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Pornography
Portrayal of sexual subject matter for the exclusive purpose of sexual arousal

Pornography, commonly known as porn, is sexually suggestive material like images, videos, texts, or audio intended for sexual arousal. Its history spans from ancient cave paintings to modern virtual reality content. The industry grew significantly with the advent of home video and the World Wide Web, making porn widely accessible via the Internet and smartphones. While porn can serve as a safe outlet for sexual desires and a form of sex education, concerns remain about risks such as STIs and ethical issues like deepfake pornography. The industry plays a significant role in technology adoption and is estimated to be worth over US$172 billion as of 2023.

Etymology and definition

The word pornography is a conglomerate of two ancient Greek words: πόρνος (pórnos) "fornicators", and γράφειν (gráphein) "writing, recording, or description".5 In Greek language, the term pornography connotes depiction of sexual activity;6 no date is known for the first use of the term pornography, the earliest attested, most related word found is πορνογράφος (pornographos) i.e. "someone writing about harlots" in the 3rd century CE work Deipnosophists by Athenaeus.78

The oldest published reference to the word pornography as in 'new pornographie,' is dated back to 1638 and is credited to Nathaniel Butter in a history of the Fleet newspaper industry.9 The modern word pornography entered the English language as the more familiar word in 1842 via French "pornographie," from Greek "pornographos".10

The term porn is an abbreviation of pornography.11 The related term πόρνη (pórnē) "prostitute" in Greek, originally meant "bought, purchased" similar to pernanai "to sell", from the proto-Indo-European root per-, "to hand over" — alluding to act of selling.12

The word pornography was originally used by classical scholars as "a bookish, and therefore inoffensive term for writing about prostitutes",13 but its meaning was quickly expanded to include all forms of "objectionable or obscene material in art and literature".14 In 1864, Webster's Dictionary published "a licentious painting" as the meaning for pornography,15 and the Oxford English Dictionary: "obscene painting" (1842), "description of obscene matters, obscene publication" (1977 or earlier).16

Definitions for the term "pornography" are varied, with people from both pro- and anti-pornography groups defining it either favorably or unfavorably, thus making any definition very stipulative.171819 Nevertheless, academic researchers have defined pornography as sexual subject material such as a picture, video, text, or audio that is primarily intended to assist sexual arousal in the consumer, and is created and commercialized with "the consent of all persons involved".20 Arousal is considered the primary objective, the raison d'etre a material must fulfill for it to be treated as pornographic.21 As some people can feel aroused by an image that is not meant for sexual arousal and conversely cannot feel aroused by material that is clearly intended for arousal, the material that can be considered as pornography becomes subjective.22

Pornography throughout history

Pornography from ancient times

See also: History of human sexuality

Pornography is viewed by historians as a complex cultural formation.23 Depictions of a sexual nature existed since prehistoric times as seen in Venus figurines and rock art.24 People across various civilizations created works that depicted explicit sex; these include artifacts, music, poetry, and murals among other things that are often intertwined with religious and supernatural themes.25 The oldest artifacts, including the Venus of Hohle Fels, which is considered to be borderline pornographic, were discovered in 2008 CE at a cave near Stuttgart in Germany, radiocarbon dating suggests they are at least 35,000 years old, from the Aurignacian period.26

Vast number of artifacts discovered in ancient Mesopotamia region had explicit depictions of heterosexual sex.2728 Glyptic art from the Sumerian Early Dynastic Period frequently showed scenes of frontal sex in the missionary position.29 In Mesopotamian votive plaques from the early second millennium (c. 2000 – c. 1500 BCE), a man is usually shown penetrating a woman from behind while she bends over drinking beer through a straw.30 Middle Assyrian lead votive figurines often portrayed a man standing and penetrating a woman as she rests on an altar.31 Scholars have traditionally interpreted all these depictions as scenes of hieros gamos (an ancient sacred marriage between a god and a goddess), but they are more likely to be associated with Inanna, the Mesopotamian goddess of sex and sacred prostitution.32 Many sexually explicit images, including models of male and female sexual organs were found in the temple of Inanna at Assur.33

Depictions of sexual intercourse were not part of the general repertory of ancient Egyptian formal art, but rudimentary sketches of heterosexual intercourse have been found on pottery fragments and in graffiti.34 The final two thirds of the Turin Erotic Papyrus (Papyrus 55001), an Egyptian papyrus scroll discovered at Deir el-Medina,35 consists of a series of twelve vignettes showing men and women in various sexual positions. The scroll was probably painted in the Ramesside period (1292–1075 BCE) and its high artistic quality indicates that it was produced for a wealthy audience. No other similar scrolls have yet been discovered.36

Archaeologist Nikolaos Stampolidis had noted that the society of ancient Greece held lenient attitudes towards sexual representation in the fields of art and literature.37 The Greek poet Sappho's Ode to Aphrodite (600 BCE) is considered an earliest example of lesbian poetry.38 Red-figure pottery invented in Greece (530 BCE) often portrayed images that displayed eroticism.39 The fifth-century BC comic Aristophanes elaborated 106 ways of describing the male genitalia and in 91 ways the female genitalia.40 Lysistrata (411 BCE) is a sex-war comedy play performed in ancient Greece.41

In India, Hinduism embraced an inquisitive attitude towards sex as an art and a spiritual ideal.42 Some ancient Hindu temples incorporated various aspects of sexuality into their art work. The temples at Khajuraho and Konark are particularly renowned for their sculptures, which had detailed representations of human sexual activity.43 These depictions were viewed with a spiritual outlook as sexual arousal is believed to indicate the embodying of the divine.4445

"pornography is sometimes characterised as the symptom of a degenerate society, but anyone even noddingly familiar with Greek vases or statues on ancient Hindu temples will know that so-called unnatural sex acts, orgies and all manner of complex liaisons have for millennia past been represented in art for the pleasure and inspiration of the viewer everywhere. The desire to ponder images of love-making is clearly innate in the human – perhaps particularly the male – psyche." — Tom Hodgkinson46

Kama, the word used to connote sexual desire, was explored in Indian literary works such as the Kama Sutra, which dealt with the practical as well as the psychological aspects of human courtship and sexual intercourse.4748 The Sanskrit text Kama sutra was compiled by the sage Vatsyayana into its final form sometime during the second half of the third century CE.49 This text, which included prose, poetry, as well as illustrations regarding erotic love and sexual behavior,50 is one of the most celebrated Indian erotic works.51 Koka shastra is another medieval Indian work that explored kama.52

Pornography from the Roman era

When large-scale archaeological excavations were undertaken in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii during the 18th century, much of the erotic art in Pompeii and Herculaneum came to light, shocking the authorities who endeavored to hide them away from the general public. In 1821, the moveable objects were locked away in the Secret Museum in Naples, and what could not be removed was either covered or cordoned off from public view.53

Other examples of early art and literature of sexual nature include: Ars Amatoria (Art of Love), a second-century CE treatise on the art of seduction and sensuality by the Roman poet Ovid;54 the artifacts of the Moche people in Peru (100 CE to 800 CE);55 The Decameron, a collection of short stories, some of which are sexual in nature by the 14th-century Italian author Giovanni Boccaccio;56 and the fifteenth-century Arabic sex manual The Perfumed Garden.57

Pornography from early modern era

A highly developed culture of visual erotica flourished in Japan during the early modern era. From at least the 17th century, erotic artworks became part of the mainstream social culture.58 Depictions of sexual intercourse were often presented on pictures that were meant to provide sex education for medical professionals, courtesans, and married couples. Makura-e (pillow pictures) were made for entertainment as well as for the guidance of married couples.59 The ninth-century Japanese art form "Shunga", which depicted sexual acts on woodblock prints and paintings became so popular by the 18th century that the Japanese government began to issue official edicts against them. Even so, Japanese erotica flourished with the works of artists such as Suzuki Harunobu achieving worldwide fame.6061 Japanese censorship laws enacted in 1870 made the production of erotic works difficult. The laws remained in effect until the end of the Pacific War in 1945; nevertheless, pornography flourished through the sale of "erotic, grotesque, nonsense" (ero-guro-nansensu) periodicals, particularly in the Taishō era (1912–1926).62 From the 1960s, pink films, which portrayed sexual themes became popular in Japan. In 1981 the first Japanese Adult video (AV) was released.63 The Japanese pornography industry peaked in the early 2000s when about 30,000 AVs were made a year. From the mid-2010s, increased availability of free porn on the Internet led to a decline in the production of AVs.64 Other forms of adult entertainment such as hentai, which refers to pornographic manga and anime, and erotic video games have become popular in recent decades.65

