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Authors: Gail Dines

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But what about men who are not looking for a substitute to the real thing but rather prefer to have sex with adult women and yet masturbate to the PCP sites? It is clear from the sheer volume of traffic being generated on these sites that such men must be visiting them. Why would they go to these sites rather than the thousands of others devoted to adult on adult sex? The answer is the same for these men as it is for pedophiles: desensitization. Journalist Pamela Paul found that many of the men she interviewed had quickly become desensitized. Many expressed shock at just how rapidly their viewing preferences had turned to increasingly violent and bizarre porn genres—genres that they had previously found distasteful but now actively sought out.
31
Many of these genres featured adult women—in scenes of urinating, bestiality, or heavy bondage—but for some men, children became the object of their sexual desire. David G. Heffler, a psychotherapist who counsels child pornography offenders, was recently quoted as saying that in his clinical work he has had many men who revealed that “after looking at adult porn a long time, they get bored. They want something different. They start looking at children. Then, they can’t get enough of it.”
32

This slide from adult to child pornography flies in the face of conventional wisdom, as we tend to think of men who are sexually aroused by children as pedophiles who form a distinct and separate group from other men by virtue of their deviant sexual interests and behavior. However, after a thorough analysis of the empirical literature, feminist sociologists Diana Russell and Natalie J. Purcell
argue that the research on pedophiles does not point to a model of two clearly defined groups (pedophiles and nonpedophiles); rather, there is a continuum: some men are clearly situated at either end, but others are scattered at various points. Furthermore, men’s position along the continuum is subject to shifts, depending on the particular constellation of their life experiences at any one time.
33
Russell and Purcell note that although in the past, researchers pointed to unusual life experiences, such as the loss of a spouse, substance abuse, and unemployment, as contributory factors, recent studies suggest that ongoing use of pornography is increasingly playing a role in shifting men along the continuum.

In a March 2008 interview I conducted with seven men in a Connecticut prison who were incarcerated for downloading child pornography (and in three cases, for sexually abusing a child), not one of them fitted the definition of a pedophile. All seven told me that they preferred sex with an adult woman, but had become bored with regular pornography. Five of them had looked at PCP sites first and then moved into actual child porn. This backs up Russell and Purcell’s claim that for pedophiles and nonpedophiles alike, PCP sites “can serve as a bridge between adult pornography and child pornography.”
34
Since there are currently no large-scale empirical studies available on this, it is impossible to point to any findings, but if Russell and Purcell are correct, and the anecdotal evidence suggests that they are, then the continued and increasing popularity of PCP will have devastating implications for child sexual abuse. First, the demand for real child pornography will increase, which will mean a greater number of children being abused for the purpose of production, and second, a greater number of children will be at risk of being sexually abused by men who use the pornography as a stepping-stone to contact sex with a child.

The research on the relationship between consuming pornography and actual contact sex with a child suggests that there are a percentage of men who will act out their desires on real children after viewing child porn. Quayle and Taylor found in their study of convicted child offenders that “for some respondents, pornography was used as a substitute for actual offending, whereas for others, it acted as both blueprint and stimulus for contact offense.”
35
While the actual percentage of child porn users who also sexually victimize children varies from study to study, with some putting the number as low as 40 percent, and others as high as 85 percent,
36
the weight of the evidence is that masturbation to images of sexualized children is, for a significant proportion of men, linked to actual child sexual abuse. A government study conducted in 2007 of convicted child pornography offenders found that 85 percent of men convicted of downloading child pornography had committed acts of sexual abuse against minors, from inappropriate touching to rape.
37
An article detailing the findings was submitted to the
Journal of Family Violence,
and then pulled by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. According to an article in the
New York Times,
many experts in the field are angry that the findings have been suppressed.
38

In addition to the psychological literature on the effects of child pornography on individual men’s behaviors and attitudes, we know from the research conducted within media studies that people construct their notions of reality from the media they consume, and the more consistent and coherent the message, the more people believe it to be true.
39
Thus, the images of girls in PCP do not operate within a social vacuum; rather, they are produced and consumed within a society where the dominant pop culture images are of childified women, adultified children, and hypersexualized youthful female bodies.

