T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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45.1 | details | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Mon Jul 14 1986 23:13 | 22 |
| I'll leave the early opinions at least to the women, but two
small bits of fact. First, Guccione is the publisher of
Penthouse etc. Hustler is published by Larry some-one-or-other
(Flint?). I've no idea which one took out the adds you're
referring to.
Second, there seems to be scientific evidence that depictions of
violence can change people's attitudes and either incite
aggression in children or perhaps get them "keyed up" and
excited which would cause the incidence of aggression to go up
along with other activities. There is not yet any evidence that
violence or violence and sex contribute to the incidence of
violence or sexual violence.
The only study that the pornography commision used to support
their contention that sexual pornography contributes to sexual
violence didn't support that opinion according to the preson who
conducted it. Rather, it showed that violence or sexual
explictness combined with violence changes attitudes towards
sexual violence, but mere sexual explicitness does not.
JimB.
|
45.2 | just HAD to jump in, sorry | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Tue Jul 15 1986 10:32 | 66 |
| at the risk of making this seem to be a men's topic, I'll also add
a few words.
Bob Guccione is the publisher of Penthouse and all of it's spinoffs
as well as a new magazine called NEW LOOK which seems to be a kind-of
European LIFE magazine. (european in that it has photo spreads of
nudes, but is not a "men's magazine")
Guccione is behind an anti-censorship campaign ( I don't know about
the full page newspaper ads) but the ads I've seen are like this.
red paper, gold hammer&sicle emblem, line "censorship can make the
world a better place" (or some such) the text underneath goes on
to extol the advantages of censorship, clearly in a satirical light.
(is this what you saw in the paper?)
I've heard it said that pornography is one of the prices we pay
for the right to speak freely. Just as the search and siezure laws
will allow some known criminals to go free is the price we pay for
the privacy of the innocent. Ever hear of "I don't agree with what
you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."?
I don't like "pornography" (in the extreme sense), but giving the
government the right to ban one form of literature (even if you
do consider it filthy offensive trash) is like the story of the
arab and his camel (okay you're going to get the story whether you
like it or not)
An arab made camp for the night and tied his camel outside.
The night became cold and the camel began to suffer. The Arab
took mercy on the camel and allowed the camel to put his nose
under the wall of the tent. The camel was still cold, so the
arab allowed the camel to put his head in. so on and so on until
the camel was entirely in the tent and the arab was forced out
into the cold.
Once you allow one form of literature to be banned, all other forms
become vulnerable. (remember SEXCETERA?)
The real problem,as stated before, is not the pornography, but the
NEED for pornography in some men. And it is not at all even remotely
suggested that violent pornography will entice someone to perform
a rape. Rape is a crime of violence, not sex. I don't think that
becoming sexually excited by portrayals of rape will induce someone
to actually rape another. (I have no proof, I don't hold this statement
as TRUTH).
Should we also ban all the Jason movies and the Texas Chain-Saw
Massacre? How about Das Kapital, Mein Kampf, and others that undermine
the very principals on which this country was founded.
WHERE DO YOU DRAW "THE LINE"?
I am sorry I've rambled on longer than I intended, but my freedoms
are very dear to me, and if, in order to keep those freedoms, I
must allow someone to exploit those freedoms, then so be it.
I find violence and exploitation just as offensive as every other
"right thinking"( ;-) ) American, but I believe that it IS the price
we pay for our own freedoms.
(and please don't mis interpret me, I am NOT saying that rape and
violence is that price, just the right to publish offensive material
is the price. When it can be proven that they are one and the same,
then I will have to think about it some.)
for what it's worth,
sm(all town news)
(--@^@--)
'
# = #
###
|
45.3 | more questions | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Jul 15 1986 11:52 | 7 |
| i don't thing pornography is a swell thing. however, it is a puzzling
issue for me. where is the fine line between erotic and pornographic?
at what point does the pornography become morally unacceptable --
hal didn't even mention kiddie porn. is it all right that the library
of congress has recently refused to provide playboys in braille
(sans centerfold)? is it ok that tom sawyer and huck finn are banned
in some places?
|
45.4 | offensive, or just plain *bad*? | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Tue Jul 15 1986 12:37 | 44 |
| Basically, I suspect that it comes down to "erotic" is what
you like, and "pornography" is what you *don't* like. According
to the dictionary (hell, it's convenient!)
erotic:
1. Of, concerning, or tending to arouse sexual desire.
2. Dominated by sexual desire.
pornography:
Written or pictorial matter intended to arouse sexual
feelings (from the Greek pornographos, "writing about
prostitutes")
In other words, the dictionary doesn't make much distinction,
except that pornography is limited to written or pictorial
forms of eroticism.
I really don't see how pictures of naked women (or men) are
any more degrading than classical nude statues or paintings.
