Dorchen Leidholdt: Introduction Anti-Pornography Feminism Andrea Dworkin: Against the Male Flood: Censorship, Pornography and Equality Andrea Dworkin: Pornography and Grief Diana Russell: Pornography and Rape: A Causal Model Catharine A. MacKinnon: Defamation and Discrimination Ronald Dworkin and Catharine A. MacKinnon: Pornography: An Exchange-Comment/Reply Catharine A. MacKinnon: The Roar on the other Side of Silence Andrea Dworkin: Suffering and Speech Questioning Moralism Catharine A. MacKinnon: Not a Moral issue Wendy Brown: The Mirror of Pornography Kimberle Crenshaw: The Obscenity Prosecution of 2 Live Crew Deborah Cameron and Elizabeth Frazer: On the Question of Pornography and Sexual Violence: Moving Beyond Cause and Effect Mary Jo Frug: The Politics of Postmodern Feminism: lessons from the Anti-Porn Campaign Becki Ross: It's Merely Designed for Sexual Arousal: Interrogating the Indefensibility of Lesbian Smut Anne Scales: Avoiding Constitutional Depression: Bad Attitudes and the Fate of Butler Italian Manifesto: On Prostitution: Two Broadsheets and a Statement A Historical and Cultural Analysis of Sexuality, Imperialism and Modernity Lynn Hunt: Obscenity and the Origins of Modernity, 1500-1800 Malek Alloula: The Colonial Harem: Images of a Suberoticism Jacqui Alexander: Erotic Autonomy as a Politics of Decolonization: An Anatomy of Feminist and State Practice in the Bahamas Tourist Industry Lliane Loots: Looking for Women's Rights in the Rainbow: Pornography, Censorship and the 'New' South Africa Victoria Ortiz: We are Women Too: Prostitution After the Cuban Revolution Breaking Open the Ground of Sex and Gender Amber Hollibaugh: Seducing Women into a 'Lifestyle and Vaginal Fisting': Lesbian Sex Gets Virtually Dangerous Kobena Mercer: Just Looking for Trouble: Robert Maplethorpe and Fantasies About Race Bell Hooks: Good Girls look the Other Way Judith Butler: The Force of Fantasy: Feminism, Maplethorpe and Discursive Excess Rey Chow: Love Me, Master, Love Me, Son Erotic Hope, Feminine Sexuality and the Beginnings of Sexual Freedom Angela Carter: Polemical Preface: Pornography in the Service of Women Candida Royalle: Porn in the USA Drucilla Cornell: Pornography's Temptation Audre Lorde: Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power Catherine Portuges: Lovers and Workers: Screening the Body in Post-Communist Hungarian Cinema Amber Hollibaugh and Cherrie Moraga: What We're Rolling Around in Bed With Alice Walker: Porn Peter Esterhazy: Little Hungarian Pornography Flora Di Peidra: El Salvador, Mission Statement Zooraida Ramirez Rodriguez: Prostitution in Latin America and the Caribbean Siriporn Skrobanek, Nattaya Boonpakdi and Chutima Janthakeero: From Research to Action Isabell Barker: Editing Pornography Index
A collection of essays which seeks to open a space for divergent points of view (pro- and anti-pornography) from diverse socio-political contexts (capitalist, post-socialist, post-colonial, post-apartheid) and from a wide array of constituencies (activist, sex workers, academics) to address the complexity of sexual material.
