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11 - The Ethics of Porn on the Net

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

Catharine Lumby
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Elspeth Probyn
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
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Summary

IN LATE 1995 I BEGAN RESEARCHING MY HONOURS THESIS ON ‘Representations of heterosexuality in media and popular culture’. I soon realised that there was a rich vein of heterosexual representation to be explored in popular men's magazines – that is to say, soft-core porn. Researching amateur images in soft-core pornography led me to consider the broader genres of explicit sex media (… which is, of course, a nice way of saying the ‘soft’ stuff led to the ‘hard’ stuff).

Initially friends and colleagues were apprehensive when I discussed my work – although I did get plenty of flirtatious offers of ‘research assistance’. By 1998–99, however, things changed. Where the topic of my porn research had once been a sure-fire conversation stopper, it began to receive a great deal of informed (and amused) interest in both academic and non-academic circles. It was clear from these conversations that many more people had become familiar with the diversity of pornography as a media form – and that the Internet had played a major role in this familiarisation. Pornography was no longer the scary and/or embarrassing secret they hid under their beds. It was being openly accessed – and discussed – in my friends' nice middle-class homes and offices. Yet this same openness and ease of access represented a growing source of anxiety for many, particularly those who were already dubious about the production and consumption of sexually explicit magazines and videos.

Type
Chapter
Information
Remote Control
New Media, New Ethics
, pp. 196 - 211
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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