Over the years there has been a shift in mainstream society regarding the way girls look. Girls’ clothes now mimic sexualized clothes for women to such a degree that communications scholar Mardia Bishop argues that “the majority of clothing available for elementary school girls at the local suburban mall is from the porn industry, which I call ‘porn’ fashion.”
40
Wearing thongs, low-slung jeans, short skirts, and midriff-revealing tops, these girls now appear “hot.” Chris, one of the men in the Connecticut prison I interviewed, told me that he had stopped going to the mall because “looking at the girls aroused me and I couldn’t stop looking at them.” To this Greg added: “I do respond to the sexuality of their dress that they don’t even know they’re projecting.” Both of these men were talking about prepubescent girls.

This cultural shift toward sexualizing girls from an early age is bound to have real social consequences. Not only does it affect the way girls see themselves, it also chips away at the norms that define children as off-limits to male sexual use. The more we undermine such cultural norms, the more we drag girls into the category of “woman,” and in a porn-saturated world, to be woman is often to be a sexual object deserving of male contempt, use, and abuse.

Conclusion: Fighting Back

Ironically, pornography has become almost invisible by virtue of its very ubiquity. It seeps into our lives, identities, and relationships. We are so steeped in the pornographic mindset that it is difficult to imagine what a world without porn would look like. It is affecting our girls and boys, as both are growing up with porn encoded into their gender and sexual identities. I opened this book by stating that we are in the midst of a massive social experiment, and nobody really knows how living in Pornland will shape our culture. What we do know is that we are surrounded by images that degrade and debase women and that for this the entire culture pays a price.

What can we do about the porning of our culture? I wish I had a magic bullet but I don’t; we are up against an economic juggernaut. Fighting the porn industry demands that we resist both as individuals and as part of a collective movement. At the moment, most resistance happens at the individual level, and this is a promising start. I meet young women who refuse to date men who are users of porn, parents who teach their children media literacy skills, teachers who develop sophisticated sex-education programs, and men who boycott porn because of the ways it affects their sexuality. Absent a wider social movement, these individual forms of resistance make the most sense.

The pressing question, then, is how to unite these individual acts of resistance into a movement. In 2007, I helped form the group Stop Porn Culture (SPC), whose goal is to educate the public about the nature and effects of porn. SPC consists of activists, academics, teachers, anti-violence experts, parents, and students. The major educational tools we currently use are two slide shows. The first one—
Who Wants to Be a Porn Star?
—I cowrote with Rebecca Whisnant and Robert Jensen. The show comes with a fifty-minute script and over one hundred slides and covers many of the main points made in this book; it introduces people to the concept of a porn culture as well as showing the content of the contemporary porn industry. This show is now being given across the country (as well as in Canada, Scotland, and England) in colleges, anti-violence groups, student groups, and community centers. The slide show is an effective tool for raising people’s consciousness and can be obtained free of charge from Stop Porn Culture (
[email protected]
).

The second slide show—
Growing Up in a Porn Culture,
written by Rebecca Whisnant—focuses on how the porn culture harms children and youth. Geared toward parents, teachers, and anyone who works with children and youth, this show not only explores the media world of young people, but it also offers advice on how to talk to this age group about the hypersexualized culture we live in. This show can also be obtained free of charge from SPC. On the SPC Web site are links to other feminist anti-porn sites, readings, videos, and resources. Twice a year SPC runs a seminar and training workshop for those who want to learn more about the topic or receive training on how to present the slide show in public venues. Information can be found at
http://stoppornculture.org/home.html
.

Movements typically begin small, and grassroots education is one way to build an effective vehicle for change. But this movement can’t only be about what’s wrong with the world. It also needs to offer a mobilizing vision that will excite and entice people to join. We need to offer an alternative way of being, a way to envisage a sexuality that is based on equality, dignity, and respect. Part of this inevitably means organizing against the commodification of human needs and desires. Women and men must throw these industrial images out of our bedrooms and our heads so that we can develop a way of being sexual that does not dictate conformity to the plasticized, generic, and formulaic sex on offer in a porn culture. Such a sexuality cannot be scripted by a movement because it belongs to individuals and reflects who they are and what they want sexually.

