I love this video. There are, of course, some complexities to calling other men out right-then-right-there: Can it be done in a way that doesn't perpetuate conflict and violence between men, for example? There are also complexities around race that need to be taken into account--as a white guy, calling out a black guy on street harassment means something different than if another black guy does it.
And yet, despite all of the complexities, I can't help but think that the world would be better off if we just heard more men like the men in this video...
"The women of Bikini Kill let guitarist Billy Karren be in their feminist punk band, but only if he's willing to just "do some shit." Being a feminist dude is like that. We may ask you to "do some shit" for the band, but you don't get to be Kathleen Hannah."--@heatherurehere
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Thursday, March 08, 2012
Wednesday, March 07, 2012
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Men Doing Feminist Work: Si Spurrier and Paul Cornell
Seems there's a bit of a wave of allies in comics these days. Recently,
Paul Cornell, a celebrated comic (and television) writer, decided that
he's not going to be on comic book panels that don't have some gender
parity:
If I'm on, at any convention this year, a panel that doesn't have a 50/50 gender split (I'll settle for two out of five), I'll hop off that panel, and find a woman to take my place.
If I'm on, at any convention this year, a panel that doesn't have a 50/50 gender split (I'll settle for two out of five), I'll hop off that panel, and find a woman to take my place.
Yay for Paul.
And now, Si Spurrier has followed Paul's example, and given up his seat on a panel to Tammy Taylor. I hope this trend continues!
Friday, March 02, 2012
Feminist Reading: Battling Pornography
There is little that tends to polarize feminist communities more than discussions about pornography. Carolyn Bronstein has written a fantastic book, Battling Pornography, which gives us an in-depth look at how various feminist movements in the 60's and 70's helped to move pornography "...to the forefront of the American women's movement in the 1980s, singled out by some leading feminists as a key agent of female oppression and celebrated by others as an essential ingredient of sexual liberation."
My favorite part of Bronstein's book is that it doesn't shy away from the complexities of the issues. It's a great read; I urge you to go buy it:
Bronstein was kind enough to do a pretty in-depth interview with me, below, about some of the issues that I thought would be of particular interest to readers of this blog.
Bronstein was kind enough to do a pretty in-depth interview with me, below, about some of the issues that I thought would be of particular interest to readers of this blog.
I
hope that Battling Pornography will
appeal to both academic and popular audiences.
Among academics, I think that American historians and sociologists,
especially those specializing in women’s history, the history of gender and sexuality,
social movements and popular culture will find the book useful and insightful,
and will provide a new context for understanding anti-pornography organizing. Media studies scholars are also a primary
audience for the book, as it emphasizes the representation of women in
advertising, television and film, and examines how radical feminists in the
1970s and 1980s tried to challenge the dominant constructions of femininity and
masculinity created and reinforced by popular media. Pornography is of interest to most academic
disciplines: psychologists try to elucidate the potential for harmful effects
on users; political scientists and legal scholars are interested in citizen and
government attempts to restrict its free flow and the scope of the First
Amendment in terms of protecting this
type of expression; philosophers debate the moral and ethical questions
surrounding exploitation and consent among sex workers, which includes the live
actors who appear in adult films and magazines, and on adult websites. To the extent that pornography has
implications for many academic disciplines, I hope that a wide range of
scholars will find Battling Pornography
to be an informative and engaging resource.
In
terms of a general audience, I expect that the book will draw readership from
people with interests in feminism, sexuality, popular media and American
history. I hope that today’s young
feminists—the third wavers—will pick up Battling
Pornography and will come away with a deeper understanding of the unflagging
campaign against sexism in media that the anti-pornography feminists led, and how
hard they worked to illuminate and contest a culture of male violence against
women, especially rape and battering. Too
many young women have been exposed to caricatures of anti-pornography feminists
as anti-sexual manhaters who sought to eradicate all forms of sexual
expression, and this stereotype has helped create barriers between older and
younger feminists, with the latter coming to perceive themselves as rejecting and
overthrowing the sexual puritanism of their foremothers. One lesson that I hope that readers of Battling Pornography will learn is that
the vast majority of anti-pornography feminists opposed violence, not sex. They saw their work against sexualized media
violence as a means of reducing women’s vulnerability to assault by eradicating
gender stereotypes of woman as passive victim and man as lustful brute. They did so in hopes that women might achieve
the authentic sexual liberation that the sexual revolution had promised, but had
failed to deliver.