At least, when we're talking about the generally well
photographed Playboy type pictures... I never saw much artistic
merit in the typical Penthouse type of "crotch-shot".
As for X rated movies... I've seen two or three, and I can't
say I considered them sexually offensive. They were, however,
extremely offensive artistically. Nudes I don't mind, or
even nudes having sex. But when I watch a movie I like to
have some script, photography, maybe even a little acting.
I suppose the lack is inevitable when treating the people
as objects. *That's* what's degrading, not what those objects
happen to be doing on screen.
The same goes for violent movies, actually. Although I don't
really like blood-and-gore movies, I don't object when it's
relevant to the story, when there's a purpose, when *people*
are involved. It's this "humanoid object tears apart other
humanoid objects and gee isn't this fun" attitude which is
offensive and degrading, not the violence in and of itself.
Of course, there should be fewer flames on this set of opinions
than on anything else I've said here, because nearly everyone
is just PF3'ing over my notes now, right?! :-) :-) :-(
/dave
|
45.5 | Not a chance, David <heh> | MOSAIC::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Jul 15 1986 13:45 | 19 |
| I think the distinction that makes the most sense t'me is:
Erotica: portrayal of consensual activities
Pornography: portrayal of exploitation.
I know, I know, it's very hard to tell the difference sometimes, and it
leaves certain minorities (e.g., S/M practitioners, who enjoy
fantasised/play exploitation) unfairly on the proscribed side of the
fence. I'm not too sure what to do about that...but I'm real clear that
coercing children into sexual activities, or portraying people
(particularly women) as deserving of violence or degradation is
Not Good.
(Lemme struggle into my riot gear before you start flinging brickbats,
okay guys?)
=maggie
|
45.6 | no problem | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Tue Jul 15 1986 19:17 | 24 |
| OK, Maggie... although those obviously aren't the "real"
definitions, I think that's a reasonable statement of what
most people think of when they hear the words, and I'm willing
to accept them for the purposes of this discussion topic.
Your definition, incidentally, makes the vast majority of
X rated movies safely "erotica" rather than "pornography"
(well, at least all of the few *I've* seen, and most that
I've heard of)... and makes a number of R and even PG movies
safely "pornography", including many which don't depict any
explicit sex. Most all, however, include explicit violence.
Sounds good to me.
Oh yeah, one possible point of dispute: "portraying people
(particularly women) as deserving of violence and degradation is
Not Good"... If you mean that it's somehow better to portray
non-women as deserving of violence, I'd have to make severe
flames against your parenthesized comment. If, on the other
hand, you merely meant that people seem to portray women thusly
more often than non-women, then I've got no comment, since
it's true.
/dave
|
45.7 | Illegal forms of pornography | ULTRA::GUGEL | Ellen G | Tue Jul 15 1986 20:05 | 14 |
| Going after Playboy and other such magazines isn't where the effort
should be. The following types of pornography are already *illegal*
and the perpetrators should be gone after and prosecuted: kiddie porn
(abducting a minor), snuff movies (murder), and pimps who abduct
women and force them into (basically) slavery (remember Linda
Lovelace?).
So whenever I hear about censorship of "pornography", I have to
wonder *why* the most severe, dangerous, and illegal forms of
pornography (obviously not the mainstream stuff in 7-11's) are not
already being vigorously prosectued by law officials.
By the way, where do all those children you see on milk cartons
go?
|
45.9 | At the movies | DINER::SHUBIN | when's lunch? | Wed Jul 16 1986 11:04 | 18 |
| re: movies -- I don't know if I'd agree that X-rated movies are "erotica".
I'd modify Maggie's definitions beyond consensual vs. exploitative to
include the intended audience: even if something shown in an X-rated movie
appears to be an activity between 2 consenting people, it's likely to be
exploitative in intent, and aimed at an audience that expects that.
There's a lot of nudity in mainstream movies. That's ok, because there's a
lot of nudity in life, too. Sometimes it's reasonable to expect nudity in
a particular scene, but much of it is just gratuitous. Even that would be
okay, except that it's mostly gratuitous female nudity. (Name the last 2
times you saw a man nude, shown from the front, in a movie, especially an
American movie!) After awhile one gets to expect to see clothed men and
naked women. I guess I'd include this in a broad definition of
porn, in that it lowers women to the status of objects to be shown off,
instead of characters in a story (and at another level, instead of people
playing characters).
-- hs
|
45.10 | exit | SSVAX::LUST | | Wed Jul 16 1986 11:24 | 17 |
| Re: .9:
Could the fact that there is more female nudity than male nudity
be because women are less 'body conscious' than men?