In Europe, the Italian Renaissance work from the 16th century - I Modi (The Ways) also known as The Sixteen Pleasures became famous for its engravings that explicitly depicted sex positions.66 The publication of this book was considered the beginning of print pornography in Rome.67 The second edition of this book was published in 1527, titled Aretino Postures, which combined erotic images with text - a first in the Western culture.68 The Vatican called for the complete destruction of all the copies of the book and imprisonment of its author Marcantonio Raimondi.69 With the development of printing press in Europe, the publication of written and visual material, which was essentially pornographic began. Heptaméron written in French by Marguerite de Navarre and published posthumously in 1558 is one of the earliest examples of salacious texts from this era.70 Beginning with the Age of Enlightenment and advances in printing technology, the production of erotic material became popular enough that an underground marketplace for such works developed in England with a separate publishing and bookselling business.71 Historians have identified the 18th century as an age of pornographic opulence.72 Written by anonymous authors, the titles: The Progress of Nature (1744); The History of the Human Heart: or, the Adventures of a Young Gentleman (1749), which had descriptions of female ejaculation; and The Child of Nature (1774) have been noted as prominent pornographic fictional works from this period.73 The book Fanny Hill (1748), is considered "the first original English prose pornography, and the first pornography to use the form of the novel."74 An erotic literary work by John Cleland, Fanny Hill was first published in England as Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure.7576 The novel has been one of the most prosecuted and banned books in history.7778 The author John Cleland was charged for "corrupting the King's subjects."79

At around the same time, erotic graphic art that began to be extensively produced in Paris came to be known in the Anglosphere as "French postcards".80 Enlightenment-era France had been noted by historians as the center of origin for modern-era pornography.81 The works of French pornography, which often concentrated on the education of an ingénue into libertine, dominated the sale of sexually explicit content.82 The French sought to interlace narratives of sexual pleasure with philosophical and anti-establishment basis.83 Political pornography began with the French Revolution (1789–99).84 Apart from the sexual component, pornography became a popular medium for protest against the social and political norms of the time.85 Pornography during this period was used to explore the ideas of sexual freedom for women and men, the various methods of contraception, and to expose the offenses of powerful royals and elites.86 The working and lower classes in France produced pornographic material en masse with themes of impotency, incest, and orgies that ridiculed the authority of the Church-State, aristocrats, priests, monks, and other royalty.87

One of the most important authors of socially radical pornography was the French aristocrat Marquis de Sade (1740–1814), whose name helped derive the words "sadism" and "sadist". He advocated libertine sexuality and published writings that were critical of authorities, many of which contained pornographic content.88 His work Justine (1791) interlaced orgiastic scenes along with extensive debates on the ills of property and traditional hierarchy in society.89

Pornography in the Victorian era

During the Victorian era (1837–1901), the invention of the rotary printing press made publication of books easier, many works of lascivious nature were published during this period often under pen names or anonymity.90 In 1837, the Holywell Street (known as "Booksellers' Row") in London had more than 50 shops that sold pornographic material.91 Many of the works published in the Victorian era are considered bold and graphic even by today's lenient standards.92 The English novel The Adventures, Intrigues, and Amours, of a Lady's Maid! written by anonymous "Herself" (c. 1838) professed the notion that homosexual acts are more pleasurable for women than heterosexuality which is linked to painful and uncomfortable experiences.93 Some of the popular publications from this era include: The Pearl (magazine of erotic tales and poems published from 1879 to 1881); Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess (1870) by Alfred de Musset; and Venus in Furs (1870) by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, from whose name the term "masochism" was derived.94 The Sins of the Cities of the Plain (1881) is one of the first sole male homosexual literary work published in English, this work is said to have inspired another gay literary work Teleny, or The Reverse of the Medal (1893), whose authorship has often been attributed to Oscar Wilde.95 The Romance of Lust, written anonymously and published in four volumes during 1873–1876, contained graphical descriptions of themes detailing incest, homosexuality, and orgies.96 Other publications from the Victorian era that included fetish and taboo themes such as sadomasochism and 'cross-generational sex' are: My Secret Life (1888–1894) and Forbidden Fruit (1898). On accusations of obscenity many of these works had been outlawed until the 1960s.97

Criminalization

The UK Obscene Publications Act

The world's first law that criminalized pornography was the UK Obscene Publications Act 1857, enacted at the urging of the Society for the Suppression of Vice.9899 The act passed by the British Parliament in 1857 applied to the United Kingdom and Ireland. The act made the sale of obscene material a statutory offense, and gave the authorities the power to seize and destroy any material which they considered as obscene.100101

For centuries before, sexually explicit material was considered a domain that is exclusive to aristocratic classes.102 When pornographic material flourished in the Victorian-era England, the affluent classes believed they are sensible enough to deal with it, unlike the lower working classes whom they thought would get distracted by such material and cease to be productive. Beliefs that masturbation would make people ill, insane, or become blind also flourished.103 The obscenity act gave government officials the power to interfere in the private lives of people unlike any other law before.104 Some of the people suspected for masturbation were forced to wear chastity devices. "Cures" and "treatment" for masturbation involved such measures like giving electric shock and applying carbolic acid to the clitoris.105 The law was criticized for being established on still yet unproven claims that sexual material is noxious for people or public health.106

The US Comstock Act

In 1865, the US postal service was seen as a "vehicle" for the transmission of materials that were deemed obscene by the American lawmakers.107 An act relating to the postal services was passed, which made people pay a fine of $500 for knowingly mailing any "obscene book, pamphlet, picture print, or other publication".108 From 1865 to up until the first three months of 1872, a total number of nine people were held for various charges of obscenity, with one person sentenced to prison for a year; while in the next ten months fifteen people were arrested under this law. This was partly due to the efforts of Anthony Comstock, who became a major figure in 1872 and held great power to control sexual related activities of people including the choice of abortion.109

The Comstock Act of 1873 is the American equivalent of the British Obscene Publications Act.110111 The anti-obscenity bill, drafted by Anthony Comstock, was debated for less than an hour in the US Congress before being passed into law.112 Apart from the power to seize and destroy any material alleged to be obscene, the law made it possible for the authorities to make arrests over any perceived act of obscenity, which included possession of contraceptives by married couples. Reportedly 15 tons of books and 4 million pictures were destroyed, and about 15 people were driven to suicide with 4,000 arrests.113 At least 55 people whom Comstock identified as abortionists were indicted under the Comstock Act.114

Steps towards liberalization

The laws regarding pornography have differed in various historical, cultural, and national contexts.115 The English Act did not apply to Scotland where the common law continued to apply. Before the English Act, publication of obscene material was treated as a common law misdemeanor,116 this made effectively prosecuting authors and publishers difficult even in cases where the material was clearly intended as pornography.117 However, neither the English, nor the United States Act defined what constituted "obscene", leaving this for the courts to determine.118 For implementing the Comstock act, the US courts used the British Hicklin test to define obscenity, the definition of which was first proposed in 1868, ten years after the passing of the English obscene act.119 The definition became cemented in 1896 and continued until the mid-twentieth century. Starting from 1957 to 1997, the US Supreme Court made numerous judgments that redefined obscenity.120121

The nineteenth-century legislation eventually outlawed the publication, retail and trafficking of certain writings and images that were deemed pornographic. Although laws ordered the destruction of shop and warehouse stock meant for sale, the private possession and viewing of (some forms of) pornography was not made an offense until the twentieth century.122 Historians have explored the role of pornography in determining social norms.123 The Victorian attitude that pornography was only for a select few is seen in the wording of the Hicklin test, stemming from a court case in 1868, where it asked: "whether the tendency of the matter charged as obscenity is to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences".124

Although officially prohibited, the sale of sexual material nevertheless continued through "under the counter" means. Magazines specialising in a genre called "saucy and spicy" became popular during this time (1896 to 1955), titles of few popular magazines include; Wink: A Whirl of Girls, Flirt: A FRESH Magazine, and Snappy. Cover stories in these magazines featured segments such as "perky pin-ups" and "high-heel cuties".125 Some of the popular erotic literary works from the twentieth century include the novels: Story of the Eye (1928), Tropic of Cancer (1934), Tropic of Capricorn (1938), the French Histoire d'O (Story of O) (1954); and the short stories: Delta of Venus (1977), and Little Birds (1979).126

Invention of photography and filmography

After the invention of photography, the birth of erotic photography followed. The oldest surviving image of a pornographic photo is dated back to about 1846, described as to depict "a rather solemn man gingerly inserting his penis into the vagina of an equally solemn and middle-aged woman".127 At one point of time, it was more expensive to purchase an erotic photograph than to hire a prostitute.128 The Parisian demimonde included Napoleon III's minister, Charles de Morny, an early patron who delighted in acquiring and displaying erotic photos at large gatherings.129

Pornographic film production commenced almost immediately after the invention of the motion picture in 1895. A pioneer of the motion picture camera, Thomas Edison, released various films, including The Kiss that were denounced as obscene in late 19th century America.130131 Two of the earliest pioneers of pornographic films were Eugène Pirou and Albert Kirchner. Kirchner directed the earliest surviving pornographic film for Pirou under the trade name "Léar". The 1896 film, Le Coucher de la Mariée, showed Louise Willy performing a striptease. Pirou's film inspired a genre of risqué French films that showed women disrobing, and other filmmakers realized profits could be made from such films.132133

Legalization

Sexually explicit films opened producers and distributors to be liable for prosecution. Such films were produced illicitly by amateurs, starting in the 1920s, primarily in France and the United States. Processing the film was risky as was their distribution, which was strictly private.134 In the Western world, during the 1960s, social attitudes towards sex and pornography slowly changed.135 In 1967, Denmark repealed the obscenity laws on literature; this led to a decline in the sale of pornographic and erotic literature. Hoping for a similar effect, in the summer of 1969, legislators in Denmark abolished censorship on picture pornography,136 thereby effectively becoming, from July 1, 1969, the first country that legalized pornography,137138 including child pornography, which was later prohibited in 1980.139140 The 1969 legislation, instead of resulting in a decline in pornography production, led to an explosion of investment in, and commercial production of pornography in Denmark, which made the country's name synonymous with sex and pornography.141 The total retail turnover of pornography in Denmark for the year 1969 was estimated at $50 million. Much of the pornographic material produced in Denmark was smuggled into other countries around the world.142