Dorchen Leidholdt: Introduction Anti-Pornography Feminism Andrea Dworkin: Against the Male Flood: Censorship, Pornography and Equality Andrea Dworkin: Pornography and Grief Diana Russell: Pornography and Rape: A Causal Model Catharine A. MacKinnon: Defamation and Discrimination Ronald Dworkin and Catharine A. MacKinnon: Pornography: An Exchange-Comment/Reply Catharine A. MacKinnon: The Roar on the other Side of Silence Andrea Dworkin: Suffering and Speech Questioning Moralism Catharine A. MacKinnon: Not a Moral issue Wendy Brown: The Mirror of Pornography Kimberle Crenshaw: The Obscenity Prosecution of 2 Live Crew Deborah Cameron and Elizabeth Frazer: On the Question of Pornography and Sexual Violence: Moving Beyond Cause and Effect Mary Jo Frug: The Politics of Postmodern Feminism: lessons from the Anti-Porn Campaign Becki Ross: It's Merely Designed for Sexual Arousal: Interrogating the Indefensibility of Lesbian Smut Anne Scales: Avoiding Constitutional Depression: Bad Attitudes and the Fate of Butler Italian Manifesto: On Prostitution: Two Broadsheets and a Statement A Historical and Cultural Analysis of Sexuality, Imperialism and Modernity Lynn Hunt: Obscenity and the Origins of Modernity, 1500-1800 Malek Alloula: The Colonial Harem: Images of a Suberoticism Jacqui Alexander: Erotic Autonomy as a Politics of Decolonization: An Anatomy of Feminist and State Practice in the Bahamas Tourist Industry Lliane Loots: Looking for Women's Rights in the Rainbow: Pornography, Censorship and the 'New' South Africa Victoria Ortiz: We are Women Too: Prostitution After the Cuban Revolution Breaking Open the Ground of Sex and Gender Amber Hollibaugh: Seducing Women into a 'Lifestyle and Vaginal Fisting': Lesbian Sex Gets Virtually Dangerous Kobena Mercer: Just Looking for Trouble: Robert Maplethorpe and Fantasies About Race Bell Hooks: Good Girls look the Other Way Judith Butler: The Force of Fantasy: Feminism, Maplethorpe and Discursive Excess Rey Chow: Love Me, Master, Love Me, Son Erotic Hope, Feminine Sexuality and the Beginnings of Sexual Freedom Angela Carter: Polemical Preface: Pornography in the Service of Women Candida Royalle: Porn in the USA Drucilla Cornell: Pornography's Temptation Audre Lorde: Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power Catherine Portuges: Lovers and Workers: Screening the Body in Post-Communist Hungarian Cinema Amber Hollibaugh and Cherrie Moraga: What We're Rolling Around in Bed With Alice Walker: Porn Peter Esterhazy: Little Hungarian Pornography Flora Di Peidra: El Salvador, Mission Statement Zooraida Ramirez Rodriguez: Prostitution in Latin America and the Caribbean Siriporn Skrobanek, Nattaya Boonpakdi and Chutima Janthakeero: From Research to Action Isabell Barker: Editing Pornography Index
A collection of essays which seeks to open a space for divergent points of view (pro- and anti-pornography) from diverse socio-political contexts (capitalist, post-socialist, post-colonial, post-apartheid) and from a wide array of constituencies (activist, sex workers, academics) to address the complexity of sexual material.
This collection of essays seeks to expand the parameters of the debate on pornography. In an effort to move away from the divisive frameworks of which side are you on? and who counts as women worthy to be listened to? in feminist debates on pornography, this volume seeks to understand what pornography means to those who consume it, fight against it, work within it, and to those engaged in changing its meaning. By opening up a space for divergent points of view toaddress the complexity of sexual material, this volume seeks to forge solidarity amongst a diverse array of constituencies, including academics, activists, and sex workers from diverse socio-politicalcontexts. Through seeking to address the relationship between imperialism, the exotic, and the pornographic, the collection moves away from Eurocentric perspectives on pornography, by including the perspectives of women involved in struggles for national liberation in the South. This volume explores a wide range of issues, such as, how the meaning of pornography is shaped by changing historical and political realities; the role law should play, if any, in the sexindustry; whether union organizing can change the working conditions in the sex industry; kinds of representational politics available for redefining pornography; and how sexually explicity literature, videos,art, and music can serve the purpose of sexual freedom. Contributors to the volume include Diana Russell, Catharine MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin, Wendy Brown, Becki Ross, Mallek Alloula, M. Jacqui Alexander, Victoria Ortiz, bell hooks, Rey Chow, Judith Butler, Candida Royalle, Zoraida Ramirez Rodriguez, amongst others.
Professor of Law, Political Science, and Women's Studies at Rutgers University
This collection of essays seeks to expand the parameters of the debate on pornography. In an effort to move away from the divisive frameworks of which side are you on? and who counts as women worthy to be listened to? in feminist debates on pornography, this volume seeks to understand what pornography means to those who consume it, fight against it, work within it, and to those engaged in changing its meaning. By opening up a space for divergent points of view to address the complexity of sexual material, this volume seeks to forge solidarity amongst a diverse array of constituencies, including academics, activists, and sex workers from diverse socio-political contexts. Through seeking to address the relationship between imperialism, the exotic, and the pornographic, the collection moves away from Eurocentric perspectives on pornography, by including the perspectives of women involved in struggles for national liberation in the South. This volume explores a wide range of issues, such as, how the meaning of pornography is shaped by changing historical and political realities; the role law should play, if any, in the sex industry; whether union organizing can change the working conditions in the sex industry; kinds of representational politics available for redefining pornography; and how sexually explicity literature, videos, art, and music can serve the purpose of sexual freedom. Contributors to the volume include Diana Russell, Catharine MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin, Wendy Brown, Becki Ross, Mallek Alloula, M. Jacqui Alexander, Victoria Ortiz, bell hooks, Rey Chow, Judith Butler, Candida Royalle, Zoraida Ramirez Rodriguez, amongst others.
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