In my (admittedly limited) experience, men tend to be much 'shyer'
than women in such matters. No I am *NOT* trying to make a statement
that women are 'looser'. But I do believe women have fewer inhibitions
about nudity. I think that men tend to have a closer identification
of nudity and sex i.e. men are more likely to be 'turned on' by
nudity.
I think that, in general, men are more attunned to outward symbols
than women, which could help explain why the vast majority of
pornography is aimed at males instead of women.
Dirk
|
45.11 | women are prettier | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Wed Jul 16 1986 11:41 | 18 |
| re .10:
I think that there is more female nudity than male is that women's
bodies are nicer to look at than men. (yes i know that's sexist)
Men like to look at women's bodies. I've seen conflicting statements
about whether or not women like to look at nude males. The movie
industry is male dominated. Until that changes, we will continue
to see more nude females than nude men.
a side point to /dave's statement about violence. The Meese commision's
"star witness", the psychologist whose work was used as the evidence
against pornography, clearly states that it is the *violence* that
lowers ones attitudes toward women. That is show the same movie
without the sex, you get the same effect, show the sex without the
violence, and you get *no* effect. From the news I've read about
the report, this statement was ommitted from the report.
sm
|
45.12 | { | STUBBI::REINKE | | Wed Jul 16 1986 12:45 | 21 |
| re .10
After living with one husband and three sons (and also 2 daughters)
for a number of years I would have thought that men were less body
conscious than women. All of my boys will wander about in their
skivies and my daughters would never think of it. My husband used
to wander about in a good deal less than that until the kids came
along but I am extremely uncomfortable walking around with nothing on.
I had always assumed that men were more comfortable undressed than
women. Perhaps because they take group showers after gym, go skinny
dipping as young boys (at least some used to), and manage to go to the
bathroom publically.
Since you have three daughters, Dirk, perhaps your experiences with this
have been different.
I have long felt that nature made women's bodies prettier than men's
- at least the parts we normally keep private (I'm not talking about
a man's well muscled chest here). Perhaps it was do to natural
selection. After all - over the history of the human races - more
men have done the chosing than women.
|
45.13 | | CECILE::SCHNEIDER | Audrey | Wed Jul 16 1986 13:05 | 16 |
| RE: Relative modesty of people
From my experience it has seemed that whether you run around naked
or not is more related to the family / community in which you were
raised.
I love nothing more than the time and place (appropriate) to skinny
dip and have been caught more than once sitting around naked on
a hot day reading at home (ever see a flash of white go behind a
chair as you approached someone's door? (-: )!
Don, on the other hand, while occaisionally skinny dipping is not
at all comfortable without at least gym shorts on....
It takes all kinds,
Audrey
|
45.14 | nudity in movies | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Wed Jul 16 1986 13:49 | 19 |
| It's interesting that showing even a *drawing* of a penis
(e.g., Fritz the Cat or Zardoz) is a instant and automatic
R rating on a movie. A real one is an X. Period. The only
alternative is to remain "unrated", which means most theatres
won't show the film.
On the other hand, R movies can show full female nudity,
and even PG can show only slightly restricted female nudity.
I believe a PG rating can include full rear nudity for both
sexes.
When a PG movie can show people getting graphically blown
up and torn apart, this rating system seems---to say the
least---a bit skewed.
Of course, I've always wondered why people object to women
walking around topless, too...
/dave
|
45.15 | beautiful bodies | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | a vote for choice | Wed Jul 16 1986 14:01 | 35 |
|
The fact that more women are shown nude than men in "X" films
is pure sexism against women. I have noticed that even when
the men are completely nude, the camera tends to avoid shots
of the male genitalia. Shyness has nothing to do with it
since they can always find "actors" that are not shy.
I also feel that society has dictated that women are the better
looking half (notice the large amt. of advertisement for female
beauty products).
All human bodies are beautiful (as long as they are reasonably fit).
I've seen some pretty good looking legs on men. (Don't get
uncomfortable fella's I'm not looking! :-) ).
re: .10
> ...I think that men tend to have a closer identification
> of nudity and sex i.e. men are more likely to be 'turned on' by
> nudity.
>
> I think that, in general, men are more attunned to outward symbols
> than women, which could help explain why the vast majority of
> pornography is aimed at males instead of women.
You may have something in that statement. But I think it's
more of society expecting men to be more visual, and women
to be more "doing it for love".
I personally get uncomfortable watching X films, but maybe that's
because I start getting mad at the film because of its sexism.
I think women can get 'turned on' by nudity just as much as
men. We just try to deny it.
...Karen
P.S. Why is it "erotic" to see two women making love, but
you never see two men making love in X films?
|
45.16 | more on movies | OBLIO::SHUSTER | Red Sox Addition: 1986 = 1975 + 1 | Wed Jul 16 1986 14:22 | 22 |
| Unfortunately, Hollywood makes movies for the majority of movie-goers: young
heterosexual men (this determined by one of those surveys). And they like
to see naked women, so most nudity tends to be of women.