In the United States, pornography is protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution unless it constitutes obscenity or child pornography that is produced with real children. Nevertheless, in Stanley v. Georgia (1969), the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of an adult to possess obscene material in private.143 Subsequently, however, the Supreme Court rejected the claim that under Stanley there is a constitutional right to provide obscene material for private use144 or to acquire it for private use.145 The right to possess obscene material does not imply the right to provide or acquire it, because the right to possess it "reflects no more than ... the law's 'solicitude to protect the privacies of the life within [the home]'".146

In 1969, Blue Movie by Andy Warhol became the first feature film to depict explicit sexual intercourse that received a wide public theatrical release in the United States.147148

Film scholar Linda Williams remarked that prurience "is a key term in any discussion of moving-image sex since the sixties. Often it is the "interest" to which no one wants to own up".149 In 1968, the Motion Picture Association of America created a new film ratings system in which any film that was not approved by the association was released with an "X" rating. When pornographers began to release their productions with the rating X, the association adopted NC-17 rating for adults only films, leaving the X rating to pornography. Later the invented gimmick rating "XXX" became a standard for pornographic material.150

Commissions and their findings

In 1970, the United States President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, set up to study the effects of pornography, reported that there was "no evidence to date that exposure to explicit sexual materials plays a significant role in the causation of delinquent or criminal behavior among youths or adults".151 The report further recommended against placing any restriction on the access of pornography by adults and suggested that legislation "should not seek to interfere with the right of adults who wish to do so to read, obtain, or view explicit sexual materials".152 Regarding the notion that sexually explicit content is improper, the Commission found it "inappropriate to adjust the level of adult communication to that considered suitable for children". The Supreme Court supported this view.153

In 1971, Sweden removed its obscenity clause. Further relaxation of legislations during the early 1970s in the US, West Germany and other countries led to rise in pornography production.154 The 1970s had been described by Linda Williams as 'the "Classical" Era of Theatrically Exhibited Porn', a time period now called the Golden Age of Porn.155156

In 1979, the British Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship better known as the Williams Committee, formed to review the laws concerning obscenity reported that pornography could not be harmful and to think anything else is to see pornography "out of proportion". The committee declared that existing variety of laws in the field should be scrapped and so long as it is prohibited from children, adults should be free to consume pornography as they see fit.157158

The Meese Report in 1986 argued against loosening restrictions on pornography in the US. The report was criticized as biased, inaccurate, and not credible.159

In 1988, the Supreme Court of California ruled in the People v. Freeman case that "filming sexual activity for sale" does not amount to procuring or prostitution and shall be given protection under the first amendment.160 This ruling effectively legalized the production of X-rated adult content in the Los Angeles county, which by 2005 had emerged as the largest center in the world for the production of pornographic films.161162 Pornographic films appeared throughout the twentieth century. First as stag films (1900–1940s), then as porn loops or short films for peep shows (1960s), followed by as feature films for theatrical release in adult movie theaters (1970s), and as home videos (1980s).163

Role of magazines in legalization

Pornographic magazines published during the mid-twentieth century have been noted for playing an important role in the sexual revolution164 and the liberalization of laws and attitudes towards sexual representation in the Western world.165 Hugh Hefner, in 1953 published the first US issue of the Playboy, a magazine which as Hefner described is a "handbook for the urban male". The magazine contained images of nude women along with articles and interviews covering politics and culture.166 Twelve years later, in 1965, Bob Guccione in the UK started his publication Penthouse, and published its first American issue in 1969 as a direct competitor to Playboy. In its early days, the images of naked women published in Playboy did not show any pubic hair or genitals. Penthouse became the first magazine to show pubic hair in 1970. Playboy followed the lead and there ensued a competition between the two magazines over publication of more racy pictures, a contest that eventually got labeled as the "Pubic Wars".167

"We were the first to show full frontal nudity. The first to expose the clitoris completely. I think we made a very serious contribution to the liberalization of laws and attitudes. HBO would not have gone as far as it does if it was not for us breaking the barriers. Much that has happened now in the Western world with respect to sexual advances is directly due to steps that we took." — Bob Guccione, Penthouse founder in 2004.168

The tussle between Playboy and Penthouse paled into obscurity when Larry Flynt started Hustler, which became the first magazine to publish labial "pink shots" in 1974. Hustler projected itself as the magazine for the working classes as opposed to the urban centered Playboy and Penthouse.169 During the same time in 1972, Helen Gurley Brown, editor of the Cosmopolitan magazine, published a centerfold that featured actor Burt Reynolds in nude. His popular pose has been later emulated by many other famous people. The success of Cosmo led to the launch of Playgirl in 1973.170 At their peak, Playboy sold close to six million copies a month in the US, while Penthouse nearly five million. In the 2010s, as the market for printed versions of pornographic magazines declined, with Playboy selling about a million and Penthouse about a hundred thousand, many magazines became online publications.171 As of 2005, the best-selling US adult magazines maintained greater reach compared to most other non-pornographic magazines, and often ranked among top-sellers.172

Modern-day pornography

Modern-day pornography began to take shape from the mid-1980s when the first desktop computers and public computer networks were released.173 Since the 1990s, the Internet has made pornography more accessible and culturally visible.174 Before the 90s, Usenet newsgroups served as the base for what has been called the "amateur revolution" where non-professionals from the late 1980s and early 1990s, with the help of digital cameras and the Internet, created and distributed their own pornographic content independent of mainstream networks.175 The use of the World Wide Web became popular with the introduction of Netscape navigator in 1994. This development led to newer methods of pornography distribution and consumption.176 The Internet turned out to be a popular source for pornography and was called the "Triple A-Engine" for offering consumers "anonymity, affordability, and accessibility", while driving the business of pornography.177 The notion of Internet being a medium abound with porn became popular enough that in 1995 Time published a cover story titled "CYBERPORN" with the face of a shocked child as the cover photo.178 In the Reno v. ACLU (1997) ruling, the US Supreme Court upheld the legality of pornography distribution and consumption by adults over the Internet. The Court noted that government may not reduce the communication between adults to "only what is fit for children".179180

With the introduction of broadband connections, much of the distribution networks of pornography moved online giving consumers anonymous access to a wide range of pornographic material.181 To have better control over their content on the Internet some professional pornographers maintain their own websites.182 Danni's Hard Drive started in 1995 by Danni Ashe is considered one of the earliest online pornographic websites, coded by Ashe – a former stripper and nude model, the website was reported by CNN to had generated revenues of $6.5 million by 2000.183184 According to some leading pornography providers on the Internet, customer subscription rates for a website would be about one in a thousand people who visit the site for a monthly fees averaging around $20.185 Ashe said in an interview that her website employs 45 people and she expects to earn $8 million in 2001 alone.186 The total number of pornographic websites in 2000 were estimated to be more than 60,000.187 The development of streaming sites, peer-to-peer file sharing (P2P) networks, and tube sites led to a subsequent decline in the sale of DVDs and adult magazines.188

Starting in the 21st century, greater access to the Internet and affordable smartphones made pornography more accessible and culturally mainstream.189190191 The total number of pornographic websites in 2012 was estimated to be around 25 million comprising 12% of all the websites.192 About 75 percent of households in the US gained Internet access by 2012.193 Data from 2015 suggests an increase in pornography consumption over the past few decades which is attributed to the growth of Internet pornography.194 Technological advancements such as digital cameras, laptops, smartphones, and Wi-Fi have democratized the production and consumption of pornography.195196197 Subscription-based service providers such as OnlyFans, founded in 2016, are becoming popular as the platforms for pornography trade in the digital era.198199 Apart from the professional pornographers, content creators on such platforms include others like;200 a physics teacher,201 a race car driver,202 a woman undergoing cancer treatment.203 In 2022, the total pornographic content accessible online was estimated to be over 10,000 terabytes.204

AVN and XBIZ are the industry-specific organizations based in the US that provide information about the adult entertainment business.205 XBIZ Awards and AVN Awards, analogous to the Golden globes and Oscars, are the two prominent award shows of the adult entertainment industry.206207 Free Speech Coalition (FSC) is a trade association and Adult Performer Advocacy Committee (APAC) is a labor union for the adult entertainment industry based in the US.208 The scholarly study of pornography notably in cultural studies is limited. Porn Studies, which began in 2014, is the first international peer-reviewed, academic journal that is exclusively dedicated to the critical study of the "products and services" identified to constitute pornography.209

Classifications

Adult content classifications

Adult content is generally classified as either pornography or erotica.210 Considerations of distinctness between pornography and erotica is mostly subjective.211 Pornographic content is categorized as softcore or hardcore.212 Softcore pornography contains depictions of nudity but without explicit depiction of sexual activity.213 Hardcore pornography includes explicit depiction of sexual activity.214 Hardcore porn is more regulated than softcore porn.215 Softcore porn was popular between the 1970s and 1990s.216

