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Print Material
Author Bronstein, Carolyn.

Title Battling pornography : the American feminist anti-pornography movement, 1976-1986 / Carolyn Bronstein.

Imprint Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  363.4709047 B789b 2011    ---  Available
Description xiv, 360 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 337-354) and index.
Contents Seeds of discontent: the failed promise of the sexual revolution for women -- Male violence and the critique of heterosexuality: the influence of radical feminism on the anti-pornography movement -- Have you seen Deep Throat yet? : the growth of the commercial sex industry in 1970s America -- "I'm black and blue from the Rolling Stones and I love it!" : Women Against Violence Against Women and the campaign against media violence -- Something inside me just went "click" : Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media and the transition to an anti-pornography movement -- Growing pains: the emergence of Women against Pornography and new directions for the feminist anti-pornography movement -- Porn tours: tensions and triumphs for WAP -- The new lay of the land: WAP assumes leadership of the movement and faces challenges from within and without -- Anti-pornography comes undone: the rise of the feminist pro-sex counter-movement -- Porn is here to stay: the feminist anti-pornography movement in the 1980s and beyond.
Summary In the mid-1970s, American feminists formed grassroots organizations to protest the proliferation of advertisements, films, and other popular media that glorified sexual violence against women. They pioneered feminist analyses of these images, which were thought to promote sexist attitudes and behavior, and male power and control. Over time, feminists shifted their focus to pornography, and a full-fledged anti-pornography movement was born. This book analyzes the rise and fall of the American feminist anti-pornography movement, situating its development in the social and cultural history of the late 1960s and 1970s, including the sexual revolution and the second wave. Based on extensive original archival work, the author chronicles the three most influential movement organizations and reveals how and why anti-pornography took root. She shows that the strategic reorientation to pornography propelled the movement into the national spotlight but also ignited a counter-movement led by feminists and free speech advocates that ultimately toppled anti-pornography in the mid-1980s. This work offers a detailed account of inner movement dynamics and the contributions of its central actors, including some of the best-known figures in American feminism.
Subject Pornography -- United States -- History.
Feminism -- United States -- History.
Women -- Crimes against -- United States -- History.
ISBN 9781107400399 (paperback)
9780521879927 (hardback)
0521879922 (hardback)
1107400392 (paperback)
Standard No. 40019650096

 
    
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