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At Home with Pornography: Women, Sexuality, and Everyday Life
 
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At Home with Pornography: Women, Sexuality, and Everyday Life [Paperback]

Jane Juffer (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0814742378 978-0814742372 July 1, 1998 1

Twenty-five years after the start of the feminist sex wars, pornography remains a flashpoint issue, with feminists locked in a familiar argument: Are women victims or agents? In At Home with Pornography, Jane Juffer exposes the fruitlessness of this debate and suggests that it has prevented us from realizing women's changing relationship to erotica and porn.

Over the course of these same twenty-five years, there has been a proliferation of sexually explicit materials geared toward women, made available in increasingly mainstream venues. In asking "what is the relationship of women to pornography?" Juffer maintains that we need to stop obsessing over pornography's transgressive aspects, and start focusing on the place of porn and erotica in women's everyday lives. Where, she asks, do women routinely find it, for how much, and how is it circulated and consumed within the home? How is this circulation and consumption shaped by the different marketing categories that attempt to distinguish erotica from porn, such as women's literary erotica and sexual self-help videos for couples?

At Home with Pornography responds to these questions by viewing women's erotica within the context of governmental regulation that attempts to counterpose a "dangerous" pornography with the sanctity of the home. Juffer explorers how women's consumption of erotica and porn for their own pleasure can be empowering, while still acting to reinforce conservative ideals. She shows how, for instance, the Victoria's Secret catalog is able to function as a kind of pornography whose circulation is facilitated both by its reliance on Victorian themes of secrecy and privacy and on its appeals to the selfish pleasures of modern career women. In her pursuit to understand what women like and how they get it, Juffer delves into adult cable channels, erotic literary anthologies, sex therapy guides, cyberporn, masturbation, and sex toys, showing the varying degrees to which these materials have been domesticated for home consumption.

Representing the next generation of scholarship on pornography, At Home with Pornography will transform our understanding of women's everyday sexuality.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Juffer discusses how in recent years women have been more active in producing erotica for their own enjoyment and shows how this has affected the nature of erotica itself. She chronicles the rise of literary porn written by women for women, showing how books like Nancy Friday's collections of female fantasies helped pave the way . . . Juffer . . . is a sharp observer of the media."

-Los Angeles Times Book Review,

"Illuminates the complex politics of sex in women's everyday lives. At Home with Pornography is an important contribution to a new model of cultural studies and an exciting and valuable addition to contemporary struggles over sexual politics."

-Lawrence Grossberg,

About the Author

Jane Juffer is an associate professor of English and women's studies at Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of At Home with Pornography: Women, Sex, and Everyday Life (also available from NYU Press).


Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: NYU Press; 1 edition (July 1, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0814742378
  • ISBN-13: 978-0814742372
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.3 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,497,583 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This work is good but misses the mark, April 29, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: At Home with Pornography: Women, Sexuality, and Everyday Life (Paperback)
I found this book to be filled with facts about porn and women over the past three or so decades, however, it left me rather cold as to it's approach to the reader. I did not feel involved with the contents. It read more like a dictionary or encyclopedia than an expose or display on sex and porn and women. I found the amount of research to be adequate and all, but I just did not feel a part of what the author was trying to accomplish. I felt rather distant and cold to an issue which has been hotly debated since the begining of time. The book is interesting and well written, but not passionate by any standard. It certainly does not use flair, or even wry comedy to bring home it's points. It chooses to acomplish it's goals by just giving you the facts and nothing but the facts, madam. I may be looking at this issue from a male standpoint but after reading Woman, an intimate geography(which was fantastic), this left me a little cold.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It looks at facts and not theories to develop is discourse, April 30, 2007
By 
This review is from: At Home with Pornography: Women, Sexuality, and Everyday Life (Paperback)
At the introduction the author gets into a lingo of cross references with other writers which invites to an early closing of the book, but when the author goes to explain how women and market forces have colluded to turn products which deal with sexual descriptions and sexual practices from being labeled pornography and now called erotic, the reading takes flight and gives hope that fascist such as Andrea Dworkin and the likes of the Messe Commission will not be able to revert women to a home cage as the only place were there their sexual desires are acceptable.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A welcome new perspective, March 18, 2000
By 
This review is from: At Home with Pornography: Women, Sexuality, and Everyday Life (Paperback)
Heh. It appears to me that both the previous reviewers missed the point of this interesting book. Let not the prospective reader be misled by them.

The thesis of Juffer's book is that anti-porn and anti-censorship feminists alike have conducted their respective attacks on and defense of pornography at an abstracted level which does not address the ways in which production and marketing of erotic materials in the past have discouraged, limited, and in some ways guided, women's interest in pornography.

She suggests the advent of videocassettes, and the seeping of the erotic (and even pornographic techniques) into other areas of domestic consumption, have altered this in recent years.

Skip over the brief but dense intellectual lingo in the introduction (folks named Ernesto Laclau, Chantel Mouffe and the inevitable Foucault rear their heads), and move on to Juffer's thoughtful and (yes, gail@ttlc.net) witty discussion of the Victoria's Secret phenomenon, Black Lace, and the man from Mars, John Gray.

What I found perhaps most interesting is Juffer's observation that Black Lace, a successful series of British erotic novels written by and for women, pay no more attention to safer sex practices than traditional male-oriented porn. She also quotes a "Redbook" magazine reviewer who expresses disgust over a Candida Royalle Femme Productions video in which a condom is incorporated into the lovemaking.

Perhaps the sexes are not so unalike in their notion of what constitutes fantasy?

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