Mainstream pornography

Pornography productions cater to consumers of various sexual orientations.217 Nonetheless, pornography featuring heterosexual acts made for heterosexual consumers, comprise the bulk of what is called the "mainstream porn", marking the industry more or less as "heteronormative".218219

Mainstream pornography involves professional performers who work for various corporate film studios in their respective productions.220

Mainstream pornography productions are usually classified as feature or gonzo.221222 Features involve storylines, characterizations, scripted dialog, elegant costumes, detailed sets, and soundtracks, which make the productions look similar to mainstream Hollywood productions but with the depictions of explicit sexual activity included.223224225 Features contain both original narratives as well as parodies that parody mainstream feature films, TV shows, celebrities, video games or literary works.226227228 Gonzo is a form of content creation that attempts to put the viewer into the scene, this is commonly achieved by close-up camera work or performers talking to the audience; also called "wall-to-wall", gonzo involves some aspects of "breaking the fourth wall" between the audience and performers.229230 The term "gonzo" is often misused as a genre to identify demeaning depictions, however gonzo is a film-making style and not a genre.231 Gonzo style is variably incorporated in the creation of all types or genres of adult content.232 Gonzos do not involve the expensive sets or the costly production values of features, which makes their production relatively inexpensive.233234 From the mid-2010s about 95 percent of porn productions are gonzo.235

Indie pornography

See also: Porn 2.0

Pornography productions that are independent of mainstream pornographic studios are classified as indie (or) independent pornography.236 These productions cater to more specific audience, and often feature different scenarios and sexual activity compared to the mainstream porn.237238 The performers in indie porn include real-life couples and regular people, who sometimes work in partnership with other performers. Apart from content creation the performers do the background work such as videography, editing, web development themselves, and distribute under their own brand.239 Paysites like Clips4Sale.com, MakeLoveNotPorn.tv, and PinkLabel.tv provide a platform to the web-based content of independent pornographers.240241242

Genres

Pornography encompasses a wide variety of genres providing for an enormous range of consumer tastes.243244 Most of the genres or types are named according to the depiction of sexual activity, these include: anal, creampie, cum shot, double penetration, fisting, threesome.245 Categorizations based on the age of the performers include: teens, milf, mature.246 Other categorizations based on gender and sexual identity include: lesbian, transsexual, queer, shemale; while those based on race include: ethnic, interracial.247 Others include: Mormon,248 zombie.249 Pornography also features numerous fetishes like: "'fat' porn, amateur porn, disabled porn, porn produced by women, queer porn, BDSM and body modification."250

Commercialism

Main article: Sex industry

Pornography is commercialized mainly through the sale of pornographic films.251 Many adult films had theatrical releases during the 1970s corresponding with the Golden Age of Porn.252 A 1970 federal study estimated that the total retail value of hardcore pornography in the United States was no more than $5 million to $10 million.253254 The release of the VCR by Sony Corporation for the mass market in 1975 marked the shift of people from watching porn in adult movie theaters, to the confines of their houses.255 The introduction of VHS brought down the production quality through the 1980s.256

Starting in the 1990s, Internet eased the access to pornography.257 The pay-per-view model enabled people to buy adult content directly from cable and satellite TV service providers. According to Showtime Television network report, in 1999 adult pay-per-view services made $367 million, which was six times more than the $54 million earned in 1993.258 Although this development resulted in a decline in rentals, the revenues generated over the Internet, provided much financial gains for pornography producers and credit card companies among others.259 By the mid-1990s, the adult film industry had agents for performers, production teams, distributors, advertisers, industry magazines, and trade associations.260 The introduction of home video and the World Wide Web in the late twentieth century led to global growth in the pornography business.261 Performers got multi-film contracts.262 In 1998, Forrester Research reported that online "adult content" industry's estimated annual revenue is at $750 million to $1 billion.263

Retail stores or sex shops engaged in the sale of adult entertainment material ranging from videos, magazines, sex toys and other products, significantly contributed to the overall commercialization of pornography.264265 Sex shops sell their products on both online shopping platforms such as Amazon and on specialized websites.266

In 2000, the total annual revenue from the sales and rentals of pornographic material in the US was estimated to be over $4 billion.267 The hotel industry through the sale of adult movies to their customers as part of room service, over pay-per-view channels, had generated an annual income of about $180-$190 million.268 Some of the major companies and hotel chains that were involved in the sale of adult films over pay-per-view platforms include; AT&T, Time Warner, DirecTV from General Motors, EchoStar, Liberty Media, Marriott International, Westin and Hilton Worldwide. The companies said their services are in response to a growing American market that wanted pornography delivered at home.269270 Studies in 2001 had put the total US annual revenue (including video, pay-per-view, Internet and magazines) between $2.6 billion and $3.9 billion.271

Commercialization of pornography
Pornography

magazines

artwork

photography

literature

audio

internet

film/videos

adult movie theaters

animation

sex shops

video games

(commercialized via)

From the mid 2000s, emergence of tube sites led to an increase in free streaming and a decrease in traditional studio sales.272273 Many performers turned to subscription-based platforms like OnlyFans, which continue to provide financial independence for some, but also increase market saturation, making it harder for new creators to establish themselves. Additionally, dependence on third-party platforms leaves creators vulnerable to policy changes and financial restrictions.274 In 2020, Visa and Mastercard implemented restrictions on processing payments for adult content due to concerns over illegal material.275 Additionally, the arrival of AI-generated adult content, including deepfake pornography, poses ethical and legal dilemmas.276

Economics

The production and distribution of pornography are economic activities of some importance. In Europe, Budapest is regarded as the industry center.277278 Other pornography production centers in the world are located in Florida (US), Brazil, Czech Republic, and Japan.279 In the United States, the pornography industry employs about 20,000 people including 2,000 to 3,000 performers,280 and is centered in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles. By 2005, it became the largest pornography production center in the world.281282 Apart from regular media coverage, the industry in the US receives considerable attention from private organizations, government agencies, and political organizations.283

As of 2011, pornography was becoming one of the biggest businesses in the United States.284 In 2014, the porn industry was believed to bring in at least $13 billion on a yearly basis in the United States.285 Through the 2010s, many pornography production companies and top pornographic websites such as Pornhub, RedTube and YouPorn have been acquired by MindGeek, a company that has been described as "a monopoly" in the pornography business.286 This development was identified as a problem. According to Marina Adshade, a professor from the Vancouver School of Economics and the author of Dollars and Sex: How economics influences sex and love, having a monopoly in the pornography business has forced the producers to reduce their charges, and radically changed the work of performers "who are now under greater pressure to perform acts that they would have been able to refuse in the past", all at a lower price without profits for themselves.287

Online pornography is available both for a fee and free of charge.288 The availability of free porn on the Internet has led to a decline in the business of mainstream pornography.289290 Piracy is estimated to result in losses of some $2 billion a year for the porn industry.291 Budgets of many studios reduced considerably and contracts for performers became less common.292 Reportedly, applications by established pornography companies for porn-shoot permits in Los Angeles County fell by 95 percent during the period 2012 to 2015.293294 According to Mark Spiegler, an adult talent agent, in the early 2000s female performers made about $100,000 a year. By 2017, the amount is about $50,000.295

The technological era led to decline of the studio and "the rise of the pornography worker herself".296 Newer ways of monetization have opened for the pornography workers who are taking the path of entrepreneurship.297 In 1995, Jenna Jameson signed her first contract with the porn studio Wicked Pictures.298 After building a brand image for herself she started her own company ClubJenna, which by 2005 was reportedly earning an annual revenue of $30-$35 million.299300 "Performers are hustlers now," said Chanel Preston (a performer who was also chairperson of the Adult Performer Advocacy Committee), while noting that performers have to be creative to sustain their income and reach audience, both of which, she said are mainly achieved through "feature dancing, selling merchandise, webcamming", among other activities.301 "Custom" pornography made according to the requests of customer clients has emerged as one new business niche.302 The average career for the new age performer lasts about four to six months.303 Before moving on to the business side, adult performers use studio works to advertise and build a brand image for themselves. They acquire an audience who would later pay at personal website or webcam performances.304305 Commercial webcamming, which emerged in the 1990s306 as a niche sector in the adult entertainment industry, grew to become a multibillion-dollar business by the mid-2020s.307

The exact economic size of the porn industry in the early-twenty-first century is unknown to anyone.308 Kassia Wosick, a sociologist from New Mexico State University, estimated the global porn market value at $97 billion in 2015, with the US revenue estimated at $10 and $12 billion. IBISWorld, a leading researcher of various markets and industries, calculated total US revenue to reach $3.3 billion by 2020.309310 On the basis of a research report by a market analysis firm, USA Today published that the estimated worth of the adult entertainment industry market in 2023 is over $172 billion.311

Technology

Pornographers have taken advantage of each major technological advancement for the production and distribution of their services.312 Pornography has been called an "erotic engine" and a driving force in the development of various media related technologies from the printing press, through photography (still and motion), to satellite TV, Home video, and streaming media.313

One of the world's leading anti-pornography campaigners, Gail Dines, has stated that "the demand for porn has driven the development of core cross-platform technologies for data compression, search, transmission and micro-payments."314 Many of the technological developments that had been led by pornography have benefited other fields of human activity too.315 In the early 2000s, Wicked Pictures pushed for the adoption of the MPEG-4 file format ahead of others, this later became the most commonly used format across high-speed Internet connections.316 In 2009, Pink Visual became one of the first companies to license and produce content with a software introduced by a small Toronto-based company called "Spatial view", which later made it possible to view 3D content on iPhones.317

