Friday, January 17, 2014

Leather Punishment Sack

My drawing of a leather punishment sack, as described by William Seabrook.
I have been reading everything I can get my hands on by William Seabrook, in search of any references to bondage devices or techniques, and his relation to them. He's an American adventurer and author who traveled to exotic locations and wrote about his experiences in the 1930s and 40s - a time when such exploits were relatively rare. He also (later in life) explored bondage as a pathway to altered states of consciousness or perception. (I keep wanting to do a series of posts about him, but there is so much to tell, it's hard to get it all boiled down into small parts...) 

For now I want to share a passage from Seabrook's 1934 book The White Monk of Timbuctoo. The book is a biography of a white French missionary named Yakouba who eventually "goes native" after being assigned by the church to bring religion to the natives of (what's now) Timbuktu, in the west African nation of Mali. Seabrook writes about a large leather bag found at an abandoned Tuareg campsite:

"They found also a large empty cowhide bag, tanned soft and pliable but strong, with a heavy silver lock attached to the thongs which drew the neck shut. Nobody was able to guess its use, so when they returned they gave it to the mission as a curiosity. 
When the little baptized Tuareg cubs–the mission now had three–saw it brought in, they all began howling bloody murder and tried to run away. They were too scared at first to explain intelligibly, but one of them kept yowling, "Don't put me in it! Don't put me in it!" so the solution was easy to guess. Grown calmer, they told that they were put in such sacks for punishment–as white mothers will sometimes shut up a child in the closet. But as even this seemed insufficient to explain their terror at the mere sight of the sack, Yakouba kept questioning them further, until one of them said, "Big people sometimes scream and die in it." 

They got the full explanation later from a Bellah. It is rather ingenious. Putting bad children in such sacks for an hour or so is not their principal use. They are used to punish or torture grown-ups whom the Tuaregs do not wish to mutilate, particularly recalcitrant girls and women. They are stuffed in the sack with their knees doubled under their chin, their heads bent, their bodies drawn tight in a ball, and with a small hole left somewhere for the air to come in so they can't stifle. "Three or four days and nights of it," the Bellah said, would "completely tame the most rebellious." In the daytime the sack was left in the sun, at night it was rolled and left on a pile of sharp stones or camp gear such as tent-pegs, mallets, tools; if they moved from one camp to another, it was simply put on a camel with other baggage. 

Sometimes, he explained, the sack was first soaked with water so that after the supple leather "had been drawn as tight as possible, it would shrink in drying and become still tighter." Weak ones sometimes died, he said, but not often. Usually they "were not spoiled." It was amusing, though, he said, to hear them, after the first day, begging and pleading to have a spear stuck through them. Another amusing thing, he said, was that if they wanted to keep a girl that way a long time, they would fasten her in a tight ball with her head outside the sack so they could give her food and water."

There is no other mention of the sack (or any other type of bondage) in this book, but you can definitely get a sense of Seabrook's fascination with the object in question. As horrific as the experience sounds, I must also admit a part of me wants to try making such a device to see what may come of it (and to find out just how unbearable it might be). 

8 comments:

  1. very interesting - reminds me of early Jim Stewart / Fetters 'mail sack' like bags that locked at the top.
    Now I have my mind racing here - wonder if it could be lined with sheepskin of fur ? ...

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    1. You are right about the mail sack (I found page with some photos here:
      http://www.houdini-connections.co.uk/4-info/Topics/bags-male.htm).

      Seems to be the closest modern equivalent. Sheepskin lining sounds like it would make it pretty warm inside, but that would definitely add a whole new tactile sensation as well. Hmmmm....

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  2. Ahahaha, yes! Capturing women with sacks is a trope in Chinese period dramas (set in 1920s-1940s) usually involving unpaid debts with triad bosses. With latex, those scenes seem kinkier now!

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  3. did you ever realize your plans to build one of these punsihment sacks?

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    1. Not yet, but still something I would like to do... It's hard to find a model who can take that position.

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  4. ahh - i see .. especially for the long perids as described

    it might be a good idea to install multiple belt loops to be able to change the position of the closure belt on the belt neck - and perhaps also a set of belt loops to put a tensioning belt around the model

    but don't you think you might be able to find a buyer for this kind of thing?

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    1. The only thing about your suggestion about belt loops is I really like the clean look of the sack, and the idea of being able to see the bound form inside the bag. The more things you add to the surface, the more it might take away from that...

      About finding a buyer: I've changed my focus away from doing custom work for others altogether at this time. I just want to do some things without worrying about sell-ability, practicality or cost. Freedom to explore and experiment.

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  5. I understand your concern about the esthetic impact .. but I dont see another way of adujsting the position of the closure strap up or down for models of diffferent sizes - or do you have some idea as a result of your hands-on knowledge?

    I do hope that you will be able to find a model for this at some time ... and it is nice to be able to do this "for art" 8) - without having to consiuder saleability

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