Publications While researching needlework in late 19th- and early 20th-century women's magazines, Maines encountered what she would argue were highly circumspect advertisements for
vibrators. The advertisements, she claimed, showed women using the electrical devices to massage their necks and backs but the accompanying text described the devices as "thrilling, invigorating" and promised that "all the penetrating pleasures of youth will throb in you again". Maines recalled in a 1999 interview, "I kept thinking to myself, this can't be what I think it is." She then began researching and writing articles on the history of vibrators, the first one for the newsletter of the
Bakken Museum of Electricity in Life. According to Maines, the article caused her to lose her post as assistant professor at
Clarkson University in 1986 because the university was convinced that the nature of her research would drive away benefactors and alumni donors, though no evidence was presented to substantiate this claim. Three years later she submitted a more detailed article, "Socially Camouflaged Technologies: The Case of the Electromechanical Vibrator", to
Society and Technology, the magazine of the
IEEE Society on Social Implications of Technology. Initially, the IEEE thought the article was a joke perpetrated by the magazine's editors and that there was no such person as Rachel Maines. However, after checking all the internal citations and Maines's own background, the IEEE finally allowed the article to be published in the June 1989 edition of the magazine. Her book-length treatment of the subject,
The Technology of Orgasm, was published in 1998 by Johns Hopkins University Press. Subtitled ''"Hysteria," the Vibrator, and Women's Sexual Satisfaction'', it won the
American Historical Association's
Herbert Feis Award and was the inspiration for
Sarah Ruhl's 2009 play
In the Next Room and
Tanya Wexler's 2011 film
Hysteria. The book also formed the basis for
Passion & Power, a 2007 documentary by
Emiko Omori and Wendy Slick.
Controversy Many of Maines's claims in
The Technology of Orgasm have been challenged, notably by classicist
Helen King and researchers at the
Wellcome Collection. In 2012, King's article on Maines's misuse of classical material was awarded the
Barbara McManus Prize of the Women's Classical Caucus. A central claim in Maines's book—that Victorian physicians routinely used electromechanical vibrators to stimulate female patients to orgasm as a treatment for hysteria—was challenged by
Hallie Lieberman and Eric Schatzberg of the
Georgia Institute of Technology. In January 2020, Lieberman wrote an op-ed in
The New York Times which drew further attention to Maines' role in promoting the latter widespread myth as fact. ==Other research==