The Internet and the Rise of Porn

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The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby MaggieH » Fri Jan 11, 2008 3:19 pm

"The internet and the rise of porn

http://www.theage .com.au/news/opinion/the-internet-and-the-rise-of-porn/2008/01/02/1198949896984.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Maree Crabbe and David Corlett
January 3, 2008


ON THE Thursday before Christmas, a judge sentenced a Melbourne man convicted of raping a woman to 11 years' jail. The judge, Damian Murphy, said the perpetrator, Andrew Bowen, 20, had used the internet to access hardcore pornography and to learn how to avoid leaving evidence at a rape scene. Judge Murphy said Bowen had "sought to depict a (sexual) fantasy" seen in downloaded material from the internet.

Bowen stalked his victim before he broke into her house, tied her hands together and repeatedly raped her.

The case highlights the link between pornography and violent attitudes and behaviour towards women.

Pornography is not new, but the development of the internet has contributed to a marked shift towards more extreme and more violent sexual imagery. Materials that would not pass Australia's film and television classification system are freely available — to young and old — on the internet.

Images of rape, coercion and abuse are commonplace. Even when the acts portrayed are not so abusive, the images are degrading and humiliating. The vast majority of portrayals are of men doing things to women for men's indulgence.

These are more than just pictures on a screen. They are images that are ripe with meanings about men and women, what they like and about how they ought to treat each other. They are images that impact on the perceptions, attitudes and behaviours of those viewing them.

Research suggests a clear link between exposure to or consumption of pornography and male sexual aggression against women. This connection is strongest when the imagery is violent. But it is also relevant to non-violent pornography, particularly for frequent users. Exposure to sexually violent material increases male viewers' tolerance of sexual violence and reduces their empathy for victims of violence, including rape.

The exposure of young people to pornography, including violent pornography, is particularly disturbing. Adolescence is a time in which young people are working out who they are and how they will interact with the world around them. It is a critical stage in the development of personal and sexual identity.

Young people are turning to internet pornography at the same time as they undertake this important developmental task. According to a 2003 Australia Institute study of 16 and 17-year-olds, 38% of boys (and 2% of girls) accessed internet sex sites deliberately. Twenty-two per cent of boys used internet sex sites at least every two or three months. These young men risk being captured by the intoxicating mixture of sexual and violent images and the physical rush that often accompanies it. Inequality and violence are eroticised.

Nor is it only those young people who intentionally seek out sexually explicit websites that consume internet pornography. The Australia Institute study found that 84% of boys and 60% of girls had been exposed accidentally to sex sites on the internet. This reflects the aggressive marketing of internet pornography, including through the use of involuntary and persistent "pop-ups" and games that become increasingly sexually explicit as young players progress through levels.

Pornography is now mainstream. Advertising and the media hard-sell on soft porn, regularly portraying women as sex objects to be looked at and used. Pornography takes this further: women are mere bodies for men's sexual gratification. The internet has provided a vehicle for easy, anonymous access to a vast array of sexually explicit material. It is material that is produced from all over the globe and that depicts all kinds of sexual activities. In the real world, according to child psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg, young women are performing sex acts on and for young men that are common only on internet porn sites.

The attitudes and behaviours that pornography — whether it be hard or soft — promotes and normalises are reflected in the attitudes and behaviours of many young men and women. This is alarming in view of rates of sexual assault in our community. Australian research suggests that nearly 20% of women have experienced sexual violence since the age of 15. Young men are disproportionately more likely than other sections of the community to be the perpetrators of sexual assault.

Even if our children do not become the victims or, like Andrew Bowen, perpetrators of sexual assault, there is reason to be concerned about the pornofication of our culture. While the use of pornography is common, it does not have to be passively accepted. Young people — and young men in particular — need to be equipped with the conceptual frameworks and skills to reject a sexuality that eroticises degradation and violence. To fail to do so is to sell our young people short. It is to accept a situation where they are having images planted into their heads and attitudes into their hearts that undermine healthy and fulfilling intimate relationships.


Maree Crabbe works at Brophy Family and Youth Services in Warrnambool. David Corlett is a writer and academic."
"The assumption that "most women are innately heterosexual'' stands as a theoretical and political stumbling block for many women. It remains a tenable assumption, partly because lesbian existence has been written out of history or catalogued under disease;. . . partly because to acknowledge that for women heterosexuality may not be a "preference" at all but something that has had to be imposed, managed, organized, propagandized and maintained by force is an immense step to take if you consider yourself freely and "innately" heterosexual. Yet the failure to examine heterosexuality as an institution is like failing to admit that the economic system called capitalism or the caste system of racism is maintained by a variety of forces, including both physical violence and false consciousness. . ."
-- Adrienne Rich, in Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence: http://www.terry.uga.edu/~dawndba/4500compulsoryhet.htm

“The animals of the world exist for their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more than black people were made for white, or women created for men.” ~ Alice Walker
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby bluecoat28 » Fri Jan 11, 2008 8:09 pm

the perpetrator, Andrew Bowen, 20, had used the internet to access hardcore pornography and to learn how to avoid leaving evidence at a rape scene.

:shaking:
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby RGM » Sat Jan 12, 2008 4:24 am

This article is a fantastic resource for information. Much of it is well-known to well-read feminists, of course, but for a mainstream audience this story should be as strong and powerful as anything else they read in the span of a week. I'm going to post it on the WRC-Hfx blog.

One thing that really stood out in there is the part about 16- and 17-year olds. Those numbers are really something. 38 out of 100 boys that age look at porn, compared to 2 out of 100 girls. At a time when 19 out of 20 porn consumers under the age of 18 are males, where is the outrage? Why is there so much time devoted to "women look at it too" thinking? Why aren't schools doing more to make kids--and these are still kids--aware of the harms of pornography consumption, and not in the "oh woe is me, I have a hard time getting it up without consuming degrading images of women" context, but rather how it turns them into misogynist assholes?
Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood once asked a male friend why men feel threatened by women. He replied: "They are afraid women will laugh at them." She then asked a group of women why they felt threatened by men. They answered: "We're afraid of being killed."
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby laurelin » Sat Jan 12, 2008 4:44 am

I'd be surprised if the 2 in 100 girls are watching porn for the same reason as the 38 of 100 boys as well. When I saw it when I was younger, I was instantly disturbed by it, and was trying to find it 'okay' just like the world said I should.
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby RGM » Sat Jan 12, 2008 9:16 am

laurelin wrote:I'd be surprised if the 2 in 100 girls are watching porn for the same reason as the 38 of 100 boys as well. When I saw it when I was younger, I was instantly disturbed by it, and was trying to find it 'okay' just like the world said I should.


Very good point.
Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood once asked a male friend why men feel threatened by women. He replied: "They are afraid women will laugh at them." She then asked a group of women why they felt threatened by men. They answered: "We're afraid of being killed."
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby bluecoat28 » Sat Jan 12, 2008 8:35 pm

I think women who look at mainstream porn (not that many do) but those who do know it is misogynist, they just don't know the word "misogyny". So in women's hearts we know something is "off", but we don't have the words to explain it. Most women and girls haven't taken a women's/gender studies class
so they don't have the language to make sense of porn (words like "sexism", misogyny", and "violence against women" were new to me in college). Knowing those words is helping me make sense of porn. I get so annoyed with these silly sexologists in magazines telling women to look at porn to "open" our sexual imaginations... Oh please.
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Re: The Internet and the Rise of Porn

Postby Andrew » Thu Feb 07, 2008 3:50 pm

THat's right, bluecoat, and thanks for saying it. An example of how the right theory can help someone "see" the facts.
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