As an early adopter of innovations, the pornography industry has been cited to be a crucial factor in the development and popularization of various media processing and communication technologies.318319 From innovative smaller film cameras, to the VCRs, and the Internet, the porn industry has employed newer technologies much ahead than other commercial industries, this early adoption provided the developers their early financial capital, which aided in the further development of these technologies.320321 The success of innovative technologies is predicted by their greater use in the porn industry.322

Pornographic content accounted for most videotape sales during the late 1970s.323 The pornography industry has been considered an influential factor in deciding the format wars in media, including being a factor in the VHS vs. Betamax format war (the videotape format war)324325 and the Blu-ray vs. HD DVD format war (the high-def format war).326327328 Piracy, the illegal copying and distribution of material, is of great concern to the porn industry.329 The industry has been the subject of many litigations and formalized anti-piracy efforts.330331

Many of the innovative data rendering procedures, enhanced payment systems, customer service models, and security methods developed by pornography companies have been co-opted by other mainstream businesses.332333 Pornography companies served as the basis for a large number of innovations in web development. Much of the IT work in porn companies is done by people who are referred to as a "porn webmaster", often paid well in what are small businesses, they have more freedom to test innovations compared to other IT employees in larger organizations who tend to be risk-averse.334

Virtual reality pornography

See also: Virtual reality pornography

Some pornography is produced without human actors at all. The idea of computer-generated pornography was conceived very early as one of the obvious areas of application for computer graphics. Until the late 1990s, digitally manipulated pornography could not be produced cost-effectively. In the early 2000s, it became a growing segment as the modeling and animation software matured, and the rendering capabilities of computers improved. Further advances in technology allowed increasingly photorealistic 3D figures to be used in interactive pornography.335336337 The first pornographic film to be shot in 3D was 3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy, released on 14 April 2011, in Hong Kong.338

The various mediums for pornography depictions have evolved throughout the course of history, starting from prehistoric cave paintings, about forty millennia ago, to futuristic virtual reality renditions.339340341 Experts in the pornography business predict more people in the future would consume porn through virtual reality headsets, which are expected to give consumers better personal experiences than they can have in the real world.342 Speculations are rife about an increased presence of sex robots in the future pornography productions.343

Consumption

Pornography is a product made by adults-for the consumption by adults,344 the consumption of which has become more common among people due to the expansive use of the Internet.345 About 90% of pornography is consumed on the Internet with consumers preferring content that is in tune with their sexuality.346347 Pornography has been found to be a significant influencer of people's ideas about sex in the digital age.348 Pornographic websites rank among the top 50 most visited websites worldwide.349 XVideos and Pornhub are the two most visited pornographic websites worldwide.350

Pornography consumption in people is found to induce "psychological moods and emotions" similar to those evoked during actual sexual intercourse and casual sex.351 Researchers identified four broad motivating factors for pornography consumption: an innate sexual drive or desire, to learn about sex and improve ones own sexual performance, peer pressure or social groups, lack of sexual relationship or absence of partner.352 Majority of pornography consumers tend to be male, unmarried, with higher levels of education.353 Younger people are more frequent consumers of porn than older people. There's been a gradual increase in the consumption rates across different age groups with the increased availability of free porn over the Internet.354

Researchers at McGill University ascertained that on viewing pornographic content, men reached their maximum arousal in about 11 minutes and women in about 12 minutes.355 An average visit to a pornographic website lasts for 11.6 minutes.356 Both marriage and divorce are found to be associated with lower subscription rates for adult entertainment websites.357 Subscriptions are more widespread in regions that have higher measures of social capital.358 Pornographic websites are most often visited during office hours.359 As per a recent CNBC report, seventy per cent of online-porn access in the US happens between nine-to-five hours.360

Sexual arousal and sexual enhancement tend to be the primary motivations among the self-reported reasons by users for their pornography consumption.361 Studies had found that greater levels of psychological distress leads to higher rates of pornography consumption.362 Pornography may provide a temporary relief from stress, or anxiety. A need to assuage coping and boredom is also found to result in higher consumption of pornography.363

By Gender

A study of Austrian adults found that men consume pornography more frequently than women. The intent for consumption may vary, with men being more likely to use pornography as a stimulant for sexual arousal during solitary sexual activity, while women are more likely to use pornography as a source of information or entertainment, and rather prefer using it together with a partner to enhance sexual stimulation during partnered sexual activity.364 Studies have found that sexual functioning defined as "a person's ability to respond sexually or to experience sexual pleasure" is greater in women who consume pornography frequently than in women who do not. No such association was noticed in men.365 Women who consume pornography are more likely to know about their own sexual interests and desires, and in turn be willing and able to communicate them during partnered sexual activity, it has been reported that in women the ability to communicate their sexual preferences is associated with greater sexual satisfaction for themselves.366 Pornographic material is found to expand the sexual repertoire in women by making them learn new rewarding sexual behaviors such as clitoral stimulation and enhance their overall "sexual flexibility".367 Women who consume pornography frequently are more easily aroused during partnered sex and are more likely to engage in oral sex compared to the women who do not view pornography.368 Women users of pornography had reported (almost 50%) to have had engaged in cunnilingus, which research suggests is related to female orgasm, and to have had experienced orgasms more frequently than women who do not use pornography (87% vs. 64%).369 Most people, probably do not consider pornography use by a partner as indulging in infidelity.370

By education level

A two year long survey (2018–2020) conducted to assess the role of pornography in the lives of highly educated medical university students, with median age of 24, in Germany found that pornography served as an inspiration for many students in their sex life.371 Pornography use among students was higher in males than in females, among the male students those who did not cheat on their partner or contracted an STI were found to be more frequent consumers of pornography. Although pornography use was more common among men, associations between pornography use and sexuality were more apparent in women.372 Among the female students, those who reported to be satisfied with their physical appearance have consumed three times as much pornography than the female students who had reported to be dissatisfied with their body. A feeling of physical inadequacy was found to be a restraining factor in the consumption of pornography. Female students who consume pornography more often had reported to have had multiple sexual partners.373 Both female and male students who enjoyed the experience of anal intercourse in their life were reported to be frequent consumers of pornography. Sexual content depicting bondage, domination, or violence was consumed by only a minority of 10%. More sexual openness and less sexual anxiety was observed in students who regularly consumed pornography. No association was noticed between regular pornography use and experience of sexual dissatisfaction in either female or male students. This finding was in concurrence with another finding from a longitudinal study, which demonstrated most pornography consumers differentiate pornographic sex from real partnered sex and do not experience diminishing satisfaction with their sex life.374

By region

A vast majority of men and considerable number of women in the US use porn.375376 A study in 2008 found that among University students aged 18 to 26 located in six college sites across the United States, 67% of young men and 49% of young women approved pornography viewing, with nearly 9 out of 10 men (87%) and 31% women reportedly using pornography.377 The Huffington Post reported in 2013 that porn websites registered higher number of visitors than Netflix, Amazon, and Twitter combined.378379 A 2014 poll, which asked Americans when they had "last intentionally looked at pornography", elicited a result that 46% of men and 16% of women in the age group of 18–39 did so in the past week.380 A 2016 study reported that about 70% of men and 34% of women in romantic relationships use pornography annually.381 Gallup poll surveys conducted over the years 2011 to 2018 noted a gradual increase in the acceptance rates of pornography among the general American public.382

Since the late 1960s, attitudes towards pornography have become more positive in Nordic countries; in Sweden and Finland the consumption of pornography has increased over the years.383 A 2006 study of Norwegian adults found that over 80% of the respondents used pornography at some point in their lives, a difference of 20% was observed between men and women in their respective use.384 A 2015 study in Finland noted that 75% of the 30-40-y.o. women and above 90% of the 30-40-y.o. men found porn "very exciting". Of those who had watched porn during the latest year, 71% of the 18-24-y.o. women, almost 60% of the 18-49-y.o. women, and a tenth of 65+ women did so; among men, the numbers were above 90% of the men under 50-y.o., 3/4 of the 18-64-y.o. and most of the 65+ y.o.; the numbers were quickly increasing, particularly for women, partially due to increased masturbation.385

In 2012 and 2013, interviews with large number of Australians revealed that in the past year 63% of men and 20% of women had viewed pornography.386

A 2020 Egyptian study surveying 15,027 individuals in Arab countries noted a prevalence of pornography use "nearly similar to Danish, German, and American ones".387

In 2021, it was estimated that in modern countries, 46–74% of men and 16–41% of women are regular users of pornography.388 In 2022, a national survey in Japan, of men and women aged 20 to 69 revealed that 76% of men and 29% of women had used pornography as part of their sexual activity.389 A 2023 study reported that in Netherlands, young men who watched porn in the previous six months ranged between 65% (13–15-y.o.) to 96% (22–24-y.o.), and among young women between 22% (13–15-y.o.) to 75% (22–24-y.o.).390

Legality and regulations

Further information: Pornography laws by region and Laws regarding child pornography

