The Feminist Porn Book
Preliminary Table of Contents
Introduction: “Producing Pleasure, Watching Smut, and Redefining
Sex: Feminist Pornography and Politics in Academe and The Adult
Industry” by Constance Penley, Celine Parreñas Shimizu, Mireille
Miller-Young and Tristan Taormino
1. Watching It: Feminist/Porn Spectatorship
Susie Bright, The Birth of the Blue Movie Critic
Kristin Cole, Pornography, Censorship, and Public Sex: Exploring
Feminist Perspectives of (Public) Pornography Through the Case of
Pornotopia
Ariane Cruz, Pornography: A Black Feminist Woman Scholar’s
Reconciliation
Emily Crutcher, “She’s Totally Faking It!” The Politics of
Authentic Female Pleasure in Pornography
Alea Adigweme, The Pleasure of Flinching: On the Intersections
between Pornography, Brown Women, and Suffering
Jane Ward, Feminist Chauvinist Pigs: Getting Off and Getting Beyond
the Authenticity Imperative
2. We Build It, They Come? Emerging Markets and (In)conspicuous
Consumption
Candida Royalle, What’s A Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like
This?
Karen Jackson, My Decadent Decade: Ten Years of Making and Debating
Porn for Women
Lynn Comella, From Text to Context: Feminist Porn and the Making of
a Market
Anne G. Sabo, After Pornified: Feminist Porn
Keiko Lane, Imag(in)ing Possibilities: The Psychotherapeutic
Potential of Queer Pornography
3. Making It: Agency, Labor, and Production
Betty Dodson, Porn Wars
Tristan Taormino, Calling the Shots: Feminist Porn in Principle and
Practice
Christopher Daniel Zeischegg, The Case for Consent: An Examination
of Ethics in Porn
Mireille Miller-Young, Interventions: The Deviant and Defiant Art
of Black Women Porn Directors
Crystal Jackson and Laurenn McCubbin, The Queer Porn Mafia:
Redefining Gender, Sex, Desire, and Feminism
Jennifer Moorman, “Wanda Whips Wall Street”: Women Filmmakers and
the Business of Pornography
4. Messages and Manifestos: Performance and Representation
Nina Hartley, Porn As Vehicle for Sexual Role Modeling and
Education
Kevin Heffernan, From “It Could Happen to Someone You Love” to “Do
You Speak Ass?” Women and Discourses of Sex Education in Erotic
Film and Video
Kristina Pia Hofer, Pornographic Domesticity: Amateur Couple
Netporn, Straight Subjectivities, and Sexual Labor
Lorelei Lee, Cum Guzzling Anal Nurse Whore: A Feminist Porn Star
Manifesta
Dylan Ryan, Porn Star. Feminist?
Sinnamon Love, A Question of Feminism
5. Academic and Activist Interventions: Feminist Porn Pedagogies
and Social Movements
Ronald Weitzer, The Need for Solid Evidence: Reviewing Everyday
Pornography and Pornland
Feona Attwood and Clarissa Smith, Emotional Truths and Thrilling
Slideshows: The Resurgence of Anti-Porn Feminism
Constance Penley, Teaching Pornography
Ingrid Ryberg, “Every time we fuck, we win.” The Public Sphere of
Queer, Feminist and Lesbian Porn as a (Safe) Space for Sexual
Empowerment
Celine Parreñas Shimizu, Beyond Looking for the Penis: The Feminist
Ethics of Asian American Men in Porn
6. “Dangerous” Bodies: Constructions of Desire and Otherness
Jason Davids Scott, Girls Will Be Boys: The Transgressive Female
Body
Jiz Lee, Uncategorized: Genderqueer Identity and Performance in
Independent and Mainstream Porn
April Flores, Being Fatty D
Loree Erickson, Out of Line: The Sexy Femmegimp Politics of
Flaunting It
Buck Angel, The Power of My Vagina
Bobby Nobel, The P Word: Pleasure, Penetration and the
Post-Politics of Porn’s Feminist Masculinities
Tobi Hill-Meyer, Where The Trans Women Aren’t: The Slow Inclusion
of Trans Women in Feminist/Queer Porn
Campaign to national feminist and mainstream media
Promotion on TristanTaormino.com
Promotion on feministpress.org and through social media outlets
(Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and GoodReads)
Tristan Taormino is a sex educator, feminist
pornographer, and the award-winning author of seven books including
The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women and Opening Up. As head of
Smart Ass Productions, she has directed and produced twenty-four
adult films. She is the host of "Sex Out Loud" on The VoiceAmerica
Talk Radio Network.
