Moderators: delphyne, oneangrygirl, deedle, sam
I don't know if you also read the blog at The F Word, but I have repeatedly blogged against prostitution and sex trafficking there.
The F Word does not have an editorial line
People don't want sexual images because it makes sex and themselves feel more real or important or free. Some people just like to be turned on. Simple as that. What, at the most basic of levels, is actually wrong about watching something to become sexually aroused? Right now, of course, because of the nature of porn, it means eroticising abuse and misogyny. But watching something that doesn't degrade or abuse anyone? Where is the problem?
Laura wrote:But maybe if a man watches erotica/porn of a woman being whipped - and clearly this, like any egalitarian porn/erotica, would have to be made in an ethical, consenting way - and the woman's pleasure is shown to be of utmost importance, she is treated like and respected as a human being, the whipper is portrayed and the film shot in such a way as to avoid any kind of desire for degradation, it wouldnt have the same result in the viewer.
Laura wrote:But I don't think it is feminists' place to be saying what is and isn't an acceptable sex act. Wrt BDSM - yes it can be abusive, especially when taken to the stage where people live as sub/dom - but I have never been comfortable with the out and out condemnation of any act that could fall under this acronym. How do you know what is going on in people's head when they tie each other up or xyz? Why am I not a feminist if I like my sex partner to cause me some pain, because it gets me off, when it is consensual, when s/he is doing it because I want her/him to?
Laura wrote:According to you that means I don't care about violence against women. I'd appreciate it if you would stop patronising me.
I believe that freedom for women must begin in the repudiation of our own masochism. I believe that we must destroy in ourselves the drive to masochism at its sexual roots. I believe that we must establish our own authenticity, individually and among ourselves--to experience it, to create from it, and also to deprive men of occasions for reifying the lie of manhood over and against us. I believe that ridding ourselves of our own deeply entrenched masochism, which takes so many tortured forms, is the first priority; it is the first deadly blow that we can strike against systematized male dominance. In effect, when we succeed in excising masochism from our own personalities and constitutions, we will be cutting the male life line to power over and against us, to male worth in contradistinction to female degradation, to male identity posited on brutally enforced female negativity--we will be cutting the male life line to manhood itself.
Laura wrote:Completely offtopic: lostclown can't access the forum at the moment, the page won't load - she asked me to let the mods know, don't know if you can help.
sam wrote:Where's the excitement is the question you should be asking. People don't watch others eating food to work up an appetite for food, they eat when they are hungry and stop when they're not.
No need to analyze why it gets me off--Because our desires are conditioned by patriarchy, racism, and capitalism, perhaps?
Lost Clown wrote:all I ask is that you analyse it and understand why this is (and I think we'll all agree that it's social conditioning).
This is unfair. [/quote]Lost Clown wrote:
Laura wrote:delphyne, sam, laurelin,
I am antiporn because I think the vast majority of the pornography being produced and consumed at the moment supports and encourages the oppression and abuse of women. I also believe that the overt misogyny contained in porn affects people's sexualities and the way they relate to each other: I've experienced this myself. I am also against the abuse and exploitation of women in the industry.
Lost Clown wrote:Yes, and in her MANY responses she has made it VERY clear that she's not asking people to give it up in their bedrooms, because it's not up to her what they do, but instead to analyse why they are turned on by it.
Btw, anyone know why she hasn't been blogging recently?
And quite a few BDSMers seem to come into feminism
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