A Quick & Easy Guide to Consent

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A Quick & Easy Guide to Consent
A Quick and Easy Guide to Consent review
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  • NORTH AMERICAN PUBLISHER / ISBN: Limerance Press - ‎ 978-1-62010-794-2
  • RELEASE DATE: 2020
  • FORMAT: Black and white
  • UPC: 9781620107942
  • CONTAINS ADULT CONTENT?: no
  • DOES THIS PASS THE BECHDEL TEST?: yes
  • POSITIVE MINORITY PORTRAYAL?: yes

Comics are a matchless tool for education: rendering the most complex topics easily accessible and displaying a potent facility to inform, affect and alter behaviour. Here’s another superb example of the art form using its great powers for good.

The Quick & Easy Guide series has an admirable record of confronting uncomfortable issues with taste, sensitivity and breezy forthrightness: offering sound solutions as well as awareness or solidarity. Here, cartoonist Isabella Rotman supplies a cogent, compelling primer covering the irrefutable basics When, Where, Why and most especially What can be taken as consent. This is such a charged issue that the light, informative lecture is preceded by a very clear and well thought out content warning defining terms and the specifics of situations, with firm regard to gender, scope and even an informational disclaimer – that’s how hot a topic this still is.

Terms are examined and situations explored during a tenuous first encounter between two healthy young adults. However, as things heat up, a phantasmal guide pops in to steer the participants and give voice to their suppressed concerns, through chapters such as ‘What is Consent?’, ‘Consent is Simple’, ‘What is Sex?’ and ‘Consent Must be Freely Given!’, all emphasised through sidebars like ‘Tell Them What Turns You On!’ and an enumeration of what definitively ‘Have Nothing to do With Consent!’

The dialogue and comics show and tells are punctuated by quotes from professional Sexual Consent Educators, augmented by role plays, quizzes and a section outlining and defining current (US only) ‘Age of Consent’ laws, before asking ‘Is Everyone Fully Informed?’ This last is primarily about all the many factors – physical and emotional – potential partners should always be apprised of, but also broadmindedly enquires ‘What About Kink?’, and even tackles the ever-present – and potentially devastating – ‘Fear of Rejection’.

In closing, the convivial confrontation offers a list of potential faux pas in ‘So Don’t…’; a summation ‘In Review…’ before providing a ‘Yes. No. Maybe So Checklist’ as well as a selection of ‘Safer Sex: Contraception’, ‘…STI Risk Reduction’ and ‘…Activities’ suggestions.

Being wise beyond her years and probably acutely aware of how inventive humans are, the author closes with sagacious questionnaire ‘Anything Else?’, plus a fulsome bibliography and list of resources to contact. However, considering how hostile most parents, many governments and all organised religions are to such dangerous knowledge in the sweaty hands of actual consentors/consentees, these might no longer be of much use.

This witty, no-nonsense treatise offers sage advice on becoming our best selves by dealing with our selfish natures – something that really should have been bred out of humanity eons, if not centuries, ago. This should be compulsory reading in every school and college… and pub, and nightclub, and scenic natural beauty spot, and cinema and waiting room and…

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