A movement that resists the porn culture needs to include men as they, too, are being dehumanized and diminished by the images they consume. Men’s refusal to collaborate with the pornographers will not only undermine the legitimacy of the industry, it will also drain it of its profits. For too long women have been the only ones fighting this predatory industry, even though we have long argued that porn also hurts men. What resistance to porn offers men is a sexuality that celebrates connectedness, intimacy, and empathy—a sexuality bathed in equality rather than subordination.

A sexuality based on equality ultimately requires a society that is based on equality. While we fight for a way to define our own sexuality, we must not lose sight of the bigger picture: women still face economic, political, and legal discrimination. Porn is embedded in this wider structure, as nowhere is the practice of inequality so starkly obvious. In porn we are one-dimensional objects who want nothing more than porn sex. What we actually want is equality in all areas of our lives so that we no longer have to fear erasure, poverty, loss of reproductive rights, or men’s violence against us. As long as we have porn, we will never be seen as full human beings deserving of all the rights that men have. This is why we need to build a vibrant movement that fights for a world where women have power in and over their lives—because in a just society, there is no room for porn.

Acknowledgments

This book has been many years in the making and could not have been written without my students. They have generously shared stories, insights, and ideas, helping me to navigate the pop culture world of young adults. Along the way, I have had some great research assistants and would like to give special mention to Amy Beth DiMasi, Dana Bialer,
and
Megan Byra for their excellent work. Wheelock College, always a place of support, helped to fund this project. Thanks to two great editors, Gayatri Patnaik and Joanna Green, for all their work and skill. Janina Fisher’s support throughout the project cannot be measured. I am especially indebted to Diane Levin, Leslie Lebowitz, Jackson Katz, Rebecca Whisnant, Lierre Keith, and, of course, Rhea Becker for offering insights, advice, and, when needed, comfort. My sister Ruth deserves a special mention: she is a true sister in every sense of the word. Researching and writing about porn is not easy, and over the years a number of people have become my support system. For over fifteen years I have had Robert Jensen as a friend and coauthor. His knowledge and understanding of the topic have greatly enriched my thinking and his humor keeps me sane when the porn seems too much. My son, T, makes my world joyful. And to David, the person who has been by my side my entire adult life, thank you for all that you are.

Notes

Introduction

1.
Quoted in Betsy Schiffman, “Turns Out Porn Isn’t Recession-Proof,” July 21, 2008,
http://blog.wired.com/business/2008/07/turns-out-por-1.html
(accessed January 2, 2009).
[back]

2.
I refer to the user in the masculine since the majority of porn consumers are men. While it is impossible to give an accurate breakdown of male and female consumers, Mark Kernes, senior editor of the pornography trade magazine
Adult Video News,
stated, “Our statistics show that 78% of the people that go into adult stores are men. They may have women with them, but it’s men, and 22%, conversely, is women or women with other women or women alone.” Mark Kernes, interview with Robert Jensen at the Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas, January 7, 2005. In my January 2008 interviews with porn producers at the Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas, I was told that that the market for gonzo is almost always men.
[back]

3.
“How Internet Porn Is Changing Teen Sex,”
Details,
n.d.,
http://men.style.com/details/features/full?id=content_10357
(accessed September 12, 2009).
[back]

4.
I did not look at gay porn as it has its own specific representational codes and conventions.
[back]

5.
Some of the sites asked for age verification, but all this required was clicking on the “I am over 18” button.
[back]

6.
http://www.gagmethenfuckme.com/index.htm?id=leonxm
(accessed June 12, 2007).
[back]

7.
http://www.gagfactor.com/videopreview-scarlett.html
(accessed May 23, 2007).
[back]

8.
http://tour.analsuffering.com/home.html?nats=NoAdvert:revs:AS,0,0,0,0
(accessed June 12, 2007).
[back]

9.
http://www.talkingblue.com/DVD/124371D1_Anally_Ripped_Whores_dvd.htm
(accessed June 12, 2007).
[back]

10.
Although there are many parents working hard to protect their children from porn, given its ubiquity, it is almost impossible to avoid. The Internet filters are becoming increasingly sophisticated, but I have heard from parents that their computer-savvy child can easily disable them. More important, parents cannot monitor their children twenty-four hours a day because they use computers at friends’ homes and libraries. The much bigger issue here is that to put the responsibility on parents is to ignore the role that culture plays in socializing children.
[back]

