Everyday Pornography

Front Cover
Karen Boyle
Routledge, Sep 13, 2010 - Performing Arts - 256 pages

Public and academic debate about ‘porn culture’ is proliferating. Ironically, what is often lost in these debates is a sense of what is specific about pornography. By focusing on pornography’s mainstream – contemporary commercial products for a heterosexual male audience – Everyday Pornography offers the opportunity to reconsider what it is that makes pornography a specific form of industrial practice and genre of representation.

Everyday Pornography presents original work from scholars from a range of academic disciplines (Media Studies, Law, Sociology, Psychology, Women’s Studies, Political Science), introducing new methodologies and approaches whilst reflecting on the ongoing value of older approaches. Among the topics explored are:

  • the porn industry’s marketing practices (spam emails, reviews) and online organisation
  • commercial sex in Second Life
  • the pornographic narratives of phone sex and amateur videos
  • the content of best-selling porn videos
  • how the male consumer is addressed by pornography, represented within the mainstream, understood by academics and contained by legislation.

This collection places a particular emphasis on anti-pornography feminism, a movement which has been experiencing a revival since the mid-2000s. Drawing on the experiences of activists alongside academics, Everyday Pornography offers an opportunity to explore the intellectual and political challenges of anti-pornography feminism and consider its relevance for contemporary academic debate.

From inside the book

Contents

List of figures and tables
KAREN BOYLE 1
GAIL DINES LINDA THOMPSON REBECCA WHISNANT WITH KAREN BOYLE 17
violence and domination in Adult Video News
the gendered choreographies of heteroporn
fetishizing semen in pornography beyond bukkake
Virtually commercial
Address consumption regulation 103
the grooming of male pornography consumers
mainstream media address
a social network analysis of the online
Young men using pornography
pornography and the popular press
debating extreme pornography laws in public
how was it for you?
Bibliography 212

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About the author (2010)

Karen Boyle is Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies at the University of Glasgow, and is a Director of the Women’s Support Project, a feminist anti-violence organisation. She is author of Media & Violence (2005) and has published widely on gendered violence and feminist media studies.

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