Filmmaker and film scholar Celine Parreas Shimizu is
professor of Asian American Studies at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. Her books are Straitjacket Sexualities
and The Hypersexuality of Race, winner of the 2009 Cultural Studies
Book Award from the Association for Asian American Studies.
Constance Penley is professor of film and media studies and
co-director of the Carsey-Wolf Center, University of California,
Santa Barbara. A founding editor of Camera Obscura, her work
includes The Future of an Illusion: Film, Feminism, and
Psychoanalysis, NASA/TREK: Popular Science and Sex in America,
Teaching Pornography (forthcoming), and influential collections
Feminism and Film Theory, Male Trouble, and Technoculture.
Mireille Miller-Young is associate professor of feminist
studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She
researches and teaches about race, gender, and sexuality in popular
culture and the sex industries. Her book, A Taste for Brown Sugar:
Black Women, Sex Work, and Pornography (Duke University Press)
examines African American women's sex work in the porn
industry.
Contributors aren’t afraid to both objectively praise and
criticize advances the industry has made (such as the way feminist
porn has, for some, come to equate soft” porn, and prescribe
stereotypes of female desire), and provide both practical ways to
become a smart feminist or queer porn consumer alongside academic
approaches to the movement. The collection also rightfully includes
essays on racial, queer, and transgender representations in porn,
topics often marginalized in this discussion. Besides being
extremely thoughtprovoking, this must-read collection is accessible
to all readers, and the topic inherently makes it engaging and
fun.”Publishers Weekly (starred review)
The voices that stand out most are those who’ve been traditionally
either left out of mainstream porn or fetishized in a way that
leaves them cold. After a historical overview from Betty Dodson,
Susie Bright, and Candida Royalle, the book presents women who
knowingly entered porn to make women like them more visible. From
April Flores on plus-size porn to Tobi Hill-Meyer on trans women’s
fight to be included at levels proportionate to trans men to Loree
Erickson on disability in porn, each practically echo the other in
conveying porn’s real-life impact.”The Hairpin
For Taormino and other feminists involved in making and studying
pornography, sexually explicit media provide an opportunity to
critically engage with the relationship between identity and
agency. By subverting and diversifying the often-stereotypical
portrayals of sexuality found in much mainstream media, feminist
pornographers invite traditionally marginalized audiences to
connect with sex as a medium of pleasure and power. These explicit
portrayals, grounded in a cognizance of pornography as both an
industry and a cultural form, empower viewers to take charge while
getting off.”Manifesta Mag
"In terms both jarring and harrowing, women's bodies became the
terrain on which the 2012 election was fought. That the choices,
experiences, and consequences of women's sexual lives became fodder
for such poorly informed national "conversations" is evidence of
the pressing need for thoughtful, sex-positive scholarship which
centers on women's sexual agency. The Feminist Porn Book is just
such a contribution, and I predict this volume is going to find its
way onto the bedside tables of several generations of American
women. This volume brings together academics, activists, and porn
entrepreneurs who have a startling array of interactions with
pornography as an experience, a business, and a field of inquiry.
This text is straightforward and informative in ways that are
unfortunately rare in the multi-decade feminist struggle over porn.
It's also fun and sometimes a bit naughty to read. The authors do
not assume that the porn industry as it exists is the one essential
and only possible incarnation of porn. Instead, they assume that
when feminists engage, intervene in, produce, and study
pornography, they can radically alter its formations and meanings.
