From Publishers Weekly
Thompson argues that there is nothing innate in pornography that encourages violence against women. By exposing "the bogus link between pornography and sex crimes," he hopes to turn public attention to the real causes of sex crimes. Thompson covers the history of censorship in Britain and some recent American juggernauts, such as the Meese Commission and the Dworkin-MacKinnon anti-porn ordinances (a telling bias of which is his definition of gay men as "substitute women"), though U.S. readers can fill in some missing historical context with works by Lynn Hunt and Robert Stoller, among others. Thompson's scrutiny of "pornography effects studies" uncovers some surprises: the manipulation of subjects and their attitudes that passes for scientific research, the assumption that women's reactions differ from men's, and the evidence that even highly explicit soft-core material fails to increase aggression and, more often, reduces it. A serious lapse-considering the timeliness of the censorship vs. free choice debate-is in the outdated bibliography and absence of footnotes.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
Thompson advances many scathing arguments against the moral crusaders who find a causal link between pornography consumption and sexual violence. Although some readers may be turned off by his sarcastic tone, everything is clearly presented and backed with thorough understanding of the legal issues involved. Tracing the antipornography movements in England to a pre-Victorian attack on "vice," he shows how their expressed purpose of protecting women has often been a cover for a political--and religious--agenda to suppress them. In chapters focusing on the U.S., he pokes holes in both the right-wing Meese Commission Report on Pornography and Andrea Dworkin and Catherine MacKinnon's neo-Marxist municipal ordinances aimed at what they consider to be "sexually explicit material." Thompson also provides support for organizations, such as Women Against Rape, that diligently work to fight sex crimes without wasting their energies on becoming censors, and he shows the similarities and differences between civil liberties cases in a country with a written constitution and cases from across the ocean.
Aaron Cohen
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