After the Sex Wars: Pornography and Feminism
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In Andrea Dworkin and Catharine Mackinnon
Dymock, Alex. 2018. Anti-communal, Anti-egalitarian, Anti-nurturing, Anti-loving: Sex and the ’Irredeemable’ in Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon. Paragraph, 41(3), pp. 349-363. ISSN 0264-8334 [Article] https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/27778/ The version presented here may differ from the published, performed or presented work. Please go to the persistent GRO record above for more information. If you believe that any material held in the repository infringes copyright law, please contact the Repository Team at Goldsmiths, University of London via the following email address: [email protected]. The item will be removed from the repository while any claim is being investigated. For more information, please contact the GRO team: [email protected] Anticommunal, antiegalitarian, antinurturing, antiloving: sex and the ‘irredeemable’ in Dworkin and MacKinnon ALEX DYMOCK Abstract: The work of Andrea Dworkin and Catharine A. MacKinnon on sex and sexuality has often been posed as adversary to the development of queer theory. Leo Bersani, in particular, is critical of the normative ambitions of their work, which he sees firstly as trying to ‘redeem’ sex acts themselves, and secondly as advocating for sexuality as a site of potential for social transformation. In this article, I argue that this is a misreading of their work. Drawing on Dworkin’s wide body of writing, and the early Signs essays of MacKinnon, I suggest that their work makes no such case for sex or sexuality. Rather, by bringing their analysis into conversation with Halberstam’s recent work on ‘shadow feminism’, I contend that Dworkin and MacKinnon’s anti- social, anti-pastoral and distinctly anti-normative vision of sex and sexuality shares many of the same features of queer theory, ultimately advocating for sex as ‘irredeemable’. -
This Is NOT a Love Story: Libraries and Feminist Porn
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by YorkSpace This is NOT a Love Story: Libraries and Feminist Porn By Lisa Sloniowski our collections, recognizing that scholarly inquiry may take a variety of avenues. Nonetheless, the question of whether pornography objectifies women and alienates the feminist community is as relevant to academic libraries as it is to Two feminist researchers at York University have received public libraries. Self-proclaimed radical feminists like Andrea three years of federal funding from the Social Sciences and Dworkin and Catharine Mackinnon have historically joined Humanities Research Council to study and archive feminist hands with conservative judges, newspaper columnists, and pornography. I am one of those researchers, and a librarian, Christian fundamentalists in the cause to fight the pornography and this is my story. industry. Do we risk alienating women by actively acquiring and preserving pornography? What will the Women's Studies Once upon a time and indeed probably as recently as this very department think? Is there any legitimate scholarly reason to morning, access to pornography in libraries was a problematic collect this material? Do all feminists hate pornography? issue that divided librarians from each other, from some members of our communities and from public library board Enter Feminist Porn: A Brief History trustees. The debate surfaced in both Windsor and London in the last few years surrounding proposals to install internet There is no unified perspective on pornography within the filters on public library computer terminals. Librarians have, feminist community, despite media coverage which tends to for the most part, spoken out against filtering, not in defence emphasize the anti-porn side of what has proven to be an of pornography so much as in opposition to censorship and to ongoing and arguably ruinous debate within the feminist technology that is not robust enough to distinguish between community since at least the late 1970s. -
The Feminist Sex Wars: 1975-1986 University of Michigan Winter 2018 January 3, 2018
The Feminist Sex Wars: 1975-1986 University of Michigan Winter 2018 January 3, 2018 ANTHROPOLOGY 658.003 WOMEN’S STUDIES 698.004 AMERICAN CULTURE 601.011 Wednesday 1:00PM-4:00PM 210 West Hall Professor: Gayle Rubin [email protected] Office Hours: Monday 1:30- 3PM or by appointment 104B West Hall 647-0947 COURSE DESCRIPTION This seminar is an excavation and exploration of a piece of the history of the present. The aim is to make sense of some common contemporary discourses on pornography, sexual representation, and sexual conduct by exploring their sources in feminist political conflicts of four decades ago, as well as examining how the feminist engagement in these issues was entangled in other trajectories of conflicts over sexual representation and sexual media. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the feminist movement was rent by a series of acrimonious debates over issues relating to sexual conduct and representation. While there were disputes over many aspects of sexual behavior, some of the most intense controversy focused on “pornography,” although the definition of what constituted “pornography” was itself contested. Nonetheless, the roles of certain kinds of sexual imagery and behaviors in the creation and maintenance of male supremacy, and their causal relationships to violence against women, were contested with unusual ferocity. While these debates have largely subsided within feminism, they have not disappeared. Moreover, they continually affect a variety of other cultural conflicts which erupt on an almost daily basis. Debates about government funding of sexually explicit art, concern over the putative dangers of on-line sexual content, and struggles over what imagery is appropriate for public display are constant features of the cultural landscape. -
