Violence and Pornography
 
 Pornography -- Sex or Subordination?
 
 In the late Seventies, America became shocked and outraged
 by the rape, mutilation, and murder of over a dozen young,
 beautiful girls.  The man who committed these murders, Ted 
 Bundy, was later apprehended and executed.  During his
 detention in various penitentiaries, he was mentally
 probed and prodded by psychologist and psychoanalysts
 hoping to discover the root of his violent actions and
 sexual frustrations.  Many theories arose in attempts to
 explain the motivational factors behind his murderous
 escapades.  However, the strongest and most feasible of
 these theories came not from the psychologists, but from
 the man himself, "as a teenager, my buddies and I would
 all sneak around and watch porn.  As I grew older, I
 became more and more interested and involved in it,
 [pornography] became an obsession.  I got so involved in
 it, I wanted to incorporate [porn] into my life, but I
 couldn't behave like that and maintain the success I had
 worked so hard for.  I generated an alter-ego to fulfill
 my fantasies under-cover.  Pornography was a means of
 unlocking the evil I had burried inside myself" (Leidholdt
 47).  Is it possible that pornography is acting as the key
 to unlocking the evil in more unstable minds?
 	According to Edward Donnerstein, a leading researcher
 in the pornography field, "the relationship between
 sexually violent images in the media and subsequent
 aggression and . . . callous attitudes towards women is
 much stonger statistically than the relationship between
 smoking and cancer" (Itzin 22).  After considering the
 increase in rape and molestation, sexual harassment, and
 other sex crimes over the last few decades, and also the
 corresponding increase of business in the pornography
 industry, the link between violence and pornogrpahy needs
 considerable study and examination.  Once the evidence you
 will encounter in this paper is evaluated and quantified,
 it will be hard not come away with the realization that
 habitual use of pornographic material promotes unrealistic
 and unattainable desires in men that can leac to violent
 behavior toward women. 
 	In order to properly discuss pornography, and be able
 to link it to violence, we must first come to a basic and
 agreeable understanding of what the word pornography
 means.  The term pornogrpahy originates from two greek
 words, porne, which means harlot, and graphein, which
 means to write (Webster's 286).  My belief is that the
 combination of the two words was originally meant to
 describe, in literature, the sexual escapades of women
 deemed to be whores.  As time has passed, this definition
 of pornography has grown to include any and all obscene
 literature and pictures.  At the present date, the term is
 basically a blanket which covers all types of material
 such as explicit literature, photography, films, and video
 tapes with varying degrees of sexual content.
 
 	For Catherine Itzin's research purposes pornogrpahy 
 
 has been divided into three categories:  The sexually 
 
 explicit and violent; the sexually explicit and 
 
 nonviolent, but subordinating and dehumanizing; and the 
 
 sexually explicit, nonviolent, and nonsubordinating that 
 
 is based upon mutuality.  The sexually explicit and 
 
 violent is graphic, showing penetration and ejaculation.  
 
 Also, it shows the violent act toward a woman.  The 
 
 second example shows the graphic sexual act and climax, 
 
 but not a violent act.  This example shows the woman 
 
 being dressed is a costume or being 'talked down' to in 
 
 order to reduce her to something not human; such as a 
 
 body part or just something to have sex with, a body 
 
 opening or an orifice.  Not only does 'erotica' show the 
 
 entire graphic sexual act, it also depicts an attraction 
 
 between two people.  Her research consistently shows 
 
 that harmful effects are associated with the first two, 
 
 but that the third 'erotica', is harmless (22).  These 
 
 three categories basically exist as tools of discerning 
 
 content.  Although sometimes they overlap without a true 
 
 distinction, as in when the film is graphic in the 
 
 sexual act and also in violence, but shows the act as 
 
 being a mutual activity between the people 
 
 participating.
 
