Further to previous posts i've made on the issue of porn (such as the ones here and here):
The incidence of rape in the United States has declined 85% in the past
25 years while access to pornography has become freely available to
teenagers and adults. The Nixon and Reagan Commissions tried to show
that exposure to pornographic materials produced social violence. The
reverse may be true: that pornography has reduced social violence.
[ http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=913013 ]
[B]efore the fall of the Soviet Union, places like Croatia were not exactly hubs of the porn trade. However, since the fall of the evil empire, porn is now readily available in Croatia, as well as the technology to view it and to download it. So you've got a pretty neat lab setting to do a before-the-influx-of-porn and after-the-influx-of-porn study. And that's exactly what researchers like Milton Diamond have done. Here's what he reports:
"We've just finished a porn study in Croatia. As a post-Communist country, it shows, like all the other countries we've looked at so far, despite a major influx of available porn, there was NO increase in sex crimes."
[ http://www.goofyfootpress.com/weeklycolumn/the_latest_on_sex_the_internet.php ]
no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 04:56 (UTC)the girls (and they usually are 'girls' - barely 18 or 19 most of the time) look so scared. It's 'deer in the headlights' stuff, and I would postulate that as such it fills a particular niche market: those for whom 'the modern woman' as represented in mainstream US porn is too assertive and too self-possessed.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 05:10 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 05:30 (UTC)But, wild assumptions, so I'll shut up for now! ;)
no subject
Date: 2006-09-28 05:31 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-29 09:15 (UTC)Indeed . . . . but unfortunately, it can result in negative 'education' too. i knew a woman who was doing community work in the Solomon Islands; she had experiences with the local men who, having watched porn and come to the conclusion that "all women really want it", treated the local women badly. :-/
This once again highlights the importance of the context of imagery: these people were unfamiliar with the notion of fictional vs. "non-fictional" television and movies (for exmaple, some of them were under the impression that the events in Independence Day really happened), because they simply hadn't grown up in a society where television and movies, and the conventions surrounding them, were 'everyday'.