Passion, Politics, and Politically Incorrect Sex: Towards a History Of
PASSION, POLITICS, AND POLITICALLY INCORRECT SEX: TOWARDS A HISTORY OF LESBIAN SADOMASOCHISM IN THE USA 1975-1993 by Anna Robinson Submitted to the Department of Gender Studies, Central European University In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Erasmus Mundus Master's Degree in Women's and Gender Studies CEU eTD Collection Main supervisor: Francisca de Haan (Central European University) Second reader: Anne-Marie Korte (Utrecht University) Budapest, Hungary 2015 PASSION, POLITICS, AND POLITICALLY INCORRECT SEX: TOWARDS A HISTORY OF LESBIAN SADOMASOCHISM IN THE USA 1975-1993 by Anna Robinson Submitted to the Department of Gender Studies, Central European University In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Erasmus Mundus Master's Degree in Women's and Gender Studies Main supervisor: Francisca de Haan (Central European University) Second reader: Anne-Marie Korte (Utrecht University) CEU eTD Collection Budapest, Hungary 2015 Approved by: ________________________ Abstract This thesis is an exploration of the largely underexamined history of lesbian sadomasochism (SM) in the United States between the mid-1970s, when the first organised lesbian feminist SM groups were founded, and 1993, by which time public debates about lesbian SM were becoming less visible. I engage with feminist discourses around lesbian SM within the so- called feminist sex wars of the 1980s, tracing the sometimes dramatic rise to prominence of lesbian SM as a feminist issue. Entwined in this web of controversy, I assert, is the story of a perceived fundamental split in the feminist movement between those who believed SM was patriarchal, abusive and violent, and those who saw it as a consensual expression of sexual freedom and liberation. -
University of Florida Thesis Or Dissertation Formatting
BEYOND BARNARD: FEMINISM, LIBERALISM, AND THE SEX WARS By LORNA BRACEWELL A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2015 1 © 2015 Lorna Bracewell 2 To Paola, my wife 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I thank my advisor, Daniel O’Neill, for introducing me to history and showing me why it might behoove a political theorist to know a little something about it. I thank my committee, the Department of Political Science, the Center for Women’s Studies and Gender Research, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the Graduate School at the University of Florida for giving me the opportunity, financial support, and intellectual freedom to follow my curiosity wherever it led. I thank my undergraduate teacher and mentor, Art Vanden Houten, for introducing me to Catharine MacKinnon’s Toward A Feminist Theory of the State and, inadvertently, the sex wars when I was a student in his Contemporary Political Thought course at Flagler College in the spring of 2003. Finally, I thank my wife, Paola Aguirre, my friends and colleagues, Mauro Carracioli, Alec Dinnin, Billy Kelly, Jessica Lancia, Manu Samnotra, and Seaton Tarrant, my parents, Lana and Michael Bracewell, and my sister, Amy Wenditz, for listening patiently, sharing generously, and forgiving readily when I neglected my most important obligations for the sake of this comparatively inconsequential project. 4 TABLE OF CONTENTS page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ...............................................................................................................4 -
AWKWARD ALLIANCES and the INDIANAPOLIS ANTI-PORNOGRAPHY ORDINANCE of 1984 Jonnie Bray Fox Submitted to the Faculty of the Univer
AWKWARD ALLIANCES AND THE INDIANAPOLIS ANTI-PORNOGRAPHY ORDINANCE OF 1984 Jonnie Bray Fox Submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in the Department of History, Indiana University May 2021 Accepted by the Graduate Faculty of Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts. Master's Thesis Committee ______________________________________ Raymond Haberski, PhD, Chair ______________________________________ Nancy Marie Robertson, PhD ______________________________________ Rebecca K. Shrum, PhD ii © 2021 Jonnie Bray Fox iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Thank you to all who supported and guided me through this process. Thank you to my advisor, Dr. Raymond Haberski, who first presented me with this topic and encouraged me to tackle controversial history with an honest and unrelenting voice. Thank you to my committee members, Dr. Rebecca Shrum and Dr. Nancy Marie Robertson. Dr. Shrum provided great opportunities like working with the Michael Bohr Collection at the Indiana Historical Society. Dr. Robertson has been a beacon of guidance through the graduate program as well as a wealth of resource recommendations. Regarding the research, thank you to the archivists of the University of Indianapolis Digital Mayoral Archives. This mecca of materials was my crutch and I still recommend these collections to anyone researching Indianapolis politics. I would like to thank everyone who allowed me to interview them for my research. They were not only invaluable resources, but inspiring individuals. I would also like to thank my family and friends for their endless support. Thank you to my Mom for being excited that her daughter was doing her thesis on pornography. -