 	In my view, to further divide pornography, it is 
 possible to break it down into even simpler categories:  
 soft and hard core pornography.  Hard core pornography is
 a combination of the sexually explicit and violent and the
 sexually explicit and nonviolent, but subordinating and
 dehumanizing categories, previously discussed.  Soft core
 pornography is thought to be harmless and falls into the
 category known as 'erotica'; which is the category based
 on mutuality.  In hard core pornogrpahy, commonly rated
 XXX, you can see graphic depiction's of violent sexual
 acts usually with a man or group of men, deriving sexual
 gratification from the degradation of a woman.  
 	You can also see women participating in demoralizing
 sexual behavior among themselves for the gratification of
 men.  In a triple-X movie all physical aspects are shown,
 such as extreme close-ups of genitalia, oral, vaginal, and
 anal penetration, and also ejaculation. Much of the time
 emphasis is put on the painful and humiliating experience
 of the woman, for the sole satisfaction of the male.  Soft
 core pornography, or X-rated pornography, is less explicit
 in terms of what is shown and the sexual act is usually
 put in the light of mutual enjoyment for both the male and
 female parties(Cameron and Frazer 23).  Triple-X
 pornography is manufactured and sold legally in the United
 States. Deborah Cameron and Elizabeth Frazer point out
 that other forms of hard core pornography that have to be
 kept under wraps, made and sold illegally in underground
 'black' markets.  These are ultraviolent, 'snuff', and
 child pornography.  Ultraviolent tapes or videos show the
 actual torture, rape, and sometime mutilation of a woman. 
 'Snuff' films go even future to depict the actual death of
 a victim, and child pornography reveals the use of
 under-age or pre-pubescent children for sexual purposes
 (17-18).   These types of pornogrpahy cross over the
 boundaries of entertainment and are definitely hard core.
 	Now that pornography has been defined in a fashion
 mirroring its content, it is now possible to touch upon
 the more complex ways a community, as a society , views or
 defines it.  Some have said it is impossible for a group
 of individuals to form a concrete opinion as to what
 pornography means.  A U.S. Supreme Court judge is quoted
 as saying, "I can't define pornography, but I know it when
 I see it" (Itzin 20).  This statement can be heard at
 community meetings in every state, city, and county across
 the nation.  Community standards are hazy due to the fact
 that when asked what pornography is to them, most
 individuals cannot express or explain in words what
 pornography is, therefore creating confusion among
 themselves.
 	Communities are left somewhat helpless in this matter
 since the federal courts passed legislation to keep
 pornography available to adults.  The courts assess that
 to ban or censor the material would be infringing on the
 public's First Amendment Right (Carol 28).  Maureen
 O'Brien quotes critics of a congressionally terminated
 bill, the Pornography Victim's Compensation Act, as saying
 "That if it had passed, it would have had severely
 chilling effects on the First Amendment, allowing victims
 of sexual crimes to file suit against producers and
 distributors of any work that was proven to have had
 'caused' the attack, such as graphic material in books,
 magazines, videos, films, and records" (7).  People in a
 community debating over pornography often have different
 views as to whether or not it should even be made
 available period, and some could even argue this point
 against the types of women used in pornography:  "A far
 greater variety of female types are shown as desirable in
 pornography than mainstream films and network television
 have ever recognized:  fat women, flat women, hairy women,
 aggressive women, older women, you name it" (Carol 25). 
 If we could all decide on just exactly what pornography is
 and what is acceptable, there wouldn't be so much debate
 over the issue of censoring it.
 	The bounds of community standards have been stretched
 by mainstreaming movies, opening the way even further for
 the legalization of more explicit fare (Jenish 53).  In
 most contemporary communities explicit sex that is without
 violent or dehumanizing acts is acceptable in American
 society today.
 	These community standards have not been around very
 long.  When movies were first brought out, they were
 heavily restricted and not protected by the First
 Amendment, because films then were looked upon only as
 diversionary entertainment and business.Even though sexual
 images were highly monitored, the movie industry was hit
 so hard during the Great Depression that film-makers found
 themselves sneaking in as much sexual content as possible,
 even then they saw that 'sex sells' (Clark 1029).  Films
 were highly restricted throughout the 30's, 40's, and 50's
 by the industry, but once independent films of the 60's
 such as:  "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Whose afraid of Virginia
 Woolfe?" (Clark 1029-30), both with explicit language,
 sexual innuendo, and violence started out-performing the
 larger 'wholesome' production companies, many of the
 barriers holding sex and violence back were torn down in
 the name of profit .  Adult content was put into movies
 long ago, we have become more immune and can't expect it
 to get any better or to go away.  Porn is here for good.
 	Pornography is a multi-million dollar international
 industry, ultimately run by organized crime all over the
