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Porn Studies

Volume 1, Issue 1-2, 2014

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Rethinking the effects paradigm in porn studies
ARTICLES

Rethinking the effects paradigm in porn studies

DOI:
10.1080/23268743.2013.870306
Brian McNaira*

pages 161-171

Abstract

It has been an assumption of most anti-pornography discourse that porn damages women (and children) in a variety of ways. In Porno? Chic!, the authorĀ interrogated this assumption by examining the correlation between the incidence of sexual violence and other indicators of misogyny, and the availability and accessibility of pornography within a number of societies. This article develops that work with a specific focus on the regulatory environment as it relates to pornography and sexual representation. Does a liberal regulatory regime in sexual culture correlate with a relatively advanced state of sexual politics in a given country? Conversely, does an illiberal regime, where pornography and other forms of sexual culture are banned or severely restricted, correlate with relatively strong patriarchal structures? A comparative cross-country analysis seeks to explain the correlations identified, and to assess the extent to which the availability of porn can be viewed as a causal or a consequential characteristic of those societies where feminism has achieved significant advances.

Keywords

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Details

  • Received: 26 Sep 2013
  • Accepted: 15 Nov 2013
  • Published online: 21 Mar 2014

Author affiliations

  • a Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia

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