From Mary Harrington:
Though pornographic art of course predates the sexual revolution, its large-scale form is a direct byproduct of that revolution. Central to this, as I’ve often noted in these pages, was the technological de-risking of real-life sexual intimacy through contraception. Though, again, the sex industry existed before the Pill, it was only with the advent of fairly reliable contraception that it became possible to imagine that who you have sex with, when, and how, is a purely private matter. And as night follows day, the privatisation of sex produced libertarian defences of buying and selling sex, including to produce porn.Share
Did the overall benefits of the sexual revolution outweigh the tradeoff of a mushrooming sex industry? Reasonable people may differ. But wherever you stand on this, it’s not a coincidence that after the Pill was legalised in the 1960s, it took barely a decade for the porn industry to explode to a scale that triggered feminist protest - and, in due course, also libertarian feminist support. The feminist ‘sex wars’ of that era are complex and merit a post or three on their own, but turned in essence on a conflict between those who saw women’s interests as best served by a defence of sexual freedom, including to make or consume porn, and those who argued that porn was structurally misogynistic and both enacted and legitimised violence against women. In the end, the libertarians won.
But the radical feminists were onto something. For the central mechanism of porn is the transgression of taboo. The most obvious of these is seeing people have sex, at all: even today, in our now very sexually liberal culture, everyone understands that it’s forbidden to rut in public. Porn makes money out of breaching this basic omertá, in a dynamic where the thrill of seeing forbidden things is at least as much part of the stimulus as the stimulating effect of watching or imagining the acts themselves. In turn, this interacts paradoxically with the ongoing drive behind the sexual revolution: the liberation of sexual expression and desire from social constraint. For, having uncoupled sex from procreation, there is no theoretical reason save perhaps the force of habit for any normative boundaries to be placed on sexual expression whatsoever. Given that sex is a private matter you should, in this view, be free to do literally anything you want, our post-revolutionary consensus asserts, provided it’s safe, sane, and consensual. (Read more.)
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