Drawing on the experiences of activists alongside academics, Everyday Pornography offers the opportunity to explore the intellectual and political challenges of anti-pornography feminism and consider its relevance for contemporary academic debate.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
@contents: Selected Contents: Introduction: Everyday pornography, Karen Boyle Part I: Content and context 1. Arresting images: Anti-pornography slideshows, activism and the academy, Gail Dines, Linda Thompson, Rebecca Whisnant, with Karen Boyle 2. Methodological considerations in mapping pornography content, Ana Bridges 3. 'Now that's pornography': Violence and domination in Adult Video News, Meagan Tyler 4. Repetition and hyperbole: The gendered choreographies of heteroporn, Susanna Paasonen 5. Cocktail parties: Fetishising semen in pornography beyond bukkake, Lisa Jean Moore & Juliana Weissbein 6. Virtually commercial sex, Sarah Neely Part II: Address, consumption, regulation 7. Pornography is what the end of the world looks like, Robert Jensen 8. From Jekyll to Hyde: The grooming of male pornography consumers, Rebecca Whisnant 9. Porn consumers' public faces: Mainstream media, address and representation, Karen Boyle 10. To catch a curious clicker: A social network analysis of the online pornography industry, Jennifer Johnson 11. Young men using pornography, Michael Flood 12. 'Students study hard porn': Pornography and the popular press, Mark Jones & Gerry Carlin 13. Marginalising feminism: debating extreme pornography laws in public and policy discourse, Clare McGlynn Epilogue: How was it for you? Karen Boyle