I
also hope that feminists who were active in the debate, in either the
anti-pornography or pro-sex camp, will read the book and perhaps come away with
a better understanding of how those on the other side of the fence interpreted
the pornography problem. Some 30 years
after the famous 1982 Barnard Conference that I discuss in the book, the
mention of this event (famous for its bitter and public clash between
anti-pornography and pro-sex feminists) continues to ignite passion, anger and resentment. The writer Dorothy Allison has identified
Barnard as the place where many feminists “lost our religion,” meaning that the
women’s movement ceased to be a safe space where diverse voices and opinions
could be heard and respected. I suppose
it’s too much to even hope that Battling Pornography
could help heal some of those divisions by giving readers greater insight and
context for understanding both sides of the movement, but somehow I do still wish
that could happen.
Finally,
I think that the book covers significant ground for anyone who is interested in
understanding the contemporary pornography scene, and how and why pornography
has become a ubiquitous feature of modern life.
When attempts to control its spread through public education and
consciousness raising and new legal approaches failed in the mid-1980s, at the
same moment that changes in technology made it possible to pipe unlimited adult
material into American homes through video and cable television, the stage was
set for a seemingly unstoppable proliferation of pornography in American
life.
Battling Pornography takes a nuanced, complex look at the history of anti-pornography movements, indicating a progression of ideas and how those movements and ideas have led us to the places we are today regarding pornography, popular culture, and feminism. I take a lot of what you wrote partly as a response to overly-simple critiques on all sides of the issue. Why do you think we keep finding ourselves continually coming back to critiques that (to oversimplify!) complain that anti-porn folks are prudes and pro-porn folks are pimps/sluts/etc.? Can knowledge of the history of progression of feminist thought and movements around porn help?
Binary
categories are appealing. They provide a
mental shortcut that enables us to organize our thoughts about the social world
in predictable and easily accessible ways:
Male or female. Democrat or
Republican. Anti-porn or pro-sex. A fellow academic demanded just the other day
that I identify myself as one or the other: stand and shoot! This made me realize how badly we need some
new terminology to describe feminists like me who see value in both sets of arguments,
and would prefer to weave the positions together in ways that encourage and
embrace sexual freedom and pleasure while recognizing that not every sexual act
or exchange is transgressive or liberatory just because someone insists that it
is. There is always potential for
exploitation in human relationships, and the feminist anti-pornography analysis
has much to offer in terms of thinking through global problems like sex
trafficking. I do believe that new histories
of anti-pornography and pro-sex organizing like Battling Pornography will reveal the existence of more complex
issue positions among feminists, and will point us toward new ways of
critiquing sexual harm without abandoning the right of individuals to pursue a
diverse, satisfying and unfettered sexual life.
The tone of the book is one of
neutrality on the issues, to some extent. As a feminist, is it harder to
be a sociologist/historicist around these issues than it would be around any
others? Did you have any concerns around the "objective"
framework, given that there are numerous feminist critiques of such frameworks
as patriarchal?
When
I began researching the history of the grassroots feminist groups that the book
discusses—WAVAW, WAVPM, and WAP—I was surprised at how little had been
published about their origins, members and campaigns. The majority of what I found dealt with WAP
from about 1982 onward, and with the MacKinnon-Dworkin anti-pornography
ordinances. So, one purpose in writing Battling Pornography was to document the
extraordinary work that these groups did around media violence in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, to preserve their achievements and enrich the history of late
twentieth century American feminism.
But, I wouldn’t necessarily agree that the framework is objective because
the very nature of my reading and interpreting the groups’ unpublished
manuscript collections transforms it into a subjective account. I had
to make decisions about what events to describe, which activists to highlight,
and which ideas to foreground, and in so doing, I brought my own biases and
beliefs to the table. recognize that it
was not possible to create an objective account.
As
one reads deeper into the book, I do let my position on the issues be
known. In short, I think that WAVAW had
it right: focus on popular media;
subsume pornography under violence, not the other way around; recognize that
men and women are both victims of gender stereotypes that glamorize violence,
and above all, stick with public education, consciousness raising and consumer
action techniques rather than seeking protection from the state. I write in the book that the movement only became
controversial when feminists began emphasizing pornography as the target and started
to look at creating new laws. Countering
fierce opposition from free speech advocates, liberals and pro-sex feminists
drained movement energy and resources, and hampered activists’ ability to
achieve concrete goals.
Although
I periodically introduce my opinion, I purposefully did not make it a central
feature of the book. Most of what is
published on the anti-pornography movement has been written by participants or
their pro-sex challengers, and takes an explicit position with regard to the
correctness (or not) of anti-pornography theory and politics. I thought the greatest contribution I could
make at this time would be to use my critical distance as a non-participant to offer
a factual, insightful and empathic account of the movement that shows how the
grassroots groups formed and changed over time, why they made certain strategic
decisions that led to the anti-pornography emphasis, and how external
political, cultural and social factors affected their trajectories. There is no other book available at this time
that gives you a thorough view of the development of the feminist
anti-pornography movement. Given the
movement’s lasting impact on American society and American feminism, I thought such
a book needed to be written.
