Vagina dentata (
Latin for toothedvagina) describes a
folk tale in which a woman's vagina is said to contain teeth, with the associated implication that
sexual intercourse might result in injury,
emasculation, or
castration for the man involved. The topic of "vagina dentata" may also cover a rare medical condition affecting the vagina, in which case it is more accurately termed a vaginal
dermoid cyst.
In folklore
Such folk stories are frequently told as
cautionary tales warning of the dangers of unknown women and to discourage
rape.[1]
The psychologist
Erich Neumann wrote that in one such myth, "...a fish inhabits the vagina of the Terrible Mother; the hero is the man who overcomes the Terrible Mother, breaks the teeth out of her vagina, and so makes her into a woman."[2]
South America
The legend also appears in the mythology of the
Chaco and
Guiana tribes of South America. In some versions, the hero leaves one tooth.[3]
North America
The
Ponca and the
Otoe tribes tell a story in which
Coyote outwits a wicked old woman who placed teeth in the vaginas of her daughter and another young woman she kept prisoner, in order to seduce, kill, and rob young men. Coyote kills the woman and her daughter but marries the other young woman, after knocking out the teeth in her vagina "except for one blunt tooth that was very thrilling when making love".[4]
Hinduism
In Hinduism, the asuraAndhaka, son of
Shiva and
Parvati (but not aware of it), is killed by Shiva when he tries to force the disguised Shiva into surrendering Parvati. Andhaka's son
Adi, also an asura, takes the form of Parvati to seduce and kill Shiva with a toothed vagina in order to avenge Andhaka, but is also slain.[5]
Ainu legends
The
Ainu legend is that a sharp-toothed
demon hid inside the
vagina of a young woman and
emasculated two young men on their wedding nights.[6] Consequently, the woman sought help from a blacksmith who fashioned an iron
phallus to break the demon's teeth.[7][8]
Māori mythology
In
Māori mythology, the
tricksterMāui tries to grant mankind immortality by reversing the birth process, turning into a worm and crawling into the vagina of
Hine-nui-te-pō, the goddess of night and of death, and out through her mouth while she sleeps. His trick is ruined when a pīwakawaka laughs at the sight of his entry, awakening Hine-nui-te-pō, who bites the worm to death with her
obsidian vaginal teeth.[9]
Western Asia
Arabs from South-Eastern
Iran and islands in
Strait of Hormuz have a legend about Menmendas, a creature that looks like a beautiful young woman with spikes on her thighs. She walks in the coastal mountains with a small box of jewels and attracts every man on her way. Menmendas goes with an attracted man into an empty house, puts the box of jewels under her head and lies down with her legs spread. If the man understands who this woman is, he can cast a fistful of sand in her eyes and run away with the box. If the man is overcome by lust, the woman cuts him in half with her legs.[10][11][12]
In her book Sexual Personae (1991),
Camille Paglia wrote: "The toothed vagina is no sexist hallucination: every penis is made less in every vagina, just as mankind, male and female, is devoured by mother nature."[13]
In his book The Wimp Factor, Stephen J. Ducat expresses a similar view, that these myths express the threat sexual intercourse poses for men who, although entering triumphantly, always leave diminished.[14]
In popular culture
In the novel Snow Crash by
Neal Stephenson, the vagina of Y.T., a female character, is equipped with a dentata, a device which injects a powerful
soporific into whatever penetrates it, in order to prevent
rape.
The 2024
Off-Broadway musical Teeth was based on the 2007 comedy horror film, with book and music by Anna K. Jacobs and book and lyrics by
Michael R. Jackson[17] (the latter of whom wrote the Tony Award–winning musical A Strange Loop). The show features a musical sequence in which the cast's female ensemble transforms into disciples of "Dentata" (a mythological goddess) and castrates the male cast members with their vaginas.[18]
In the novel Rivers of London, the Pale Lady is a
fae and chimera who possesses vagina dentata, which she uses to kill men with whom she is having intercourse.[19]
In the short story "The Weasel Bride" by
Tanith Lee, the titular bride possesses vagina dentata, which leads to her death. The short story first appears in The Book of the Dead (1991) part of Lee's The Secret Books Of Paradys series.[20]
In rare instances,
dermoid cysts (a type of tumor) may grow in the vagina. Dermoid cysts are formed from the outer layers of embryonic skin cells. These cells are able to mature into many different types of tissues, and these cysts are able to form anywhere the skin is or where the skin folds inwards to become another organ, such as in the ear or the vagina. However, when dermoid cysts occur in the vagina, they are covered by a layer of normal vaginal tissue and therefore appear as a lump, not as recognizable teeth.[22][23][24]
^Yu. E. Berezkin, E. N. Duvakin. "World mythology and folklore: thematic classification and areal distribution of motifs" (analytical catalogue).
F9A. Зубастое лоно (Toothed womb).
^Coco, Claudio; Manno, Alberto; Mattana, Claudio; Verbo, Alessandro; Sermoneta, Daniel; Franceschini, Gianluca; De Gaetano, Annamaria; Larocca, Luigi Maria; Petito, Luigi (2008-08-01). "Congenital tumors of the retrorectal space in the adult: report of two cases and review of the literature". Tumori. 94 (4): 602–607.
doi:
10.1177/030089160809400428.
ISSN0300-8916.
PMID18822703.
S2CID29999001.