 world, and is produced by the respectable mainstream
 publishing business companies (Itzin 21).  Although the
 publishing companies are thought to be 'respectable',
 people generally stereotype buyers and users of
 pornographic material as 'dirty old men in trenchcoats',
 but most patrons of adult stores are well-educated people
 with disposable income (Jenish 52).  Porno movies provide
 adults of both genders with activities they normally
 wouldn't get in everyday life, such as oral pleasures or
 different types of fetishes.  Ultimately adult
 entertainment is just a quick-fix for grown-ups, as
 junk-food would be for small children.
 	Pornography's main purpose is to serve as
 masturbatory stimuli for males and to provide a sexual
 vent.  Although in the beginning, society saw it as
 perverted and sinful, it was still considered relatively
 harmless.  Today there is one case studie, standing out
 from the rest, that tends to shatter this illusion.
 	The study done my Monica D. Weisz and Christopher M.
 Earls used "eighty-seven males . . . that were randomly
 shown one of four films", by researchers William Tooke and
 Martin Lalumiere:  "Deliverance, Straw Dogs, Die Hard II,
 and Days of Thunder", for a study on how they would react
 to questions about sexual violence and offenders after
 watching.  In the four films there is sexual aggression
 against a male, sexual aggression against a female,
 physical aggression, and neutrality-no explicit scenes of
 physical or sexual aggression.  Out of this study the
 males were more acceptable of interpersonal violence and
 rape myths and also more attracted to sexual aggression. 
 These same males were less sympathetic to rape victims and
 were noted less likely to find a defendant guilty of rape
 (71).  These four above mentioned movies are mainstreamed
 R-rated films.  If a mainstream movie can cause this kind
 of distortion of value and morality, then it should become
 evident that continuous viewing/use of pornographic films
 depicting violent sex and aggression could lead vulnerable
 persons into performing or participating in sexual
 violence against their partners or against a stranger.
 	Bill Marshall, psychology professor at Queen's
 University and director of a sexual behavior clinic in
 Kingston, interviewed one-hundred and twenty men, between
 the years 1980 and 1985, who had molested children or
 raped women.  In his conclusion he found that pornography
 appeared to be a significant factor in the chain of events
 leading up to a deviant act in 25% of these cases (Nicols
 60).  The results of this study should prove that
 pornography obviously has a down side to it.
 	According to Mark Nicols, a psychology professor at
 the University of Michigan, Neil Malamuth, concludes quite
 cautiously that some messages combined with other factors,
 including the viewer's personality type, in pornography
 can lead to antisocial behavior and make individuals less
 sensitive to violence.  Dr. Marshall also quotes men in
 Nicols article as saying, "that they looked at pornography
 with the intent to masturbate, but then became aroused,
 and decided to go out and assault a woman or child."  Men
 who are drawn into pornography and use it frequently, have
 also been proven to suggest more lenient prison terms for
 sex offenders" (60).  If this previous statement is true,
 should we reevaluate how many men serve on juries for
 these trials?
 	Itzin gives possible support for these theories.  It
 can be found in the case of an ex-prostitute who had her
 pubic hair removed with a jackknife and was forced by her
 pimp to be filmed reenacting what they had seen in
 pornographic movies; she was sexually assaulted and forced
 to have intercourse with animals, generally dogs.  Another
 such case is one of a woman who reports having metal clips
 attached to her breasts, being tied to a chair, and being
 raped and beaten continuously for twelve hours (22-24). 
 The dehumanizing, degradation, and reduction of a woman's
 body isn't just a result of viewed pornography, it is
 often inseminated into the production of a pornographic
 project.  During the making of "Deep Throat", a 1970's
 pornographic film, Linda Marchiano (a.k.a. Linda
 Lovelace), was presented to the public as a liberated
 woman with an ever present and unfulfilled appetite for
 fellatio.  What isn't known to the general public is that
 during the making of the movie, she was hypnotized to
 suppress the natural gagging reaction, was tortured when
 caught trying to escape, and also held at gun-point by her
 boss, who threatened her with death (Itzin 22).  Ms.
 Marchiano did escape and when her story was told, it was
 repeated by a number of women in the pornography business.
 	According to D'Arcy Jenish many children are lured
 into the pornography industry by choosing first to model. 
 These young teen's egos are boosted when they are told
 "[they have good bodies]", and are asked "if they work
 out?".  More often than not, they are told "to take off
 [their] shirts", and then asked "Do you feel nervous?"
 (36).  These youngsters honestly don't know when too much
 is too much, and what they don't know could put them in
 serious danger.
 	Calvin Klein, once known for being a reputable
 clothing designer, is now known for his racy ads using
 teens.  Some feel he crossed the line when he chose this
 type of advertising.  Jenish observes that these
 advertisements "featured an array of . . . teen-aged
 models dressed in loose jeans or hiked-up skirts, one
