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The Feminist Porn Book: The Politics of Producing Pleasure Paperback – February 19, 2013
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This thrilling anthology celebrates the power of desire, bringing together personal essays, manifestos, and scholarly research, turning the spotlight on an industry where feminism is thriving.
The Feminist Porn Book weaves together writing by producers, actors, consumers, and scholars of feminist pornography, investigating not only how feminists understand pornography, but also how feminists “do” porn—that is, direct, act in, produce, and consume one of the world’s most lucrative and growing industries.
With original contributions by Susie Bright, Candida Royalle, Betty Dodson, Nina Hartley, Buck Angel, Lynn Comella, Jane Ward, Ariane Cruz, Kevin Heffernan, and more, The Feminist Porn Book updates the arguments of the porn wars of the 1980s, which sharply divided the women’s movement, and identifies pornography as a form of expression and labor in which women and racial and sexual minorities produce power and pleasure.
“I predict this volume is going to find its way onto the bedside tables of several generations of American women. . . . At the core of the book is the question: Can porn coexist with the principles of feminism? No matter how one ultimately adjudicates this question, The Feminist Porn Book leaves no doubt about the inherent value in the inquiry itself.” —Melissa Harris-Perry, author of Sister Citizen
- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherThe Feminist Press at CUNY
- Publication dateFebruary 19, 2013
- Dimensions6.06 x 0.71 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-10155861818X
- ISBN-13978-1558618183
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Editorial Reviews
Review
The voices that stand out most are those who’ve been traditionally either left out of mainstream porn or fetishized in a way that leaves them cold. After a historical overview from Betty Dodson, Susie Bright, and Candida Royalle, the book presents women who knowingly entered porn to make women like them more visible. From April Flores on plus-size porn to Tobi Hill-Meyer on trans women’s fight to be included at levels proportionate to trans men to Loree Erickson on disability in porn, each practically echo the other in conveying porn’s real-life impact.”The Hairpin
For Taormino and other feminists involved in making and studying pornography, sexually explicit media provide an opportunity to critically engage with the relationship between identity and agency. By subverting and diversifying the often-stereotypical portrayals of sexuality found in much mainstream media, feminist pornographers invite traditionally marginalized audiences to connect with sex as a medium of pleasure and power. These explicit portrayals, grounded in a cognizance of pornography as both an industry and a cultural form, empower viewers to take charge while getting off.”Manifesta Mag
"In terms both jarring and harrowing, women's bodies became the terrain on which the 2012 election was fought. That the choices, experiences, and consequences of women's sexual lives became fodder for such poorly informed national "conversations" is evidence of the pressing need for thoughtful, sex-positive scholarship which centers on women's sexual agency. The Feminist Porn Book is just such a contribution, and I predict this volume is going to find its way onto the bedside tables of several generations of American women. This volume brings together academics, activists, and porn entrepreneurs who have a startling array of interactions with pornography as an experience, a business, and a field of inquiry. This text is straightforward and informative in ways that are unfortunately rare in the multi-decade feminist struggle over porn. It's also fun and sometimes a bit naughty to read. The authors do not assume that the porn industry as it exists is the one essential and only possible incarnation of porn. Instead, they assume that when feminists engage, intervene in, produce, and study pornography, they can radically alter its formations and meanings. At the core of the book is the question: Can porn coexist with the principles of feminism? No matter how one ultimately adjudicates this question, The Feminist Porn Book leaves no doubt about the inherent value in the inquiry itself.” Melissa Harris-Perry, author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America
"Finally the time is right for feminist porn! This stunning collection by academics and artists in dialogue accounts for the massive changes in technology, erotics, modes of spectatorship, and embodied identities which impact the world of pornography. As this volume demonstrates, we are now far from the sex wars of the 1980s, the sex panics of the 1990s, and well into a new era of erotic representation. In order to make sense of new and emergent worlds of desiring bodies, trans-femininities and trans-masculinities, transgressive racial performance, and the erotics of disabled bodies, read The Feminist Porn Book, and when you are finished, go out and make some porn!"Jack Halberstam, author of Gaga Feminism: Sex, Gender and the End of Normal
The Feminist Porn Book is a knockout! If this doesn’t sway antiporn feminists to the pro-porn feminist side, I’ll eat my bra. Let’s come together right now!” Annie Sprinkle, feminist pornographer and eco-sex activist
This thrilling anthology brings together scholars, producers, and fans of feminist pornography to define an emerging movement of gender and sexual visionaries, working at the radically inclusive and egalitarian edges of sexual representation. The authors explore an ever-widening range of body types, and a proliferating variety of images, sensations, and feelings. They examine the conditions of production as well as the politics of representation. They show us the new feminist porn as deep playchallenging, exciting, and important.” Lisa Duggan, author of Sapphic Slashers: Sex, Violence and American Modernity
