- Terence Sellers
Terence Sellers (born
1952 , inWashington D.C. ) is an Americanauthor and psychologist, with a specialization insadomasochism . After graduating fromJohn Jay College inNew York City and doing graduate work atSt. John's College in Santa Fe, NM she became an editor and reviewer.Early life
Sellers was born as the daughter of John Robert Sellers, a writer and Gloria Ruth Schlosser, a painter. Her father was an autodidact and avid book-collector, and instilled in her the ambition to be a writer by the age of seven."Terry" became "Teresa" in Catholic school for ten years, when the 60s intervened and she enjoyed the freedom of public school for her last two years in high-school.
Though superficially a bohemian like her parents and a 'hippie,' she was drawn intellectually to the classics, and attended the famous St. John's College, Santa Fe campus, and there studied "The Great Books." Her father's financial problems assured her an early foray into earning her own living, and without graduating or returninghome she moved to New York City at the age of 19 in 1972.
Writing
Early experiments in writing were heavily influenced by the French Decadents:
Baudelaire, Mallarme andNerval, as well as the French Surrealists.Jean Genet was a very early favorite, based partly on her knowledge of her father's one year of incarceration when she was five years of age.Like her father, an autodidact, her library modestly burgeoned within a tiny New York apartment at 21 Jones Street, financed by a secretary's salary. She taught herself French, visiting France several times in the convening years. Her father's influence included the burly American ethos of Hemingway, Fitzgerald and John O'Hara.
Other early interests were in
abnormal psychology andpsychoanalysis, in which she read widely. She was herself eventually in analysis for close to twenty years. By the age of twenty, she already understood she possessed a psyche dominated by sado-masochistic matrices. Her subsequent readings, studies and experiments insadomasochistic psychology and behaviour led her to write the seminal work,"The Correct Sadist," which was first published by ikoo-Buchverlag inBerlin in 1981 as "Die Korrecte Sadismus." The German edition remains in print. She undertook to self-publish "The Correct Sadist" in 1982 under the imprint "V.I.T.R.I.O.L," a medievalacronym referring to the transformation of lead into gold.This self-publishing venture drew the attention of New York's Grove Press, under the famed
Barney Rosset. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barney_Rosset"The Correct Sadist" appeared in 1985, and was among the last books Mr. Rosset published under his original Grove Press imprint.Terence completed her education at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, where she graduated 3rd in her class summa cum laude, 1986, with a degree in
Forensic Psychology. She also received a tribute to attend graduate school. However, realizing that a career in 'straight' society was closed to her due to her infamous book, she determined to remain in her underground of the Dominatrix, attend to a clientele that grew to over twenty-years' standing, and continued to write.During her heyday as a Dominatrix and Madam, Terence was able to purchase property, design and build a home, and make plans for a 'writing retirement.' Returning to New Mexico with strong memories and emotions connected to the place - the landscape, her new home, and her alma mater, St. John's - she was joined in this exodus from New York in 1988 by the painter
Carl Apfelschnitt . Though they were friends only briefly, from 1985 until the time of his death in 1990 at age 40 by AIDS, Apfelschnitt had a profound influence upon Terence, inspiring her to write her novel "One Decadent Life" based on the admixed heroin culture and art world of New York City. An autobiographical piece, "Is There Life After Sado-Masochism" to be found with other works on her website, http://www.terencesellers.com/wr_lifeaft.html perfectly describes thefin-de-siecle mode of their collaboration. They would be the New York Exodus Renaissance...After Apfelschnitt died, Sellers' house was completed, but she was without much impetus to engage in Renaissance. She somewhat abandoned New Mexico and returned to New York and a lively new reality, "Jackie 60," a nightclub/performance space/social club of bohemians she had known for going on twenty years. The 'Whipshack,' as it was fondly known by her friends, continued to provide a somewhat decent living for the author.
She did go to New Mexico on writing retreats, during which time she completed a second work on sado-masochism, "Dungeon Evidence." Aka "The Correct Sadist II," this work was originally 'commissioned' by Grove Press-Weidenfeld by one of its new editors - a personage who shall remain nameless. Upon completing "Dungeon Evidence," a work marked by her psychiatric studies and highly influenced by the case studies' work of the early psychoanalysts, her editor reneged. This editor had gone to South America and had a literal conversion experience - whereupon he was sworn to The Virgin not to publish anymore "degenerate literature." Though Grove Press soon fired him, "Dungeon Evidence" was snapped up by an arts' press in England, Creation/Velvet, and appeared in 1997.
Another project Terence enjoyed with Creation was the publication of 13th Editor of Krafft-Ebing's "Psychopathia Sexualis, http://www.creationbooks.com/frameset.asp?p=nf-sex_fetish.html one of her favorite works. She was asked to write its Introduction, which gave her the opportunity to remind the powers-that-be that much of the body of Krafft-Ebing's work were observations by 'women of the night,' without whose co-operation hewould have had less than half his material. It also gave her the pleasure of writing her own "Case History," #236 under Krafft-Ebing's aegis: a few paragraphs that the author considers one of her most mordant, yet finest works. This Introduction may be read at http://www.terencesellers.com/wr_psychopathia.html
She now underwent a period of relative non-productivity, concentrating on a relationship witha beautiful young transgendered lady Falon, http://www.falon./com a talented web-artist who brought Sellers out of her Luddite fixation with the 19th century, speeding her through the twentieth to land squarely in the 21st, as a fully functional member of the Wired World, as an Author and dark 'Sex Symbol,' shamaness, crone and renegade psychologist. The creation of her web-site http://www.terencesellers.com became a primary focus, her archive, and hand out to a world that has mostly remained unaware of her work.
After 28 years Terence lost "The Whipshack" in the burgeoning real-estate frenzy of 2004, and present... her tiny old building was sold to an Israeli real estate conglomerate that razed it literally at her heels. Unable to locate any space worth having for what she might pay,she arrived on October 1, 2005 to live full-time in New Mexico. At about the same time, the New York University's prestigious
Fales Library bought her papers for its "Downtown Collection," http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/fales/exhibits/downtown/collections/index3.html featuring artists of every stripe who lived and worked in New York City's downtownfrom 1972 - 1995 - just about precisely her most creative time-span there.Terence's newest work, "Unpublished Novel" is her newest work, a literary memoir that encompasses her late father-writer Bob and his unrealized literary ambitions, and features his unpublished novel, garnished with her editorial whip-hand.
Literature
* "The Correct Sadist: The Memoirs of Angel Stern", Blue Moon Books (1998), ISBN 1562010778
* "Dungeon Evidence : Correct Sadist 2", Creation Books (1998), ASIN B000KPJ9SO
* "The Obsession: The Beloved", Vitriol Pubns (1987), ISBN 0930635558External links
* [http://www.terencesellers.com Home page]
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