^
Начало
Установить закладку
+ Настройки
14 | 16 | 18 | 20 | 22 | 24
Ширина текста:
50% | 60% | 70% | 80% | 90% | 100%
Шрифт:
Цвет текста:
Установить
Цвет фона:
Установить
Сбросить настройки
Acknowledgements
Melinda Tankard Reist and Abigail Bray[1]
INTRODUCTION: UNMASKING A GLOBAL INDUSTRY
The real picture
Pornography’s training ground
Women as sex robots: artificial and living dolls
An industry unregulated and uncontrolled
‘Capturing Men in a Wide Net’
Nothing radical about mass market masturbation
Contributors to Big Porn Inc
Signs of hope
Bibliography
Caroline
(Scotland)
The Impact of Pornography on My Life
PART ONE
Pornography Cultures
Gail Dines
(USA)
The New Lolita: Pornography and the Sexualization of Childhood
Catharine A. MacKinnon
(USA)
X-Underrated: Living in a World the Pornographers Have Made[28]
Maggie Hamilton
(Australia)
Groomed to Consume Porn: How Sexualised Marketing Targets Children
Robert Jensen
(USA)
Stories of a Rape Culture: Pornography as Propaganda[29]
Nina Funnell
(Australia)
Sexting and Peer-to-Peer Porn
Diane L. Rosenfeld1
(USA)
Who Are You Calling a ‘Ho’?: Challenging the Porn Culture on Campus
Christopher N. Kendall[36]
(Australia)
The Harms of Gay Male Pornography
Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson
(USA/New Zealand)
Pornography and Animals
Robi Sonderegger
(Australia)
Neurotica: Modern Day Sexual Repression
Meagan Tyler
(Australia)
Pornography as Sexual Authority: How Sex Therapy Promotes the Pornification of Sexuality
Renate Klein
(Australia)
Big Porn + Big Pharma: Where the Pornography Industry Meets the Ideology of Medicalisation[65]
PART TWO
Pornography Industries
Susan Hawthorne
(Australia)
Capital and the Crimes of Pornographers: Free to Lynch, Exploit, Rape and Torture
Abigail Bray[102]
(Australia)
The Pornification of Post-feminism: Why Roddick’s $ex Shops Are a Sell Out
Helen Pringle
(Australia)
A Studied Indifference to Harm: Defending Pornography in The Porn Report
Melinda Tankard Reist
(Australia)
Sexpo and the Death of Sex[125]
Sheila Jeffreys
(Australia)
Live Pornography: Strip Clubs in the International Political Economy of Prostitution
Stella
(Australia)
Dancing Pornography
Melissa Farley
(USA)
Pornography Is Infinite Prostitution[127]
Abigail Bray
(Australia)
Capitalism and Pornography: the Internet as a Global Prostitution Factory
Hiroshi Nakasatomi[142]
(Japan)
When Rape Becomes a Game: RapeLay and the Pornification of Crime[143]
Chyng Sun
(USA)
Investigating Pornography: The Journey of a Filmmaker and Researcher
PART THREE
Harming Children
Diana E.H. Russell
(USA)
Russell’s Theory: Exposure to Child Pornography as a Cause of Child Sexual Victimization[146]
S. Caroline Taylor
(Australia)
The Pornification of Intrafamilial Rape[152]
Caroline Norma
(Australia)
Teaching Tools and Recipe Books: Pornography and the Sexual Assault of Children
Helen Pringle
(Australia)
Civil Justice for Victims of Child Pornography
Amy
(USA)
The Victimisation of Children by Pornography: Victim Impact Statement of Amy
PART FOUR
Pornography and the State
Anne Mayne
(South Africa)
The Power of Pornography – A South African Case Study[163]
Asja Armanda and Natalie Nenadic
(Croatia and USA)
Genocide, Pornography, and the Law[164]
Ruchira Gupta
(India)
Pornography in India
Betty McLellan
(Australia)
Pornography as Free Speech: But is it Fair?
PART FIVE
Resisting Big Porn Inc
Julia Long
(UK)
Resisting Pornography, Building a Movement: Feminist Anti-porn Activism in the UK[199]
Gail Dines
(USA)
Stop Porn Culture!
Linda Thompson
(Scotland)
Challenging the Demand
Anna van Heeswijk
(UK)
OBJECT: Challenging ‘Sex-object Culture’[209]

Melinda Liszewski
(Australia)
A Collective Shout for Women and Girls

Matt McCormack Evans
(UK)
Men Opposing Pornography in the UK

Caroline Norma
(Australia)
Challenging Pornography in Japan: the Anti-Pornography and Prostitution Research Group (APP)
Susan Hawthorne
(Australia)
Quit Porn Manifesto
Biographical Notes
Index
Other books from Spinifex Press
Review
About the Editors
Copyright