"Finally: academics are actually talking to sex industry workers, pornographers are doubling as theorists, and feminists have grabbed the cameras. The Feminist Porn Book sets the agenda for new ways of thinking about the sticky social relations of dirty pictures." Laura Kipnis, author of Bound and Gagged: Pornography and the Politics of Fantasy in America
"This is the book that feminist scholars, teachers, students, and activists have been waiting for! Eloquent, smart, passionate, and engagingeach page of the The Feminist Porn Book offers a timely reminder of the continued importance of feminist interventions into the politics and production of pornography." Carol Stabile, director of the Center for the Study of Women in Society at the University of Oregon
In this breakthrough collection, scholars, artists, and producers from across a spectrum of identities serve up profound new insights on making, consuming, and studying porn. This book advances my understanding of how porn works, when it doesn’t, and why it matters. The short essay format makes this book ideal for teaching, but it’s essential reading for anyone insterested in sexual politics or contemporary culture.” Richard Fung, video artist and professor, Ontario College of Art and Design
The Feminist Porn Book is a readable and smart must-have for any classroom dealing with sexual representations.” Chuck Kleinhans, co-editor of JUMP CUT: a review of contemporary media
To have writings from so many of the most important creators in feminist porn in one anthology is wonderful. It captures the past, present, and future pioneering of this important film genre.” Shine Louise Houston, director and CEO of Pink and White Productions
This impressive volume of essays shows that thirty years after the feminist sex wars first erupted, porn is still a hot topic for the women’s movement, and for the scholarly study of gender and sexuality. The Feminist Porn Book brings together a potent mix of perspectives from academics, activists, and sex industry workers, while addressing dis/ability, transness, and race/ethnicity.” Susan Stryker, director of the Institute for LGBT Studies, University of Arizona
About the Author
Filmmaker and film scholar Celine Parreñas Shimizu is professor of Asian American Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her books are Straitjacket Sexualities and The Hypersexuality of Race, winner of the 2009 Cultural Studies Book Award from the Association for Asian American Studies.
Constance Penley is professor of film and media studies and co-director of the Carsey-Wolf Center, University of California, Santa Barbara. A founding editor of Camera Obscura, her work includes The Future of an Illusion: Film, Feminism, and Psychoanalysis, NASA/TREK: Popular Science and Sex in America, Teaching Pornography (forthcoming), and influential collections Feminism and Film Theory, Male Trouble, and Technoculture.
Mireille Miller-Young is associate professor of feminist studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She researches and teaches about race, gender, and sexuality in popular culture and the sex industries. Her book, A Taste for Brown Sugar: Black Women, Sex Work, and Pornography (Duke University Press) examines African American women’s sex work in the porn industry.
Product details
- Publisher : The Feminist Press at CUNY (February 19, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 155861818X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1558618183
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.06 x 0.71 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #702,736 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #116 in Study of Pornography
- #1,162 in Psychology & Counseling Books on Sexuality
- #1,590 in Movie History & Criticism
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Tristan Taormino is an award-winning author, sex educator, speaker, filmmaker, and radio host. She is the author of seven books, including The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women, Opening Up: A Guide to Creating and Sustaining Open Relationships, The Secrets of Great G-Spot Orgasms and Female Ejaculation, The Big Book of Sex Toys, and True List: Adventures in Sex, Porn and Perversion. She is the editor of more than 25 anthologies including The Ultimate Guide to Kink: BDSM, Role Play and the Erotic Edge and Take Me There: Trans and Genderqueer Erotica, winner of a 2012 Lambda Literary Award. She was creator and series editor of the Best Lesbian Erotica anthology series. Her books have sold over 500,000 copies and been translated into many languages. She’s written for a multitude of publications from Yale Journal of Law and Feminism to Penthouse, and served as editor of the magazine On Our Backs. She was a syndicated columnist for The Village Voice for nine and a half years and writes an advice column for Taboo Magazine.
She is the producer and host of Sex Out Loud, a weekly radio show on the VoiceAmerica Network. As the head of Smart Ass Productions, she has directed and produced twenty-four sex education and erotic films; she is currently an exclusive director for Vivid Entertainment. Her films have won more than a dozen awards. Tristan and her work have been featured in over 400 publications including O: The Oprah Magazine, The New York Times, Redbook, Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Entertainment Weekly, Details, New York Magazine, Men’s Health, and Playboy. She has appeared on HBO’s Real Sex, The Howard Stern Show, Melissa Harris-Perry, Loveline, MTV, CNN, NBC, MTV, Oxygen, Fox News, The Discovery Channel, and on over a hundred radio shows; she was the resident sex expert and a recurring guest on two seasons of Ricki Lake.
Tristan’s work, writing and films are routinely used in college courses to explore the complex issues of relationship and sexual diversity, politics and media. As a speaker, she is widely regarded as an expert on a diverse range of topics from sexual empowerment and LGBTQ sexuality to non-monogamy and feminist pornography. She lectures at top colleges and universities including Yale, Cornell, Princeton, Brown, Harvard, Columbia, Smith, Johns Hopkins, and UCLA, where she speaks on gay and lesbian issues, sexuality and gender, and feminism. She teaches sex and relationship workshops around the world.