Since this is an "ally" site, I also want to ask: Is there anything in particular that you think men ought to get out of this book, in addition to or different from what women will get out of it?
One of the
most surprising aspects of my research was the discovery that members of the
earliest grassroots anti-media violence group, WAVAW, were critically concerned
about the well-being of men. They argued
that the glorified images of sexual violence presented in popular media taught
men that women secretly liked to be raped, and instilled in them the dangerous
idea that a real man was a brute.
Instead of vilifying men, which is something that anti-pornography
feminists are uniformly charged with, members of WAVAW believed that men were
victims too, systematically warped by media images of maleness. They decried such images as “crippling” and
“maiming” and insisted that they were devastating for both sexes. This belief in the artificial nature of
gender was consistent with radical feminism and the belief that heterosexuality
was an institution designed to ensure the continued subordination of
women. Nonetheless, I was surprised by
the empathy that members of WAVAW showed for men and the pressure they face even
today to conform to social expectations for traditionally masculine
behavior. I think that men who read Battling Pornography might realize that
many of these feminists were not anti-male at all. They opposed depictions of men that
normalized violent behavior as expected and desirable.
Do you have any plans to do
another book that leads us up to the present day around these movements, or
even makes more analysis of what should/will come next?
This
question brought to mind an experience I had in 2004 when I heard John
D’Emilio, an outstanding historian of sexuality, give a talk about his book Lost Prophet: Bayard Rustin and the Quest for
Peace and Justice in America, which had been published
the year prior. When he finished his
talk, he opened the floor for Q&A, and as it was ending I asked him to tell
us what his next book project might cover. He gave me a quizzical look and responded that
he was still working on Lost Prophet,
and that he was not ready to think beyond the book because there was still so
much that remained to be done with it.
It is only now, years later, having finished Battling Pornography, that I truly understand what he meant. Will I write a subsequent book that deals
with the pornography problem from 1986 to the present? Maybe.
First, I have to see where this book takes me. I won’t know for sure what is next until I see
how Battling Pornography is received,
how it factors into both academic and popular discussions of the pornography
problem, and whether it raises a new set of questions about pornography and
society that I had not previously considered.
I can tell you that questions around media representation and women are
an enduring intellectual interest for me, and the issue of pornography will
remain central to that subject.
How have pro-porn (or pro-sex-work) feminist folks responded to the book?
The
feedback I have had thus far has primarily been from the women’s history and
gender studies communities, and has been quite positive. The book is so new that word is just getting
out about its publication, and I might have a more interesting answer for you
several months from now. I think that I
make a good case for the pro-sex feminists in Battling Pornography and offer a fair account of their intent to
challenge the unremitting focus on sexual danger that they saw in the
anti-pornography movement, and their wish to speak about sexuality as a
positive force for women in terms of pleasure, agency and self-discovery.
I
hope that feminists who support pornography and sex work will come to
understand that the core movement objection was to violence, not sexuality. I think that some of the modern day adult
entertainment that is created with a feminist sensibility in mind would not
raise the same set of concerns as mass market male-oriented pornography that is
said to exploit women’s bodies and dehumanize both actor and viewer.
One of the interesting things about the book is that I can see various "sides" choosing to cherry pick from the histories of the movements in order to bolster their causes (I'm thinking here of a thread you point out describing how anti-violence-against-women leaders decided that being anti-porn would help get the word out, for instance--a move that might be characterized by some as taking a cue from Mad Men style of advertising).
Well, I expect that’s always the case with a book published on a hotly contested topic, and pornography certainly qualifies as such. As an author, I think that you have to write a narrative that makes the best possible case for your point of view, present your evidence clearly, offer what you see as the most logical and persuasive conclusions…and then understand that no two people are going to interpret your text or use it for their own purposes in exactly the same way. I assume that some readers will come away from Battling Pornography thinking that I am a staunch anti-pornography feminist and that the book proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that we need to mobilize new efforts to pass legislation. Others will read it and determine that I am a card-carrying member of Samois, a Bay Area lesbian feminist S/M rights organization active in the late 1970s and early 1980s which was a major foe of anti-porn groups. Given how strongly people feel about the topic, it’s fair to predict that the evidence and arguments in the book may get misrepresented at times to serve other people’s academic or political purposes. But, if you choose to write a book about pornography, you have to be prepared to enter the fray and live with the consequences. It’s not a neutral issue.
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