The legal status of pornography varies widely from country to country.391392 Regulating hardcore pornography is more common than regulating softcore pornography.393 Child pornography is illegal in almost all countries,394395 and some countries have restrictions on rape pornography and zoophilic pornography.396

Pornography in the United States is legal provided it does not depict minors, and is not obscene.397 The community standards, as indicated in the Supreme Court decision, of the 1973 Miller v. California case determine what constitutes as "obscene".398 The US courts do not have jurisdiction over content produced in other countries, but anyone distributing it in the US is liable to prosecution under the same community standards.399 As the courts consider community standards foremost in deciding any obscenity charge, the changing nature of community standards over the course of time and place makes instances of prosecution limited.400401

In the United States, a person receiving unwanted commercial mail that he or she deems pornographic (or otherwise offensive) may obtain a Prohibitory Order.402 Many online sites require the user to tell the website they are a certain age and no other age verification is required.403 A total of 16 states and the Republican Party have passed resolutions declaring pornography a "public health" threat.404 These resolutions are symbolic and do not put any restrictions but are made to sway the public opinion on pornography. The notion of pornography as a threat to public health is not supported by any international health organization.405

The adult film industry regulations in California requires that all performers in pornographic films use condoms. However, the use of condoms in pornography is rare.406 As porn does better financially when actors are without condoms many companies film in other states.407 Twitter is the popular social media platform used by the performers in porn industry as it does not censor content unlike Instagram and Facebook.408409

Pornography in Canada, as in the US, criminalizes the "production, distribution, or possession" of materials that are deemed obscene. Obscenity, in the Canadian context, is defined as "the undue exploitation of sex" provided it is connected to images of "crime, horror, cruelty, or violence".410 As to what is considered "undue" is decided by the courts, which assess the community standards in deciding whether exposure to the given material may result in any harm, with harm defined as "predisposing people to act in an anti-social manner".411

Pornography in the United Kingdom does not have the concept of community standards.412 Following the highly publicized murder of Jane Longhurst, the UK government in 2009 criminalized the possession of what it terms as "extreme pornography".413414 The courts decide whether any material is legally extreme or not, conviction for penalty include fines or incarceration up to three years.415 Content banned includes representations that are considered "grossly offensive, disgusting, or otherwise of an obscene character".416 While there are no restrictions on depiction of male ejaculation, any depiction of female ejaculation in pornography is completely banned in the UK,417 as well as in Australia.418

In most of Southeast Asia, Middle East, and China, the production, distribution or possession of pornography is illegal and outlawed.419 In Russia and Ukraine, webcam modeling is allowed provided it contains no explicit performances; in other parts of the world commercial webcamming is banned as a form of pornography.420

Disseminating pornography to a minor is generally illegal.421 There are various measures to restrict minors' any access to pornography,422 including protocols for pornographic stores.423

Pornography can infringe into basic human rights of those involved, especially when sexual consent was not obtained. Revenge porn is a phenomenon where disgruntled sexual partners release images or video footage of intimate sexual activity of their partners, usually on the Internet, without authorization or consent of the individuals involved.424 In many countries there has been a demand to make such activities specifically illegal carrying higher punishments than mere breach of privacy, or image rights, or circulation of prurient material.425426 As a result, some jurisdictions have enacted specific laws against "revenge porn".427

What is not pornography

In the US, a July 2014 criminal case decision in Massachusetts — Commonwealth v. Rex, 469 Mass. 36 (2014),428 made a legal determination as to what was not to be considered "pornography" and in this particular case "child pornography".429 It was determined that photographs of naked children that were from sources such as National Geographic magazine, a sociology textbook, and a nudist catalog were not considered pornography in Massachusetts even while in the possession of a convicted and (at the time) incarcerated sex offender.430

Drawing the line depends on time, place and context. Occidental mainstream culture has been increasingly getting "pornified" (i.e. influenced by pornographic themes, with mainstream films often including unsimulated sexual acts).431 Since the very definition of pornography is subjective, material that is considered erotic or even religious in one society may be denounced as pornography in another.432 When European travellers visited India in the 19th century, they were dismayed at the religious representation of sexuality on the Hindu temples and deemed them as pornographic. Similarly many films and television programs that are unobjectionable in contemporary Western societies are labeled as "pornography" in Muslim societies.433 Thus, assessing a material as pornography is very much personalized; to rehash a cliché, "pornography is very much in the eye of the beholder".434

Copyright status

In the United States, some courts have applied US copyright protection to pornographic materials.435 Some courts have held that copyright protection effectively applies to works, whether they are obscene or not,436 but not all courts have ruled the same way.437 The copyright protection rights of pornography in the United States has again been challenged as late as February 2012.438

STIs prevention and safer sex practices

See also: Sexually transmitted infections in the pornography industry

Performers working for pornographic film studios undergo regular testing for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) every two weeks.439 They have to test negative for: HIV, trichomoniasis, chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, and hepatitis B and C before showing up on a set and are then inspected for sores on their mouths, hands, and genitals before commencing work. The industry believes this method of testing to be a viable practice for safer sex as its medical consultants claim that since 2004, about 350,000 pornographic scenes have been filmed without condoms and HIV has not been transmitted even once because of performance on set.440441 However, some studies suggest that adult film performers have high rates of chlamydia or gonorrhea infection, and many of these cases may be missed by industry screening because these bacteria can colonize many sites on the body.442443

In the initial years, studios assessed performers suitability on the results from their blood and urine tests. According to a 2019 study by the American College of Emergency Physicians, swab tests offer better insight than urine samples for detecting bacterial STIs like chlamydia and gonorrhea.444 Performers such as Cherie DeVille have emphasized swab tests for safer sex.445 According to performer Angela White, studios will not allow them to work unless they are completely clean, insisting on performers testing regularly, she said "So for me, because I work so much, I’m testing every 12 days – and that is a full sweep of STIs such as chlamydia, gonorrhoea, syphilis, HIV and trichomoniasis. We’re doing throat swabs, vaginal swabs and anal swabs."446 Allan Ronald, a Canadian doctor and HIV/AIDS specialist who did groundbreaking studies on the transmission of STIs among prostitutes in Africa, said there's no doubt about the efficiency of the testing method, but he felt a little uncomfortable: "because it's giving the wrong message — that you can have multiple sex partners without condoms — but I can't say it doesn't work."447448

Relatedly, it has been found that individuals who received little sex education or perceive pornography as a source of information about sex are less apt to use condoms in their own sex life, making themselves more susceptible to contract STIs.449450 In 2020—the US National Sex Education Standards—released recommendations to incorporate "porn literacy" to students from grade 6 to 12 as part of sex education in the US.451

Veteran performer and former nurse Nina Hartley, who has a degree in nursing, stated that the amount of time involved in shooting a scene can be very long, and with condoms in place it becomes a painful proposition as their usage is uncomfortable despite the use of lube, causes friction burn, and opens up lesions in the genital mucosa.452453 Advocating the testing method for performers, Hartley said, "Testing works for us, and condoms work for outsiders."454

"We're tested every fourteen days. That is literally twenty-three more times than the average American. If that person makes it to their yearly physical. I have met tons of people that haven't been to the doctor in years. That scares me because they have no idea what their status is.... I don't hook up with people outside of the porn industry because I'm terrified. And I'm not the only one. There's many performers that know: if you go out into the wild, you will come back with something." — Ash Hollywood (Porn actress).455

Emphasizing that performers in the industry take necessary precautions like PrEP and are at lower risk to contract HIV than most sexually active persons outside the industry,456 many prominent female performers have vehemently opposed regulatory measures like Measure B that sought to make the use of condoms mandatory in pornographic films. Professional female performers have called the use of condoms on a daily basis at work an occupational hazard as they cause micro-tears, friction burn, swelling, and yeast infections, which altogether, they say, makes them more susceptible to contract STIs.457

Views on pornography

Pornography has been vouched to provide a safe outlet for sexual desires that may not be satisfied within relationships and be a facilitator of sexual fulfillment in people who cannot or do not want to have real-life partners.458 Pornography is viewed by people in general for various reasons; varying from a need to enrich their sexual arousal, to facilitate orgasm, as an aid for masturbation, learn about sexual techniques, reduce stress, alleviate boredom, enjoy themselves, see representation of people like themselves, know their sexual orientation, improve their romantic relationships, or simply because their partner wants them to.459

Pornography is noted for engrossing people "on more than masturbatory levels".460 Aesthetic philosophers argue whether pornographic representations can be considered as expressions of art.461 Pornography has been equated with journalism as both offer a view into the unknown or the hidden aspects. French philosopher Michel Foucault remarked that, "it is in pornography that we find information about the hidden, the forbidden and the taboo".462

Scholars such as Linda Williams, Jennifer Nash, and Tim Dean believe pornography "is a form of thinking", comprised with ideas that are way more reflective about sexuality and gender than what the creators or consumers of pornography intend.463 Pornography has been referred by people as a means to explore their sexuality. People have reported porn being helpful in learning about human sexuality in general.464 Studies recommend clinical practitioners to use pornography as an instruction aid to show their clients new and alternative sexual behaviors as part of psychosexual therapy.465 British psychologist, Oliver James, known for his work on 'happiness', stated that "a high proportion of men use porn as a distraction or to reduce stress ... It serves an anti-depressant purpose for the unhappy."466 British-American novelist, Salman Rushdie opined that pornography presence in society is "a kind of standard-bearer for freedom, even civilisation".467

