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- Newsgroups: soc.feminism
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!news.ans.net!cmcl2!panix!pw
- From: turpin@cs.utexas.edu (Russell Turpin)
- Subject: Sexual repression and pornography
- Message-ID: <1k1jm1INNaji@im4u.cs.utexas.edu>
- Summary: I doubt the former causes the latter.
- Sender: pw@panix.com (Paul Wallich)
- Organization: CS Dept, University of Texas at Austin
- References: <1j47dk$b25@agate.berkeley.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 21:06:00 GMT
- Approved: pw@panix.com
- Lines: 52
-
-
- In article <1ji7gg$bhh@agate.berkeley.edu> cortese@skid.ps.uci.edu (Janis Maria Cortese) writes:
- > Please also be aware that porn is not a herald of sexual FREEDOM but a
- > symptom of sexual repression. Why else would there be such incredible
- > mystery and such a huge economy surrounding something so simple? The
- > Victorians were the most sexually repressed (commonly known) bunch of
- > people in the world; they had a porn industry the likes of which would
- > make Larry Flint salivate. ...
- >
- > ... Victorian England and the Ages of Faith in Europe are fine
- > real-life examples of how sexual repression breeds an entre
- > subindustry dedicated to exploitation of sex.
-
- I would be interested in any good studies that attempt link
- sexual repression and pornography across various cultures. I
- realize that there was a lot of pornography in Victorian England
- compared to earlier times, but I did not think it was nearly as
- much as now. Is this increase because England has become more
- sexually repressed since the Middle Ages or because printing has
- become cheaper? And if pornography is a symptom of sexual
- repression, why is Saudi Arabia not now a font of pornography?
- And why did the Hellenes have so much more pornography than
- the Hebrews when the latter were so much more repressed?
-
- I am *very* skeptical of the notion that pornography is a symptom
- of sexual repression. Sexual repression, in one guise or
- another, is endemic to most cultures. The availability of
- pornography seems to have much more to do with economics and
- technology and how culture affects expression.
-
- > People say this all the time for drugs ...
-
- And they are wrong. Drug use in the U.S. has increased or
- declined *independently* of drug legality. Legalizing a drug
- neither engenders its increase nor guarantees its decline in the
- long run.
-
- > ... Perhaps we should be screaming "Decriminalize sex!" in
- > the streets; I'd do it. Perhaps also, "Decriminalize the
- > female body!" ...
-
- I'll join you! Whether it lessens pornography or not,
- it is a good cause.
-
- Russell
-
-
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