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"Deep Throat" Sex Wars
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Last night I watched the 2005 film Inside Deep Throat, now out on DVD. For those of you who haven't brushed up on your Nixon era cultural history, before Mark Felt was Woodward and Bernstein's Watergate "Deep Throat" source, the euphemism was recognizable primarily as the title of a wildly popular porn film released in 1972 and banned in 23 states. Inside Deep Throat interviews cultural heavyweights ranging from Norman Mailer to Erica Jong to Hugh Hefner, recalling the Mafia's distribution of the film, the federal government's prosecution of Deep Throat actor Harry Reems, and star Linda Lovelace's subsequent anti-porn activism, followed by her return to the industry in 2001, when she posed for Leg Show magazine at the age of 51. But here's what interested me most in Inside Deep Throat: In the age of Girls Gone Wild, porn star Jenna Jameson's ubiquitous presence on VH1, and concerns that Internet pornography is destroying intimacy in an entire generation, the second wave feminist movement's schizophrenic reaction to Deep Throat is worth examining.

As feminist novelist Erica Jong (Fear of Flying) recalls in the documentary, Deep Throat was de rigueur among New York City intellectuals in the early 1970s. After the New York Times described Deep Throat as a cultural phenomenon, the glitterati screened the porno at house parties, where they smoked pot and made out. Indeed, compared to today's silicon-saturated, cookie-cutter porn, there's lots to like in Deep Throat: real (smallish!) breasts, some witty banter, and discussion of female pleasure. The problem with Deep Throat lies in its ridiculous depiction of the female orgasm. It feels silly to pick apart the"plot" of a porno, but here it is: Linda Lovelace, playing "herself," can't experience orgasm, so she goes to a kindly doctor (Harry Reems), who discovers that her clitoris lies not in the usual place, but deep inside her throat. You can guess what happens next, and it's pure male fantasy.

"Anti-porn feminists," led by figures such as Gloria Steinem and Susan Brownmiller, attacked the film. Their argument was--and still is--that pornography, by depicting women as sex objects and men as controlling studs, contributes to real life violence against women and misogyny in general. "Sex-positive" feminists, some of them with first-hand experience in the porn industry, responded that the answer wasn't to censor porn, but to create porn that depicted female sexuality as it really is: powerful, complicated, messy, and when all goes well, completely earth-moving. More than 30 years later, we've moved only slightly beyond the dualism of this debate. Mainstream pornography, filled as it is with identical Barbie doll blondes and women moaning in pleasure at the mere sight of a penis, doesn't have much to offer feminism. Alternative porn exists mostly online, where there are communities for every fetish imaginable. And feminist porn is out there, represented by spokeswomen like Violet Blue and Candida Royalle.

Porn isn't going away--in fact, it seems we're addicted to it. Rather than continuously railing against the aesthetics of mainstream XXX or asserting that young men are being perverted by the Internet (the same images used to exist on playing cards), feminists should support realistic portrayals of both female and male sexuality, accurate sex education in our schools, and an emphasis on pleasure. Power is an aphrodisiac and depictions of it aren't going to disappear from porn. But it sure would be nice to see more kneeling men.

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Porn is America!
By ctpvandy07 Jul 7th 2006 at 7:27 pm EDT
It is interesting, but pornography as an industry makes a lot of money for America's economy and, dare I say it, I believe it is one of the top grossing industries in America (I believe a porn-addict who came to speak at VU mentioned this statistic, but someone can check me on that). Because of that, we know anything that makes money for America is not going anywhere, just like tobacco. As demoralizing as it sounds, this is something we do not need to try to rid ourselves of, but in light of this article, embrace is as freedom of expression and mold it into something which embraces empowering images of men and women. We oftentimes rely on Prime Time TV or Music Channels and Movies to see the display of the many personalities and character traits of women and men. We need to infuse this personality mapping into this industry of pornography if we are to get anything more than pleasure from it. Pleasure and desire are parts of human nature. Pornography is an expression of that, only these stars share this pleasure and desire with the world. However uncomfortable it makes us, I agree with the article-it is here to stay. A smart thing to do would be to challenge the pornography industry to add more substance to the plot of the porn and development of characters.
Re: Porn is America!
By Superduperficial Jul 8th 2006 at 1:37 am EDT
The question, though:


A smart thing to do would be to challenge the pornography industry to add more substance to the plot of the porn and development of characters.



In porn far more so than any other industry, there is no pretense - whatever the public wants, the public will get.

And what the public has been pushing for in porn is less story, not more - the new de rigeur form of porn is known as "gonzo", where there's no storyline whatsoever, no characters, only straight sex scenes filmed in an almost "home video" style when compared to the more Hollywood-esque production values of the past.

In other words - good luck.

According to one report I read, a current top-selling gonzo series is entitled "Pull My Hair and Call Me Stupid", volumes 1 through 10.
  
Hey now...
By Superduperficial Jul 8th 2006 at 1:35 am EDT
...Alternative porn exists mostly online, where there are communities for every fetish imaginable. And feminist porn is out there, represented by spokeswomen like Violet Blue and Candida Royalle.



We cannot forget the Suicide Girls, those feminist do-it-yourself porn stars who number several hundred strong and also run a travelling burlesque show all around the country: Link (Link is definitely not safe for work)
Suicide Girls
By Dana Goldstein Jul 8th 2006 at 4:56 pm EDT
FYI Superduperficial: There's been a ton of controversy over the Suicide Girls--allegations from former site models that they aren't as woman-directed and concerned with equality as they make themselves out to be, and actually engage is some disturbing labor practices. There was a great article about a year ago in the New York Press uncovering some of this stuff, unfortunately, I can't find it online.
Re: Suicide Girls
By Superduperficial Jul 8th 2006 at 5:47 pm EDT
I read all that controversy - a bit of googling will bring it up for you again. I don't see anything un-feminist about their labor practices; if anything, it's equality! They signed a contract, and you're bound by your contract regardless of your anatomy. If they felt they wanted better contracts, they could have negotiated for them at the point they were hired - and if SG decides the girls aren't worth their demands, so be it. If you sign a non-compete, it's not "patriarchal" to be held to it. Running a business like a business is not anti-feminist.
  
Heh
By Superduperficial Jul 8th 2006 at 1:39 am EDT
Porn isn't going away--in fact, it seems we're addicted to it. Rather than continuously railing against the aesthetics of mainstream XXX or asserting that young men are being perverted by the Internet (the same images used to exist on playing cards), feminists should support realistic portrayals of both female and male sexuality, accurate sex education in our schools, and an emphasis on pleasure. Power is an aphrodisiac and depictions of it aren't going to disappear from porn. But it sure would be nice to see more kneeling men.



This part, I can entirely agree with. Raise a generation of women who insist on a guy going down on them before they get theirs - a generation who demand orgasm equality, not just equal pay - and you'll see positive change.
  
Couldn't have said it better myself
By gwcolonial07 Jul 10th 2006 at 6:56 pm EDT
"But it sure would be nice to see more kneeling men. "

Amen to that.
  
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