Sex Wars Revisited: a Rhetorical Economy of Sex Industry Opposition Alison Phipps
Journal of International Women's Studies Volume 18 | Issue 4 Article 22 Aug-2017 Sex Wars Revisited: A Rhetorical Economy of Sex Industry Opposition Alison Phipps Follow this and additional works at: http://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws Part of the Women's Studies Commons Recommended Citation Phipps, Alison (2017). Sex Wars Revisited: A Rhetorical Economy of Sex Industry Opposition. Journal of International Women's Studies, 18(4), 306-320. Available at: http://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol18/iss4/22 This item is available as part of Virtual Commons, the open-access institutional repository of Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater, Massachusetts. This journal and its contents may be used for research, teaching and private study purposes. Any substantial or systematic reproduction, re-distribution, re-selling, loan or sub-licensing, systematic supply or distribution in any form to anyone is expressly forbidden. ©2017 Journal of International Women’s Studies. Sex Wars Revisited: A Rhetorical Economy of Sex Industry Opposition By Alison Phipps1 Abstract This paper attempts to sketch a ‘rhetorical economy’ of feminist opposition to the sex industry, via the case study of debates around Amnesty International’s 2016 policy supporting decriminalisation as the best way to ensure sex workers’ human rights and safety. Drawing on Ahmed’s concept of ‘affective economies’ in which emotions circulate as capital, I explore an emotionally loaded discursive field which is also characterised by specific and calculated rhetorical manoeuvres for political gain. My analysis is situated in what Rentschler and Thrift call the ‘discursive publics’ of contemporary Western feminism, which encompass academic, activist, and public/media discussions. -
The Feminist Sex Wars: the Battle for Impact on European Prostitution Policy
Fall 08 The Feminist Sex Wars: The Battle for Impact on European Prostitution Policy Astrid Zwinkels (6125182) [email protected] Research Master Social Sciences Jonathan Zeitlin (first reader) Conny Roggeboom (second reader) Final version 30 June 2016 University of Amsterdam Table of Contents List of abbreviations ......................................................................................................... 3 Abstract ................................................................................................................................. 4 1. Introduction .................................................................................................................... 4 2. Theoretical framework ............................................................................................... 5 2.1 The EU institutions and reasons for interacting with academia and advocacy groups ............................................................................................................................................ 5 2.3 Advocacy groups and reasons for lobbying the EU institutions .......................... 6 2.3 Possible factors affecting the level of influence in the EU institutions ............. 8 2.4 The case study .................................................................................................................... 10 2.4.1 Case study design and case selection ................................................................................ 10 2.4.2 A pan-European approach to prostitution? ................................................................... -
Beyond Explicit
1 The Sex Wars Transgressive Politics and the Politics of Transgression Anti-Pornography and Pro-Sex Perspectives Carole S. Vance describes the feminist sex wars as “the impassioned, con- tentious, and, to many, disturbing debates, discussions, conferences and arguments about sexuality that continued unabated until at least 1986” (“More Danger, More Pleasure” xxii), and she remarks that these debates “often explicitly focused on the anti-pornography movement’s fetishized Big Three—pornography, sado-masochism, and butch-femme roles” (xxiii). Mandy Merck, meanwhile, traces the origins of this “period of fabled conflict over the politics of sexual practice” (247) to three specific events: “the 1980 National Organization of Women’s resolution condemn- ing sadomasochism, pornography, public sex and pederasty; the 1981 ‘Sex Issue’ of [the feminist journal] Heresies; and the 1982 Barnard conference ‘Towards a Politics of Sexuality’ ” (247). Although the areas of dispute that came to the fore during the sex wars were in fact fairly numerous, I concentrate primarily on the intense debates that occurred around the issue of pornography. What were the key positions taken on porn? How did these positions use and exploit ideas of transgression and taboo, and what light can they shed on these complex concepts? The anti-pornography feminism of the sex wars era was, as its name suggests, critical of the role that it believed pornography played in the subjugation of women, and strongly opposed to its continued existence and availability within contemporary society. Porn was perceived as 21 © 2014 State University of New York Press, Albany 22 Beyond Explicit possessing the power to have a profound and negative effect on the lives of real women, and in 1975, Susan Brownmiller felt moved to set herself against the proponents of the so-called sexual revolution by declaring that “Pornography, like rape, is a male invention, designed to dehumanize women, to reduce the female to an object of sexual access, not to free sensuality from moralistic or parental inhibition” (38). -
