Loose Women, Lecherous Men (80 page)

Read Loose Women, Lecherous Men Online

Authors: Linda Lemoncheck

Tags: #Social Science, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #test

BOOK: Loose Women, Lecherous Men
9.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
95. John Stoltenberg, "You Can't Fight Homophobia and Protect the Pornographers at the Same TimeAn Analysis of What Went Wrong in
Hardwick
," in Leidholdt and Raymond,
The Sexual Liberals
, 18490; Stoltenberg, "Pornography and Freedom," 71; Susan G. Cole, "Pornography: What Do We Want?," in Bell,
Good Girls/Bad Girls
, 161; Bill's comments and Ron's comments, in Stoller's
Porn
, 35, 20910. For a discussion of the asymmetry between male and female sex objects, see LeMoncheck,
Dehumanizing Women
, 8694; also see Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria Jacobs,
Remaking Love: The Feminization of Sex
(New York: Anchor Books/Doubleday, 1986), 11113; Andrea Dworkin,
Pornography
, 4447.
96. See Kobena Mercer, "Just Looking for Trouble: Robert Mapplethorpe and Fantasies of Race," in Segal and McIntosh,
Sex Exposed
, 1015; Isaac Julien and Kobena Mercer, "True Confessions: A Discourse on Images of Black Male Sexuality," in
Brother to Brother
, ed. Essex Hemphill (Boston: Alyson Publications, 1991); also see Janet R. Jakobsen, "Agency and Alliance in Public Discourses about Sexualities,"
Hypatia
10 (winter 1995): 14042.
97. Margo St. James, "Feminism: 'Crunch Point,'" in Pheterson,
A Vindication of the
 
Page 249
Rights of Whores
, 167; LeMoncheck,
Dehumanizing Women
, 2630; also see Lederer, "Then and Now"; Lovelace,
Ordeal
.
98. See Scott et al. (CORP), "Realistic Feminists," 20417; also see Lopez-Jones, "Workers"; West, ''U.S. PROStitutes Collective"; Hartley, "Confessions of a Feminist Porno Star."
99. See Priscilla Alexander, "Prostitutes Are Being Scapegoated for Heterosexual AIDS," in Delacoste and Alexander,
Sex Work
, 24863; Priscilla Alexander, "Update on HIV Infection and Prostitute Women," in Pheterson,
A Vindication of the Rights of Whores
, 13237; Nina Lopez-Jones, "Prostitute Women and AIDS: Resisting the Virus of Repression," paper presented at the Women's Studies Seminar on Prostitution, Huntington Library, Pasadena, California, 13 March 1993; also see COYOTE/National Task Force on Prostitution position statement, 290; Hansje Verbeek and Terry van der Zijden, "The Red Thread: Whores' Movement in Holland," in Delacoste and Alexander,
Sex Work
, 300; "World Charter for Prostitutes' Rights," in Pheterson,
A Vindication of the Rights of Whores
, 41; Gail Pheterson, "The Social Consequences of Unchastity," in Delacoste and Alexander,
Sex Work
, 218; Clark, "Liberalism and Pornography"; Scott et al. (CORP), "Realistic Feminists," 205.
100. See Marjan Sax, "The Pink Thread," in Delacoste and Alexander,
Sex Work
, 3014; also see chapter 4, n. 16 in this book. Annie Sprinkle describes how she uses sexually explicit stage performance traditionally labeled "objectifying" to define herself subversively as female sexual subject in
Post Porn Modernist
(Amsterdam: Torch Books, 1991); also see Linda Williams, "A Provoking Agent: The Pornography and Performance Art of Annie Sprinkle," in Gibson and Gibson,
Dirty Looks
, 17691.
101. See C, in "We Take It for All Women," 102; St. James, "The Reclamation of Whores," 86; Scott et al. (CORP), "Realistic Feminists," 20414.
102. See Sprinkle, "Feminism: 'Crunch Point,'" 14647; Jane Smith, "Making Movies"; Hartley, "Confessions of a Feminist Porno Star"; Seph Weene, "Venus,"
Heresies
#12 "Sex Issue" 3, no. 4 (1981): 3638; Amber Cooke, "Stripping: Who Calls the Tune?," in Bell,
Good Girls/Bad Girls
, 9299; Cathy, "Unveiling," 11819. Linda Williams mentions the enthusiasm of lesbian performers in lesbian pornography, in "Pornographies On/scene," 253.
103. English, "The Politics of Porn," 22; also see Webster, "Pornography and Pleasure," 49; St. James, "The Reclamation of Whores"; Biermann, "Feminism: 'Crunch Point,'" 170; Gail Pheterson, "Feminism: 'Crunch Point,'" in Pheterson,
A Vindication of the Rights of Whores
, 150, 168; Valentino and Johnson, "On the Game and On the Move," 21. Bell quotes one sex worker as saying, "Feminism is incomplete without us," from Laurie Bell, "Introduction," in Bell,
Good Girls/Bad Girls
, 17.
104. Willis, "Feminism, Moralism, and Pornography," 46263; Rubin, "Misguided, Dangerous, and Wrong," 25, 2934; Soble,
Pornography, Marxism, Feminism
, 1617, 1920; Rubin, in English et al., "Talking Sex," 57, 60.
105. See Beatrice Faust,
Women, Sex, and Pornography
(New York: Macmillan, 1980).
106. See Rubin and English, in English et al., "Talking Sex"; Wendy McElroy, XXX:
A Woman's Right to Pornography
(New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995); Loretta Loach, "Bad Girls: Women Who Use Pornography," in Segal and McIntosh,
Sex Exposed
, 26674; Walkowitz, "The Politics of Prostitution"; also see Judith Walkowitz, "Male Vice and Female Virtue: Feminism and the Politics of Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Britain," in Snitow et al.,
Powers of Desire
, 41938; Brownworth, "The Porn Boom"; Smart, "Unquestionably a Moral Issue," 198.

Other books

Falling Sky by Rajan Khanna
Escape by David McMillan