At the core of the book is the question: Can porn coexist with the
principles of feminism? No matter how one ultimately adjudicates
this question, The Feminist Porn Book leaves no doubt about the
inherent value in the inquiry itself.” Melissa Harris-Perry,
author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in
America
"Finally the time is right for feminist porn! This stunning
collection by academics and artists in dialogue accounts for the
massive changes in technology, erotics, modes of spectatorship, and
embodied identities which impact the world of pornography. As this
volume demonstrates, we are now far from the sex wars of the 1980s,
the sex panics of the 1990s, and well into a new era of erotic
representation. In order to make sense of new and emergent worlds
of desiring bodies, trans-femininities and trans-masculinities,
transgressive racial performance, and the erotics of disabled
bodies, read The Feminist Porn Book, and when you are finished, go
out and make some porn!"Jack Halberstam, author of Gaga Feminism:
Sex, Gender and the End of Normal
The Feminist Porn Book is a knockout! If this doesn’t sway
antiporn feminists to the pro-porn feminist side, I’ll eat my bra.
Let’s come together right now!” Annie Sprinkle, feminist
pornographer and eco-sex activist
This thrilling anthology brings together scholars, producers, and
fans of feminist pornography to define an emerging movement of
gender and sexual visionaries, working at the radically inclusive
and egalitarian edges of sexual representation. The authors explore
an ever-widening range of body types, and a proliferating variety
of images, sensations, and feelings. They examine the conditions of
production as well as the politics of representation. They show us
the new feminist porn as deep playchallenging, exciting, and
important.” Lisa Duggan, author of Sapphic Slashers: Sex, Violence
and American Modernity
"Finally: academics are actually talking to sex industry workers,
pornographers are doubling as theorists, and feminists have grabbed
the cameras. The Feminist Porn Book sets the agenda for new ways of
thinking about the sticky social relations of dirty pictures."
Laura Kipnis, author of Bound and Gagged: Pornography and the
Politics of Fantasy in America
"This is the book that feminist scholars, teachers, students, and
activists have been waiting for! Eloquent, smart, passionate, and
engagingeach page of the The Feminist Porn Book offers a timely
reminder of the continued importance of feminist interventions into
the politics and production of pornography." Carol Stabile,
director of the Center for the Study of Women in Society at the
University of Oregon
In this breakthrough collection, scholars, artists, and producers
from across a spectrum of identities serve up profound new insights
on making, consuming, and studying porn. This book advances my
understanding of how porn works, when it doesn’t, and why it
matters. The short essay format makes this book ideal for teaching,
but it’s essential reading for anyone insterested in sexual
politics or contemporary culture.” Richard Fung, video artist and
professor, Ontario College of Art and Design
The Feminist Porn Book is a readable and smart must-have for any
classroom dealing with sexual representations.” Chuck Kleinhans,
co-editor of JUMP CUT: a review of contemporary media
To have writings from so many of the most important creators in
feminist porn in one anthology is wonderful. It captures the past,
present, and future pioneering of this important film genre.”
Shine Louise Houston, director and CEO of Pink and White
Productions
This impressive volume of essays shows that thirty years after the
feminist sex wars first erupted, porn is still a hot topic for the
women’s movement, and for the scholarly study of gender and
sexuality. The Feminist Porn Book brings together a potent mix of
perspectives from academics, activists, and sex industry workers,
while addressing dis/ability, transness, and race/ethnicity.”
Susan Stryker, director of the Institute for LGBT Studies,
University of Arizona
Freedom for women to express their sexuality on their own terms has always been at the center of feminist thought and activism. Pornography, however, presumptively aimed at men and often degrading of women, has engendered powerful disputes among feminists. This collection of new essays compiled by sex educator and pornographer Taormino (Opening Up: A Guide To Creating and Sustaining Open Relationships), Celine Parrenas Shimizu (Asian American studies, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara; Straightjacket Sexualities), Constance Penley (film & media studies, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara; NASA/Trek: Popular Science and Sex in America), and Mireille Miller-Young (feminist studies, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara), features work from feminist scholars and theorists, porn filmmakers, and performers such films whose work assumes that both the author and the viewer of feminist pornography are women and that feminist pornography empowers them. Sections of the book address the history of feminist porn; the inclusion and exclusion of groups of women from the feminist porn project; the teaching of feminist porn; and the current state of the art. VERDICT Despite the authority of the writers included and its provocative title, this dense work, suitable for a college-level course, will appeal to a fairly narrow audience of feminist theorists and scholars.-Cynthia Harrison, George Washington Univ., Washington, DC (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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