As per evaluation by medical professionals, pornography can neither be good nor bad as it does not endorse or advocate a single set of values regarding sex.468 As such, individuals may introspect their own values with regards to sex while evaluating pornography.469 The relationship between pornography and its audience is found to be complex. While many users reported their use to have had positive effects, others especially women were found to be troubled with body image issues, the cause of which is attributed to the unrealistic image of "beauty" that pornography portrays.470 The increasing prevalence of alleged beauty enhancing procedures such as breast augmentation and labiaplasty among the common populace has been attributed to the popularity of pornography.471

Data from pornographic websites regarding the viewing habits of people is studied by academics to analyze the sexual preferences and mating choices.472 More often men look for women who have larger chest and hips, with a smaller Waist–hip ratio.473 Women are found to prefer men who are taller, stronger, appear highly masculine, and are in roles that can provide resources while being protective (CEO, doctor, athlete, lawmen).474

Studies on harmful effects of pornography include finding any potential influence of pornography on rape, domestic violence, sexual dysfunction, difficulties with sexual relationships, and child sexual abuse.475 A longitudinal study had ascertained that pornography use cannot be a perpetrating factor in intimate partner violence.476477 A 2020 study that analyzed depictions in video-pornography found that normative sexual behaviors (e.g., vaginal intercourse, fellatio) were the most commonly depicted, while depictions of extreme acts of violence and rape were very rare.478 There is no clear evidence to assume that pornography is a cause of rape.479 Several studies conclude that liberalization of porn in society may be associated with decreased rates of rape and sexual violence, while others have suggested no effect, or are inconclusive.480481482 No correlation has been found between pornography use and the practice of sexual consent or lack thereof.483

Mental health experts are divided over the issue of pornography use being a problem for people.484 While some literature reviews suggest pornography use can be addictive, insufficient evidence exists to draw conclusions.485486487 According to clinical psychologist and certified sex therapist David Ley, calling pornography an "addiction" has been "an area of substantial, protracted controversy and debate". Ley explained pornography doesn't effect an adult brain or body in the way alcohol or drugs do, he said "An alcoholic going cold turkey can have seizures and die because their brain has become physiologically dependent on the alcohol, but no one has ever had seizures or died from not getting to watch porn when they want to."488 Scholars note that pornography use has no implication on public health as it does not meet the definition of a public health crisis.489

Neuroscience has noted that minds of the young are in developmental stages and exposure to emotionally charged material such as pornography would likely have an impact on them unlike on adults, and has suggested caution while enabling potential access to such material.490 Opposition to pornography use is associated with sexual satisfaction,491 gender violence,492 and marital quality (wives watching pornography more frequently scored much better than the rest).493 Some issues of doxing and revenge porn had been linked to a few pornography websites.494495496 Since the mid-2010s deepfake pornography has become an issue of concern.497

Feminist outlook

Main article: Feminist views on pornography

Feminist movements in the late 1970s and 1980s dealt with the issues of pornography and sexuality in debates that are referred to as the "sex wars".498 While some feminist groups seek to abolish pornography believing it to be harmful, other feminist groups oppose censorship efforts insisting it is benign.499 A large scale study of data from the General Social Survey (2010–2018) refuted the argument that pornography is inherently anti-woman or anti-feminist and that it drives sexism. The study did not find a relationship between "pornography viewing" and "pornography tolerance" with higher sexism—a posit that was held by some feminists; it instead found higher pornography consumption and pornography tolerance among men to be associated with their greater support for gender equality. The study concluded that "pornography is more likely to be about the sex rather than the sexism".500

People who supported regulated pornography expressed lesser attitudes of sexism than people who sought to abolish pornography. Notably, non-feminists are found more likely to support a ban on pornography than feminists. Many feminists, both male and female, have reflected that the effects of pornography on society are neutral.501 Adult users of pornography were found more egalitarian than nonusers, they are more likely to hold favorable attitudes towards women in positions of power and in workplaces outside home than the nonusers.502

Criticism

A 2016 study authored by Black feminists criticized the American adult entertainment industry for alleged omission and exclusion of Black women in pornographic representations, particularly in the interracial genres. As pornography becomes a kind of manual on how bodies in pleasure can look, and is "one of the few places where we see our bodies--and other people's bodies," it becomes imperative on pornography to represent "variety of forms", stated the feminist scholars.503 Anti-pornography feminists argue that aesthetics of pornography demote Black women with undertones of racism.504 Gender studies scholars Mireille Miller-Young and Jennifer Christine Nash, in their writings on intersectionality of race and pornography, noted that Black people have been depicted as being hypersexual and Black women—more objectified.505 The scholars also noted major discrepancies in pay rates of the performers, White women have historically made 75 percent more per scene and sometimes still make 50 percent more compared to Black women.506

Feminist resentment about pornography tend to focus on two concerns: that pornography depicts violence and aggression, and that pornography objectifies women.507 Multiple analyses of pornographic videos found that Women have been overwhelmingly at the receiving end of aggression from male performers; with the reaction of Women being either positive or neutral towards aggression, which is at odds considering a report that found only 14.2% of US adult women find pain during sex as appealing.508 Two studies in the 1990s found that Black women were the targets of aggression and faced more violence from both Black and White men than did White women.509 However, more recent research from 2018 found that Black women were the least likely group of women to suffer nonconsensual aggression and are more likely to receive affection from their male partners.510 While Black men engaged in fewer intimate behaviors than White men; White women were found more likely to experience violence during sexual activity with White men than with Black men.511

Concerning Asian women, a 2016 study based on a sample of 3053 videos from Xvideos.com, found that in the 170 videos of the Asian women category, there was much less aggression, less objectification, but also the women had less agency.512 However, another study found that in a sample of 172 videos from Pornhub, the 25+ videos of the Asian/Japanese category had considerably more aggression than those of other categories.513 A 2002 study of "internet rape sites" found that among the 56 clear pictures they found, 34 had Asian women, and nearly half the sites had either an image or a text reference to an Asian woman.514 Findings on depictions of Asian women in pornography aren't consistent in scientific literature.515516

The prevalence of aggression in pornography appears to be changing. A 2018 study of popular videos on Pornhub found that segments of aggression towards women are fewer now, and they have reduced gradually over the past decade with viewers preferring content where women genuinely experience pleasure.517

Anti-pornography

Main article: Opposition to pornography

Prominent anti-pornography feminists such as Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon argue that all pornography is demeaning to women, or that it contributes to violence against women–both in its production and in its consumption. The production of pornography, they argue, entails the physical, psychological, or economic coercion of the women who perform in it. They charged that pornography eroticizes the domination, humiliation, and coercion of women, while reinforcing sexual and cultural attitudes that are complicit in rape and sexual harassment.518519520

Other sex work exclusionary feminists have insisted that pornography presents a severely distorted image of sexual consent, and it reinforces sexual myths like: women are readily available–and desire to engage in sex at any time–with any man–on men's terms–and always respond positively to men's advances.521

Pro-pornography

In contrast to the objections, other feminist scholars "ranging from Betty Friedan and Kate Millett to Karen DeCrow, Wendy Kaminer and Jamaica Kincaid" have supported the right to consume pornography.522 The anti-porn feminist stranglehold began to loose when sex-positive feminists like Susie Bright, performers Nina Hartley, and Candida Royalle affirmed the rights of women to consume and produce porn.523

The works of Camille Paglia established that westerners have been "pagan celebrants" for long and pornography has been an inseparable part of western culture.524 Wendy McElroy has noted that both feminism and pornography are mutually related, with both thriving in environments of tolerance, and both repressed anytime regulations are placed on sexual expression.525 Societies where pornography and sexual expression is prohibited are more likely to be the places where women are often subjected to violence and sexual abuse.526

Rise of feminist pornography

The lesbian feminist movement of the 1980s is considered a seminal moment for the women in porn industry as more women entered into the developmental side, allowing women to gear porn more towards women as they knew what women wanted, both from the perspective of actresses as well as the female audience. This involved making lesbian pornography that is not merely geared towards heterosexual males—a change considered good, as for a long time the porn industry had been directed by men for men.527

Furthermore, the advent of the VCR, home video, and affordable video cameras allowed for the possibility of feminist pornography.528 Feminist porn directors are interested in challenging representations of men and women, as well as in providing sexually-empowering imagery that features many kinds of bodies.529 Angela White started her own production company, AWG Entertainment, in which she has complete creative control over the content—from her partners, to the location, costumes, and the "vibe" of the video, "I am a feminist, so what I create is feminist, and I produce ethical porn, which is when everything is consensual", she said.530

Women are more likely to consume porn that is "female-centered" and feature acts such as cunnilingus,531 a study of pornographic videos found that when men spend more time performing cunnilingus they have higher volumes of ejaculate, an increase in sexual arousal resulting from exposure to the vaginal secretion 'copulins' during cunnilingus is reasoned to be the cause.532 Female-centric porn is mostly made by women, in these works the initiation of sexual activity is done by the female.533 Porn for women is identified by factors like greater attention on "sensual surroundings" and "soft focus camerawork", rather than on explicit depiction of sexual activity, making the productions more warm and humane compared to the traditional porn made for heterosexual men.534

