patently offensive, and 3) have no redeeming social value...
- album between experimental musicians Dominick Fernow under the pseudonym Prurient and Justin Broadrick (of Godflesh and Jesu) under the pseudonym JK Flesh...
- reconcile with Marlowe's "anti-intellectualism" and his catering to the prurient tastes of his Elizabethan audiences for generous displays of extreme physical...