If you go outside of Hollywood to see others, such as the so called "art"
films, you often see different kinds of nudity, without the exploitation.
For example, a recent movie, Desert Hearts, had a very erotic scence between two
women, without much nudity, all filmed naturally (no soundtrack, no roving
cameras sweeping the bedroom). Another, a few years back, called The Fourth
Man, began with a man getting out of bed completely naked, and the camera stayed
with him for a while---all very natural, too.
So, in movies, and in theatre, the kind of nudity, I think, depends mostly on
the target audience, and to some degree on the director (you don't see very
many directors who are women, which is too bad; the director of Desert Hearts
was a woman, by the way). I don't think nudity in movies has much to do with
how men or women feel about being naked; feeling comfortable naked seems to
be more of a personal thing that differs widely within each sex, rather than
an attitude you can attribute to one sex or the other.
-Rob
|
45.17 | more nude women | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Wed Jul 16 1986 14:22 | 23 |
| Part of the reason you see more female nudity---and more
females (in whatever state of dress) on ads and such---is
that advertisers have proven (to themselves, anyway), that
both men and women would rather see women than men.
Supposedly, men don't like looking at other men, whereas men
like to look at women (for both esthetic and, I suppose, sexual
reasons), and women are supposed to like looking at pretty women
and imagining it to be themselves.
Since the same sort of distribution seems to occur in movies
(particularly with regard to nude or seminude scenes), I
suppose the movie people must be listening to the ad people.
The fact that movies can make themselves appear "racier"
by showing unclothed women (because they can show more under
lower movie ratings) may also be a factor.
The whole thing sounds pretty dumb to me, and I'd be happier
if the entire concept of "advertising" had never been invented.
As for movies: show anything necessary, but don't tack on
violence (or even sex) just for the hell of it.
/dave
|
45.18 | Naked men / Clothed women | HEADS::OSBORN | Sally's VAXNotes Vanity Plate | Wed Jul 16 1986 22:20 | 12 |
| re: .9
> (Name the last 2 times you saw a man nude, shown from the front,
> in a movie, especially an American movie!) After awhile one gets
> to expect to see clothed men and naked women.
Here's one! I just saw "Room with a View", a non-rated movie at
the Nickelodeon in Maynard. And there were THREE "men running
around naked" -- literally. The women retained all "Victorian
modesty" at all times.
Yes, I was surprised at the apparent switch -- delighted, too.
|
45.19 | I'm OK, You're an it. | SCOTCH::GLICK | Why Think About It? | Thu Jul 17 1986 10:30 | 18 |
| Seems that .16 hit the nail on the head and .18 is the exception that
proves the rule. "Room With a View" (if my circuits aren't completely
fried) is not a Hollywood movie, but came out of the U.K. Our movie
industry has a reputation (deserved?) for selling out. Adolescent
Heterosexual boys in our society (adolescents period) are not known for their
inclusive world view so movies that cater to that "I'm a human, you're an it"
mentality are not too surprising.
Pornography - That which treats people as objects (Movies, governments,
etc. . .)?
"A Room With a View" had a head start in that it came from a very good
book. The Male_body/Female_Body_in_sight mix was straight out of the book.
Anybody remember when the book was written? Could be fuel for the note on
whether things have gotten better or worse.
-Byron
|
45.20 | films continued... | MERIDN::GILLMAN | The only sure thing is DEC and taxes | Sat Jul 19 1986 12:04 | 18 |
|
Egads, dare I jump in and shyly suggest that if the "target audience"
for porno flicks are men, that the lack of "frontal" nudity may
be because it may "turn" off the man if he doesn't like the "end
results" :`) after being "forced" to compare his genital size to
another man's, with whom he is trying to emulate and/or identify
with???
BTW - regarding banning pornographic material I too am in full
agreement that many precedents about freedom of the press and freedom
of speech is in jeapordy if one begins to censor! It is pretty
scary to think that someone, or some group can dictate what is
acceptable or what is inflamitory ... Nazi Germany and book-burning
comes to mind. I also agree that kiddie porn is not of the same
category - it is a CRIME. Government tends to forget the real issues
and go for the "popular" vote! ...Thanks for letting me spew a bit...
-jlgillperson-
|
45.21 | two more cents | REX::MINOW | Martin Minow -- DECtalk Engineering | Sat Jul 19 1986 16:51 | 6 |
| One other reason one seldom sees male nudity on screen is that, because
of the way the plumbing is arranged, it is a lot easier for women to
fake arousal then it is for men.
Martin.
|
45.22 | ali skalli | GVASA::MOUGEOLLE | | Wed Mar 11 1987 12:33 | 0
|