Not many people know that the 'Kama Sutra' was written as one of the holy books of Hinduism and was intended as a social code book, instructing men and women in ancient India on appropriate behaviour throughout their lives.
Vatsyayana Mallanaga's 'Kama Sutra', the third century treatise on sexual and social conduct, has too often been misunderstood as a pornographic text. Without desexualising Vatsyayana's text this unexpurgated version acknowledges the social and cultural importance of the 'Kama Sutra' and its value as a historical document.
How should a man assess the degree of his love sickness? What types of advances do women generally appreciate? When is the right time to enlist a friend to plead your case with the woman you love?
Gathering together a wealth of previously unpublished material and unseen art, this is the definitive 'Kama Sutra'. The first 'Kama Sutra' to illustrate all 64 sexual positions, this book is both visually captivating and an invaluable information source for those wanting to understand the though and cultural framework behind the most influential sexual manual of all time.