11.
http://internet-filter-review.toptenreviews.com/internet-pornography-statistics.html
(accessed April 4, 2008).
[back]

12.
Robert J. Wosnitzer and Ana J. Bridges, “Aggression and Sexual Behavior in Best-Selling Pornography: A Content Analysis Update” (paper presented at the Fifty-seventh Annual Meeting of the International Communication Association, San Francisco, May 24–28, 2007).
[back]

13.
Ibid.
[back]

14.
Holly Randall, “Pushing the Envelope.”
XBIZ,
October 25, 2008,
http://www.xbiz.com/articles/100930
(accessed February 9, 2009).
[back]

15.
The term
gonzo
comes from the type of journalism pioneered by Hunter S. Thompson wherein the journalist actually places him- or herself in the story. According to P. Weasels, “the purest definition of gonzo is filmmaking in which the camerawork is a representation of the cameraman’s senses, and in which the camera is an acknowledged participant in the scene; the person behind the camera does not necessarily have to participate in the sex, but often does.” Today, the term is used by the industry also to describe the more hard-core porn discussed in this book. See P. Weasels, “The Quick and Dirty Guide to Gonzo,” n.d.,
http://www.gamelink.com/news.jhtml?news_id=news_nt_101_gonzo
(accessed March 2, 2009).
[back]

16.
“The Directors,”
Adult Video News,
August 2005,
http://www.avn.com/video/articles/22629.html
(accessed August 23, 2008).
[back]

17.
Robert J. Stroller and I. S. Levine,
Coming Attractions: The Making of an X-Rated Video
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press), quoted in Robert Jensen,
Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity
(Boston: South End, 2007), 69.
[back]

18.
This discussion board offers insight into porn fans as they regularly dialogue with each other. Although some posts could well have been planted by the industry to market a specific product, the sheer volume of posts suggests that this is an authentic porn discussion group.
[back]

19.
Adult DVD Talk, July 12, 2007,
http://forum.adultdvdtalk.com/forum/topic.dlt/topic_id=104388/forum_id=1/cat_id=1/104388.htm
(accessed April 10, 2009).
[back]

20.
Adult DVD Talk, May 22, 2007,
http://forum.adultdvdtalk.com/forum/topic.dlt/topic_id=101587/forum_id=1/cat_id=1/101587.htm
(accessed April 10, 2009).
[back]

21.
Adult DVD Talk, May 23, 2007,
http://forum.adultdvdtalk.com/forum/topic.dlt/topic_id=101587/forum_id=1/cat_id=1/101587.htm
(accessed April 10, 2009).
[back]

22.
Martin Amis, “A Rough Trade,”
Guardian,
March 17, 2001,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4153718,00.html
(accessed September 8, 2008).
[back]

23.
Erik Jay, “Gonzo: Taking a Toll,”
XBIZ News,
September 10, 2007,
http://xbiz.com/articles/83870
(accessed March 2, 2008).
[back]

24.
The Adult Industry Medical (AIM) Health Care Foundation, founded in 1998 by Dr. Sharon Mitchell, is, according to its Web site, “a non-profit corporation formed to care for the physical and emotional needs of sex workers and people who work in the adult entertainment industry.” The organization provides HIV and STD testing and treatment, counseling services, and support groups. For more information, see
http://www.aim-med.org/about/
.
[back]

One:
Playboy, Penthouse,
and
Hustler

1.
Pornography is defined here as any product that is produced for the primary purpose of facilitating arousal and masturbation. While there may be other uses for the product (for example,
Playboy
as a magazine to teach men how to live a playboy lifestyle), its main selling feature for the producer, distributor, and consumer (whether overtly or covertly) is sexual arousal
[back]

2.
Thomas Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise:
The Playboy Vision of America
(New York: Times Books, 1978).
[back]

3.
Michael Kimmel,
Manhood in America: A Cultural History
(New York: Free Press, 1996), 255. Some of the books on the subject are Frank Brady,
Hefner
(New York: Macmillan, 1974); Russell Miller,
Bunny: The Real Story of Playboy
(London: Michael Joseph, 1984); Barbara Ehrenreich,
Hearts of Men
(New York: Anchor, 1983).
[back]

