The Sex Wars
- Why did/ does this issue provoke such intense disagreement among feminists?
- Why might feminists have ended up allying with the right on the question of pornography?
- Can pornography be feminist?
- Can the ‘sex wars’ be blamed for the demise of the WLM as a political force?
Core Reading
S. Ardill & S. O’Sullivan, ‘Upsetting an Apple Cart: Desire, Difference, and Lesbian Sadomasochism’, Feminist Review 23 (July 1986), 31-57
Jeska Rees. ‘A Look Back in Anger: The Women’s Liberation Movement in 1978’, Women’s History Review 19:3 (2010), 337-356
Further Reading
In the thick of the debate
Anti-Porn position:
A. Dworkin, Pornography: Men Possessing Women (1981)
Julia Long, Anti-Porn: The Resurgence of Anti-Pornography Feminism
C. Mackinnon, Towards a Feminist Theory of the State (1989)
Anti-Censorship position:
Feminists Against Censorship, Pornography and Feminism: The Case Against Censorship (1991)
* Lynn Segal, Is the Future Female: Troubled Thoughts on Contemporary Feminism (1987) [chapter 3. a useful overview of the sex wars from a partial perspective] digitised
L. Segal & M. McIntosh, Sex Exposed: Sexuality and the Pornography Debate (1992)
W. Brown, ‘The Mirror of Pornography’ in States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity (1995) [for a reply to Mackinnon]
The Rebel Dykes History Project [have a look at the whole website for very interesting lesbian current in 1980s]
Valerie Mason-John and Adowa Okorrowa, 'A minefield in the garden : Black lesbian sexuality', in Valerie Mason-John (ed.) Talking black : lesbians of African and Asian descent speak out (1995)
More ‘distanced’ from the debate / historical reflections on the debate
Cornell (ed.), Feminism and Pornography (2000)
Jeska Rees, ‘“Taking Your Politics Seriously”: Lesbian History and the Women’s Liberation Movement in England’, in S. Tiernan & M. McAuliffe (eds.) Sapphists and Sexologists (2009)