Pornification
Pornification
Pornification
PORNIFICATION
PORNIFICATION
WHAT IS PORNIFICATION?
Pornification is the way in which the aesthetics and explicitness of pornography infiltrate mainstream culture. Everyday Pornography by Karen Boyle, Routledge UK July 2010 Pornification, sometimes referred to as pornographication or 'raunch culture' is the increasing distribution and acceptance of pornography as well as the fragmenting and blurring of pornography and pornographic imagery into popular culture. Pornography and pornographic imagery are infiltrating popular music videos, outdoor advertising, fashion and art to name but a few. While pornographication is sometimes viewed as simply the increasing acceptance of sexual themes in media, it is actually the promotion of a particular model of sex which is harmful to women. http://catwa.org.au/?q=pornography The values of pornography, and its practices, extended outwards from magazines and movies to become the dominating values of fashion and beauty advertising, and the advertising of many other products and services. Jeffreys, S. Beauty and Misogyny: Harmful cultural practices in the West. New York: Routledge. 2005, p. 67
WHY IS IT HAPPENING?
Hollywood makes approximately 400 films a year, while the porn industry now makes from 10,000 to 11,000. Seven hundred million porn videos or DVDs are rented each year. This is a mind-boggling figure. Pornography revenues, which can broadly be construed to include magazines, websites, cable, in-room hotel movies, and sex toys, total between 10 and 14 billion dollars annually. This figure as New York Times critic Frank Rich has noted, is not only bigger than movie revenues, it is bigger than professional football, basketball and baseball put together. With figures like these, Rich argues, pornography is no longer a sideshow but the main event. Linda Williams. Porn Studies. Durham: Duke University Press, 2004. 12
A multibillion-dollar industry that produces more than 13,000 films a year in the United States alone, the porn business is embedded in a complex value chain, linking not just film producers and distributors, but also bankers, software producers, credit card companies, internet providers, cable companies, and hotel chains. Gail Dines http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jan/04/pornographybig-business-influence-culture The line between pop culture and porn culture is blurring, as the sexual themes, language and production techniques that have made porn a multibillion dollar industry are increasingly, and intentionally, cropping up in mainstream music, movies, TV and video games. Kinnick, K. 2007. Pushing the Envelope: The role of the mass media in the mainstreaming of pornography. In A. Hall & M. Bishop (eds). Pop Porn: Pornography in American culture. Westport, CT: Praeger. 7-27.
HOW IS IT HAPPENING?
Teenagers have always been, and will always be interested in sex. It is a natural curiosity associated with growing up. I am sure all of us have tales of sneaking a peek at an adult movie or magazine, or taking more than a passing interest in a mainstream movie sex scene when we were growing up. However somewhere along the line highly sexualised images and concepts ceased being confined to brown paper bags, mail order videos, or adult theatres, and broke out into mainstream culture. http://understandingteenagers.com.au/blog/2010/09/the-pornification-ofgeneration-z/ Any time there's a new communication or entertainment technology that comes out, we want to be the very first, if possible, to make our content available. Quentin Boyer, a spokesman for adult entertainment company Pink Visual. http://www.technewsdaily.com/technology-pornography-online-sex-1422/
DON'T BUY!
If there are certain toys or dolls that you don't want your children to receive as presents, tell your friends. Many parents are starting to say no to Bratz dolls, no to makeup parties for young girls, and no to logo T-shirts such as 'I'm too sexy for my t-shirt'. Some parents are concerned that their children's dance class routines are emulating the sexualised moves of music video clips. Talk to the dance school if this is a problem.
JOIN GROUPS
that lobby and campaign on these issues - such as www.object.co.uk or The Scottish Coalition Against Sexual Exploitation https://www.facebook.com/pages/Scottish-Coalition-Against-SexualExploitation/175173580913?sk=info
ZERO TOLERANCE
www.womenssupportproject.co.uk