4.
Stephanie Coontz,
The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap
(New York: Basic Books, 1992); Elaine Taylor May,
Homeward Bound: American Families in the Cold War Era
(New York: Basic Books, 1998); Douglas Miller and Marion Nowak,
The Fifties: The Way We Really Were
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1977).
[back]

5.
Miller,
Bunny,
44.
[back]

6.
Coontz,
The Way We Never Were,
24.
[back]

7.
Quoted in Miller and Nowak,
The Fifties,
154.
[back]

8.
Ibid.
[back]

9.
Coontz,
The Way We Never Were,
33.
[back]

10.
Ehrenreich,
Hearts of Men,
30.
[back]

11.
Kimmel,
Manhood in America,
240.
[back]

12.
Ehrenreich,
Hearts of Men,
36.
[back]

13.
Miller and Nowak,
The Fifties,
164–67.
[back]

14.
Philip Wylie,
Generation of Vipers
(New York: Rinehart, 1942), 99, quoted in Kimmel,
Manhood in America,
254.
[back]

15.
Playboy,
December 1953, 16.
[back]

16.
Quoted in Ehrenreich,
Hearts of Men,
47.
[back]

17.
Playboy,
September 1958, 78.
[back]

18.
Playboy,
September 1963, 92.
[back]

19.
Playboy,
June 1954, 38.
[back]

20.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
2.
[back]

21.
Naomi Barko, “A Woman Looks at Men’s Magazines,”
Reporter,
July 7, 1953, 29–32.
[back]

22.
Ibid., 30.
[back]

23.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
5.
[back]

24.
Ibid., 34.
[back]

25.
The original name for the magazine was
Stag Party,
but shortly before the publication date, Hefner received a letter from a lawyer representing a field-and-stream magazine called
Stag
saying that there could be possible confusion between the two magazines. Hefner agreed to change the name, and
Playboy
was born. Miller,
Bunny,
42–44.
[back]

26.
Ibid., 39.
[back]

27.
Ibid., 44–45.
[back]

28.
Quoted in Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
35.
[back]

29.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
43
.
[back]

30.
Playboy,
December 1953, 41.
[back]

31.
Playboy,
January 1954, 4.
[back]

32.
George Lipsitz,
Time Passages: Collective Memory and American Popular Culture
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1990), 44.
[back]

33.
Dichter, quoted in ibid., 47.
[back]

34.
May,
Homeward Bound,
29–32.
[back]

35.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
55.
[back]

36.
Brady,
Hefner,
95.
[back]

37.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise,
32.
[back]

38.
Business Week,
June 28, 1969.
[back]

39.
Weyr,
Reaching for Paradise.
[back]

40.
Quoted in Brady,
Hefner,
128.
[back]

41.
Ibid., 129.
[back]

42.
Miller,
Bunny,
182.
[back]

43.
Newsweek,
March 2, 1970, 71.
[back]

44.
Miller,
Bunny,
189.
[back]

45.
Forbes,
March 1, 1971, 19;
Business Week,
August 9, 1969, 98;
Time,
November 7, 1969, 88.
[back]

46.
Newsweek,
March 2, 1970, 71;
Time,
November 7, 1969, 88.
[back]

47.
Miller,
Bunny,
194.
[back]

48.
Ibid.
[back]

49.
Playboy
Advertising Rate Card #44, n.d.
[back]

50.
Hustler,
1984, 7.
[back]

51.
Hustler,
1974, 4.
[back]

52.
Hustler,
1983, 5;
Hustler,
1988, 5.
[back]

53.
Hustler,
July 1988, 7.
[back]

54.
Newsweek,
February 16, 1976, 69.
[back]

55.
Ellen McCracken,
Decoding Women’s Magazines: From Mademoiselle to Ms.
(New York: St. Martin’s, 1993), 15.
[back]

56.
Playboy
Demographic Profile, Fall 1995.
[back]

57.
Hustler
Reader Profile, Fall 1995.
[back]

58.
Newsweek,
March 20, 1978, 36;
Time,
March 20, 1978, 20.
[back]

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