Mireille Miller-Young, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Feminist Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara. She researches and teaches about race, gender, and sexuality in US history, popular culture, and the sex industries. Her manuscript, A Taste for Brown Sugar: Black Women in Pornography (Duke University Press, 2014) examines African American women’s labor in pornography. A former UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow, she is a founder of the New Sexualities Research Focus Group at UC Santa Barbara and the co-convener of the Black Sexual Economies Project at Washington University School of Law. Dr. Miller-Young has published in numerous academic journals and books including Blackness and Sexuality, Pornification: Sex and Sexuality in Media Culture, C’Lick Me: A Netporn Studies Reader, Meridians, Sexualities, Colorlines Magazine, Ms. Magazine, Re-Public.com, The New York Times, and $pread, a sex worker magazine. With Constance Penley, Celine Parreñas Shimizu, and Tristan Taormino, she is an editor of The Feminist Porn Book: The Politics of Producing Pleasure (The Feminist Press, 2013).

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Pro-porn feminists like Taormino try to brand their pornography as “organic, fair-trade porn.” When I read her book, The Feminist Porn Book, I had hoped to find a clear articulation of a feminist porn perspective, informed by the systematic collection of data in some scholarly form. Unfortunately that is not want I found. I read one chapter after another written by someone tied to the porn industry writing about how the kind of porn they create or support is a great thing. While I certainly value first-person narratives, when it comes from the perspective of people whose livelihood is based on making films that scholars who study pornography systematically have found to be just as violent toward women as mainstream pornography, it is difficult to take the arguments in this book seriously. The book contains a group of essays is printed that support the oft-cited narrative propagated by the pornography industry that acting in pornography is a way to empower women. As one of my colleagues argues, it is difficult to figure out how having several men ejaculate on a woman’s face is empowering. The editors of the book include professors and pornographers who seek to show how the goals of feminism and the actions in pornography are consistent. They define feminist porn as a genre that “uses sexually explicit imagery to contest and complicated dominant representations of gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, class, ability, age, body type, and other identity markers.” (page 9). While reading through the book, I was struck by the disconnect between authors who claim that people who identify as anti-porn feminists have become hostile to scholarly work, juxtaposed against the lack of empirical research cited to support their points of view. Authors like Clarissa Smith and Fiona Attwood blame anti-porn feminists for being hostile to research, while citing nothing empirical to support their claims. In fact, most of what they cite are points of view they disagree with in various outlets. I hope that somewhere I can find a compelling explanation of what feminist porn might have to offer, so that I can better understand where people who advocate that perspective are coming from. Sadly, this book does not fit the bill.
There's an incredible throughline through most of the essays that gives credit to trailblazers like Annie Sprinkle, Betty Dodson, Candida Royalle and Nina Hartley (2 of which are contributors, and Sprinkle very much "active"... all three individuals and many, many others blowing away the notion of being "too old" to be in the sex and pleasure industry.)
And this special "niche" community still defies description. If you're like me, your faves are here, either contributing or being acknowledged: Tristan Taormino, Susie Bright, Patrick Califia, Xavier Hollander, Shine Louise Houston.
What I can only describe as the "new wave" of porn are contributors: Buck Angel, Jiz Lee, April Flores, to name a few.
This book is a mind-blowing compilation. I lack the writing ability to describe how exciting a book like this is for many of us who love the stores (Good Vibrations, Pleasure Chest,) the books (Cleis Press, anything Susie Bright), and the performers who, by simply insisting on being themselves, create porn and pleasure for those of us outside the mainstream.
This book is compilation of many essays written by different authors of different kind of experience of porn. Some of them are porn stars, some of them are educators, editors, writers. Many information, many names. Many points of view from different angle. I really discovered a lot of thing I did not know about porn.
Top reviews from other countries
Book is collection of essays from directors, producers, performers in the feminist porn industry. There were writings from the queer porn stars, accounts from people whose body is male and feel like female and vice versa, were very enlightening. There are men with female bottom and there are females with male bottom.
Essays from professors or academicians were a bit dry but still informative and worth reading.
Porn by disabled people. And porn by people in the mainstream.
Stories are worth reading both by the sexual and gender minorities and majorities.
For minorities - reading would be very liberating. And for majorities - reading would compell them to understand naturally existing sexual and gender queerness.
And why societies should give space and respect and love to queer people.
Empfehle ich allen, die sich mit dem Thema Pornographie auseinander setzen und auch gerade den Frauen, die unreflektierte Vorurteile gegen das Genre hegen und dabei meinen feministisch zu sein, denn dieses Buch, das ist feministisch und zwar ein Ja-Sagen zur weiblichen sexuellen (Schau)lust
La pornographie féministe ne nie pas qu'il y a des profonds problèmes dans cet environnement, mais elle vise à améliorer les conditions de travail des porno stars (des tests plus fréquents pour assurer la santé de tout le monde, du respect des limites des performeurs, un salaire plus équitable pour les performeurs de couleur, etc), finir le stigma des sex workers et montrer au monde des films érotiques qui montrent du vrai sexe (qui va qui va plus loin du cercle heteronormatif), où tous les partners jouissent vraiment.
Une excellente lecture!