 showing bare breasts, others offering androgynous models
 kissing" (36).  If adults in positions of power act this
 way, these youngsters cannot expect other adults to act
 any differently.  Therefore they accept this type of
 behavior as normal.
 	Diana Russell claims that tactics like these are
 being used more often in advertising and television, which
 has led media watchdogs and anti-porn activists to believe
 that this sort of masked imitation of pornography tricks
 mainstream television viewers into having an "everybody's
 doing it" attitude about pornography.  She also feels that
 this attitude subconsciously leads them into seeking
 pornography out (39).  We need to show the younger
 generation that everyone is not doing 'it', and that it is
 all right not to have sex if they feel pressured.
 	Another problem anti-pornography activists believe
 arises from regular viewing of pornography, is the
 acceptance of "rape myths".  Rape myth is a term
 pertaining to people's views on rape, rapists, and sexual
 assaults, wherein it is assumed that the victim of a
 sexual crime is either partially or completely to blame
 (Allen 6).  To help understand the rape myth a "Rape Myth
 Acceptance Scale" was established, which lists some of the
 most prominent beliefs that a person accepting the rape
 myth has.  They are as follows:
 		1. A woman who goes to the home or apartment
             of a man on their first date implies that 
 		   she is willing to have sex.
 		2. One reason that women falsely report a rape
 	        is that they frequently have a need to 
              call attention to themselves.
 		3. Any healthy woman can successfully resist
             a rapist if she really wants to.
 		4. When women go around braless or wearing
             short skirts and tight tops, they are just
             asking for trouble.
 		5. In the majority or rapes, the victim is 
             promiscuous or has a bad reputation.
 		6. If a girl engages in necking or petting and 
             she lets things get out of hand, it is her
             own fault if her partner forces sex on her.
 		7. Women who get raped while hitchhiking get
             what they deserve.
 		8. Many women have an unconscious wish to be 
             raped, and may then [subconsciously] set up
             a situation in which they are likely to be
             attacked.
 		9. If a woman gets drunk at a party and has 
             intercourse with a man she's just met 
             there, she should be considered "fair game"
             to other males at the party who want to  
             have sex with her too, whether she wants to
             or not (Burt 217).
 	Pauline Bart reports that studies held simultaneously
 at UCLA and St. Xavier College on students, demonstrate
 that pornography does positively reinforce the rape myth. 
 Men and women were exposed to over four hours of exotic
 video (of varying types; i.e. soft, hard core, etc.) and
 then asked to answer a set of questions meant to gage
 their attitudes of sex crimes.  All the men were proven to
 be more accepting to rape myths, and surprisingly, over
 half of the women were also (123).  Once again, the women
 in these films were portrayed as insatiable and in need of
 constant fulfillment.  After so much exposure to women in
 this light from films and books, it is generally taken for
 granted that women should emulate this type of behavior in
 real life(125). comment?
 	Of all the studies and examples from real life
 situations connecting pornography with violent behavior
 and sexual aggressiveness, none are more concrete than the
 activities the Serbian military are part of every day now
 in the Bosnian war.  Part of the "ethnic cleansing"
 process the Serbs are practicing in Bosnia involves the
 gang-raping of all Muslim and Croatian women.  Andrea
 Dworkin states that it is mandatory for the Serbian
 soldiers to rape the wives and female children of Muslim
 men.  Concentration camps are set up as brothels where
 women are ordered to satisfy the soldiers in the most
 painful and dehumanizing ways imaginable.  The women in
 these camps are taped with cam-corders and the videos are
 displayed everywhere throughout the camps to lower the
 woman's will and need to resist.  Were do the soldiers get
 the inspiration to commit these crimes, from commercial
 pornography.  Serbian troops are basically force-fed porn;
 it is present all through training and is made readily
 available to (even pushed upon) the soldiers.  They are
 basically asked to "watch and learn".  After the seed is
 planted not much is needed to be done, because they are
 naturally instilled with the desire to repeat what they
 have seen, and are not concerned with the feelings of the
 women.  They have seen that some women have no feelings
 and are meant to be used merely for sexual gratification
 (M2-M6).  To add insult to injury, some of the tapes of
 these women being victimized have entered the black
 market, being sold internationally, possible infecting the
 minds of millions.
 	Pornogrpahy has enamored itself as a large part of
 our modern society.  It is seldom discussed and often
 hidden as a dirty secret, but porn still seems to play a
 major part in the shaping of our morals and behaviors. 
 Although some say pornography is relatively harmless, a
 considerable larger group seem to uphold the assumption
 the porn works in negative and disruptive ways on those
 who view it and participate.  Nearly all the research
 supports this assumption, so it is evident the the topic
 is in need of much more examination and debate.