Academic Feminists Analyses of Female Celebrities from the 1980S to Today
The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Honors Theses Honors College Summer 8-2019 Academic Feminists Analyses of Female Celebrities from the 1980s to Today Brittany A. Carey University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/honors_theses Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, and the History Commons Recommended Citation Carey, Brittany A., "Academic Feminists Analyses of Female Celebrities from the 1980s to Today" (2019). Honors Theses. 682. https://aquila.usm.edu/honors_theses/682 This Honors College Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Honors College at The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi Academic Feminists Analyses of Female Celebrities from the 1980s to Today By Brittany Carey A Thesis Submitted to the Honors College of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of Honors Requirements Summer 2019 ii Approved by: ________________________________ Douglas Bristol, Ph.D., Thesis Adviser Professor of History _______________________________ Matthew Casey, Ph.D., Director School of Humanities _______________________________ Ellen Weinauer, Ph.D., Dean Honors College iii Abstract This thesis examines the history of academic feminists and their changing debates over race, class, sexism, and sexual preference from the 1980s to the present. In the 1980s, white feminists tended to focus on sexism in the workplace and class discrimination, while black feminists focused instead on the racism and classism that black women faced both inside and outside of academia. -
The Enduring Influence of Catharine Mackinnon's
MORE THAN (ONLY) WORDS: THE ENDURING INFLUENCE OF CATHARINE MACKINNON’S ANTIPORNOGRAPHY FEMINISM by SOPHIE BANGE A THESIS Presented to the Department of Journalism and Communication and the Robert D. Clark Honors College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts or Science June 2020 An Abstract of the Thesis of Sophie Bange for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the Department of Journalism and Communication to be taken June 2020 Title: More Than (Only) Words: The Enduring Influence of Catharine MacKinnon’s Antipornography Feminism Approved: ________Dr. Peter Alilunas_________________ Primary Thesis Advisor Pornography has been a focal point of feminist debate for decades. Catharine MacKinnon spearheaded antipornography feminist campaigns beginning in the 1970s; today, Gail Dines is the leader of antipornography feminism. While extensive scholarship has been conducted in response to MacKinnon, Dines’ work has been relatively ignored. In this paper, both women’s work is examined within their historical context through description of social and political concerns with regards to pornography and the development of antipornography movements outside of, yet greatly informed by, feminism. This includes conservative antipornography efforts in the political sphere. Given the prevalence of antipornography feminist theory in politics, law, and American society, the work of MacKinnon warrants revisiting to better understand the motivations of Dines. Major texts for analysis include MacKinnon’s Only Words and Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law, as well as Dines’ Pornland: How Porn Has Hijacked Our Sexuality. Emphasis is placed on the rhetorical strategies and ideological approaches to sexuality these antiporngraphy feminists employ in furthering their agenda of ending violence against women through the eradication of pornography. -
Sensational Affinity, Pleasure, and Sexual Pedagogy
Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Institute for Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Theses Studies 8-7-2018 Bringing Sex To Theory: Sensational Affinity, Pleasure, and Sexual Pedagogy Andreanna Nattiel Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/wsi_theses Recommended Citation Nattiel, Andreanna, "Bringing Sex To Theory: Sensational Affinity, Pleasure, and Sexual Pedagogy." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2018. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/wsi_theses/68 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Institute for Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BRINGING SEX TO THEORY: SENSATIONAL AFFINITY, PLEASURE AND SEXUAL PEDAGOGY by ADREANNA NATTIEL Under the Direction of Susan Talburt, PhD ABSTRACT This project is about theorizing black queer women’s sexualities and experiences with sexual pleasure outside the lens of traditional identitarian frameworks. Drawing on queer pornography and pleasure-based sex education, I analyze how these various forms of sex education conceptualize and deploy sexual pedagogy. Further, my project maps the ways in which black queer women’s sexual pleasure can be read through the lens of sensational affinity, which can serve as a form of queer world making.