 	Even though the majority of modern society views
 pornography as objectionable and sometimes obscene, there
 are some that do not agree with the assumption that
 pornography is guilty of the defamation of women and their
 sexual roles.  Social observationalists, such as Mary
 White, at the University of Michigan often agree with her
 statement on the part women play in pornogrpahy which
 explains that "since most pornographic material plays up
 to male fantasy, women are usually the aggressors, hence
 women are given a semblance of empowerment.  Also, the
 majority of these women in the material are very
 attractive, therefore seen as the forms of beauty and
 desire, something to be respected and worked for" (72). 
 Although White may not realize it, this statement
 reinforced most of the arguments made in support of the
 notion that pornography is subordinating and degrading to
 women.  By saying that being sexually aggressive gives a
 woman empowerment, she limits a woman's ability to reach
 empowerment to sexual activity alone, and by claiming that
 the use of attractive women in pornographic material lends
 to a view of women being desirable, she inadvertently
 excludes women that don't fit society's mold of the model
 physical female, (i.e. overweight, small breasted, short,
 etc.).  Most of  the arguments similar to White's follow
 the same line of reasoning, and are easily broken down in
 the same manner as hers.
 	In regards to pornogrpahy perpetuating violent acts
 toward women, pornography defenders claim that the use of
 pornographic material can act as a cathartic release,
 actual lessening the likelihood of males committing
 violent acts.  The reasoning is that the pornogrpahy can
 substitute for sex and that the 'want' to commit sexual
 crimes is acted out vicariously through the pornographic
 material (Whicclair 327).  This argument, however, does
 not explain the crimes committed by serial killers like
 Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacey, who regularly viewed
 pornography during the lengths of their times between
 murders and rapes (Scully 70).  By saying that pornogrpahy
 would reduce harm to women through cathartic effects,
 pornography defenders display a large lack in reasoning
 because through their argument the rise in the production
 of pornography would have led to a decrease in sexual
 crimes, but as has been shown previously, that simply is
 not true.
 	Pornographers and pornography defenders proclaim that
 the link between pornography and violence is exaggerated
 and that the research linking pornography to sexual crimes
 is inconclusive.  They state that the fundamentals of sex
 crimes are found inherently in the individuals and that
 the sexual permissiveness of American society cannot be
 blamed on the increase of pornography's availability
 (Jacobson 79).  David Adams, a co-founder and executive
 director of Emerge, a Boston counseling center for male
 batterers, states, "that only a minority of his clients
 (perhaps 10 to 20 percent) use hard-core pornography.  He
 estimates that half may have substance abuse problems, and
 adds that alcohol seems more directly involved in abuse
 than pornography" (Kaminer 115).  The statement made by
 Adams and the view that pornography does not contribute to
 the act of sex crimes is heavily outweighed, however, by
 the various studies connecting violence and pornography. 
 Bill Marshall's observations on his patients and the
 examples of individual crimes originating from
 pornography, show this acclimation to be invalidated.
 	Some also say that attacks on pornography merely
 reflect the majority of feminist's disdain for men,
 cynically stating that people who fear pornography think
 of all men as potential abusers, whose violent impulses
 are bound to be sparked by pornography (114).  Researcher
 Catherin MacKinnon, says that "pornography works as a
 behavioral conditioner, reinforcer, and stimulus, not as
 idea or advocacy" (114).  However, this idea is proven to
 be false by the use of pornography in and by the Serbian
 military.  This example shows that pornography does
 advocate sex crimes and that ideas of sexual violence are
 able to be stemmed from the viewing of pornography.
 	Pornography has become to most just another one of
 those cold, nasty facts of life that cannot be stopped, so
 some choose to ignore it.  This attitude has to change.  
 After reviewing the abuse and subordination delegated to
 women as an almost indisputable result of the mass
 infiltration of pornography into modern society, it should
 be impossible for someone not to want to do something
 about it.  What can be done is for those concerned to try
 to spread the word and educate others as much as possible
 to the dangers of this sort of material.  If people knew
 the roots of some of their more violent behavior, it could
 be deminished, thus protecting the future and health of
 our communities.
 	From its inception, in most cases, pornography is a
 media that links sexual gratification and violence
 together. This fact can only lead a rational mind to the
 conclusion that a chain of events will begin, combining
 sex and violence further in the minds of those who watch
 pornography and will ensure an unhealthy attitude towards
 women and their sexual identities.  Only through
 discussion and individual action can the perpetuation of
 the negative impacts of pornography be swept from the
 closets and dark corners of the American household.
     		
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