"If feminists define pornography, per se, as the enemy, the result will be to make a lot of women ashamed of their sexual feelings and afraid to be honest about them. And the last thing women need is more sexual shame, guilt, and hypocrisy—this time served up by feminism" — Ellen Willis.535

Pay rates

Porn industry has been noted for being one of the few industries where women enjoy a power advantage in the workplace. "Actresses have the power," Alec Metro, one of the men in line, ruefully noticed of the X-rated industry. A former firefighter who claimed to have lost a bid for a job to affirmative action, Metro was already divining that porn might not be the ideal career choice for escaping the forces of what he called "reverse discrimination".536 Female performers can often dictate which male actors they will and will not work with. Porn—at least, porn produced for a heterosexual audience—is one of the few contemporary occupations where the pay gap operates in the favor of women. The average actress makes fifty to a hundred per cent more money than her male counterpart.537538539

Psychological perspective

Psychologists consider pornography to be of particular relevance in the study of intimate relationships and the development of adolescent sexuality.540 Mainstream psychology is mostly concerned with the study of effects of pornography, while critical psychology and applied psychology is engaged in more nuanced and academic study of pornography.541 Problematic pornography use is assessed in clinical psychology.542

A 2013 study refuted the notion that porn actresses have higher rates of psychological problems than regular women. The study compared 177 porn actresses with regular women of similar age, ethnicity, and marital status, and found that the porn actresses had "higher levels of self-esteem, positive feelings, social support, sexual satisfaction, and spirituality" compared to the regular women.543

Psychoanalyst views

In analytical psychology, human sexual instincts and religious-spiritual instincts are considered tightly associated with each other, with both sharing a common instinctual objective, which, as Carl Jung acknowledged, is the striving of the psyche for "wholeness".544 The psyche of a person is understood to be differentiated, as being made-up of psychological traits that are feminine and masculine in nature.545 According to Jung, this differentiation allowed the formation of opposite polarities, which made "consciousness possible".546 According to psychologist and author Giorgio Tricarico, as an individual moves through various life experiences, their psyche approaches wholeness or the state of "non-differentiated"—a realm of unified, impersonal (it) consciousness—considered belonging to the sacred or divine.547 In Hindu cosmological view, the universe is weaved from the two coexisting generative principles: feminine and masculine.548549 Men and women, in whatever form they appear, are considered as microcosmic representatives, or mirrors of the macrocosmic energies: Shiva and Shakti.550 The Goddess or Shakti (spirit, feminine principle) is the "pure consciousness", the animating energy or power underlying existence.551552 Shakti, embraced by Shiva (matter, masculine principle), both together in "perpetual union" form the field of nondual "Absolute".553

Shiva and Shakti in a state of "copulation" represent the flow of "erotic energy" in an individual.554 Sigmund Freud called the feminine Shakti "libido that cannot be simply repressed."555 Self-realization or becoming aware of one's " 'deep' femininity" entails dealing with the powerful sexual energy.556 Schools of religious thought such as the Kundalini yoga and Tantra, which involve using the sexual energy for purpose of self-realization had been developed in India.557 The concept of gender had been studied in Hinduism for long, where the conclusion was arrived that the human self, an emanation from the nondual Absolute—is androgynous, and is encased in human bodies, which themselves are androgyne in the sense that every body is a compound of the feminine (spirit) and the masculine (matter) principles. Sexuality is considered a creative function of nature to align the two principles with the nondual Absolute.558 The masculine and the feminine principles of the self have been identified to the deities Shiva and Shakti, who make-up the two sexual polarities; by establishing a connection between the two, for the flow of erotic energy (as in the case of an electric circuit between positive and negative terminals for the flow of electric current), in one's own being—by the means of sexual stimulation—through "erotic visualization" or "ritual copulation", the self would "divest" from its body identity and realign into the "bipolar being", which, then represents a unit microcosm mirroring the nondual macrocosm; thus an individual in being one with the absolute experiences bliss-considered as the power of the goddess (Shakti) in a tangible form.559560 The Hindu tantric idea of feminine and masculine principles arriving at unity in the "divine feminine" or the "unified divine consciousness" is analogous to Analytical psychology idea of coincidentia oppositorum which expounds the unity of opposites.561562

In the Hindu tantric view, the women who participate in union rituals, thereby enabling men to attain self-realization are regarded as shakti or the goddess, as they are believed to embody her.563564 Recognition of the deity in an objective woman is centered upon a man's acceptance of the subjective feminine and the primacy of her desires.565 Tricarico professed that modern-day pornography in its essence is a "desacralised, technological, and consumerist" equivalent of the ancient sacred prostitution – a custom that involved honoring of the sacred feminine and worship of the prostitutes as goddess.566 The feminine is believed to embody particular qualities of the sacred or divine more broadly and deeply than the masculine, consequently in women, the ability to incorporate nondualistic awareness is assumed to be higher.567 Tricarico argued that women in porn, through their performances of many sexual acts, would inadvertently approach the non-differentiated state, an effect which he called the "intimation of hierophany".568 "Porn actresses may embody the medium to enter what used to be the realm of the sacred", he said.569 The actresses have been likened to the "descendants of the lost goddesses" who are now offering the gift of the "numinous" to all through their performances, but are unacknowledged or devalued for their contributions.570

The use of epithets like "bitch", "whore", "slut" for sexually active women has been attributed to the denial of the subjective feminine by men.571 The subdued acceptance of female sexuality, as a value in its own right, is manifested when a man's admiration for the "bitch" gets subtended if she happens to be his wife or girlfriend.572 Along with showing "admiration, lust, gratitude, and desire", men show brazen hate and disgust towards women, this behavioral dichotomy had been ascribed to the "patriarchal hypocrisy" embedded in men.573 The unconscious perception by men of the greater ability in women to reach the undifferentiated state of psyche is reasoned to be a cause for their intentional humiliation, wilful devaluation, and deliberate belittlement of women.574

According to Julia Kristeva, a psychoanalyst scholar, the psychological rejection and fear of the mother figure in males is the root cause for their behaviors that seek to subjugate women. Men in their infancy live in a state of "undifferentiated physical and psychic fusion" with the mother, experiencing "emotional exhilaration and jouissance".575 However, as they mature, sensing their separateness from the mother, they seek to become independent subjects and take recourse to paternal images and patriarchal behaviors with the hope of eliminating any possible further "undifferentiated/psychotic fusion" with the mother as they feel threatened by it.576 According to psychoanalyst Melanie Klein, the rejection and fear of the maternal image, in females, leads them to reject their own femininity.577 Tricarico hoped that porn becomes a place where men discard patriarchal antics, women embrace the sacred aspects, and audience incorporate porn as a joyful experience for the body – a genuine form of play that helps them approach the non-differentiated state.578 In being with other, we differentiate ourselves, and experience jouissance whilst becoming a unit being.579

Religious attitudes

Main article: Religious views on pornography

Many religions have long and vehemently opposed a wide range of sexual behaviors, as a result religious people are found highly susceptible to experience great distress in their use of pornography. Religious people who use pornography tend to feel sexually ashamed.580 Sexual shame—which arises from a person's perception of their self in other peoples mind, and a negative assessment of their own sexuality—is considered a powerful factor that over time governs an individual's behavior.581582 As sexuality is interwoven into one's personal identity, sexual shame or sexual embarrassment are found to attack the person's very sense of self.583

When a sexual shaming event occurs, the person attributes causation to oneself resulting in self condemnation, and experience feelings of sadness, loneliness, anger, unworthiness, and rejection, along with a perceived judgment of their self by others.584 In this mental landscape, a fear arises that ones sexual self needs to be hidden. This psychological process initiates and fuels further shame and lowers one's self-esteem.585 Sexual shame constricts the "psychic space for free play with one's sexuality".586 Sexual shame in people begets more shame, and leads to a cycle of powerlessness culminating in deepening negative emotions.587 Those who tend to feel shame easily are found to be at greater risk for depression and anxiety disorders.588 According to clinical psychologist Gershen Kaufman, all Sexual disorders are majorly "disorders of shame".589

The cause of attributing shame to sexuality is traced back to the biblical interpretation of nakedness being shameful.590 Much of the Christian mythology presented sexuality as an obstacle to be surmounted in the way of salvation. The major abrahamic religions condemn and consider all forms of nonmarital and nonreproductive sexual pleasure as unacceptable. In Hinduism, bhoga (sexual pleasure) is celebrated as a value in itself and is considered one of the two ways to nirvana, the other being the more demanding yoga.591 In the Hindu tantric view, watching coitus as an act of Shiva and Shakti is believed to unfurl the kundalini, and is considered equivalent to one's engaging in maithuna or the fifth M of the panchamakara.592 A central concept in Hinduism, purushartha, advocates pursuit of the four main goals for happiness: dharma (virtue), artha (riches), kama (pleasure), and moksha (freedom).593 The pursuit of Kama was elaborated by the sage Vatsyayana in his treatise Kama Sutra, which states that sexual pleasure and food are essential for the well-being of the body, and on both of them depend virtue and prosperity.594595 Food, despite causing indigestion sometimes, would still be consumed regularly, and so it must be with pleasure, which must be pursued with caution while eliminating unwanted or harmful effects. As no one abstains from cooking food worrying about beggars who ask for it, or restrain from sowing wheat fearing animals that destroy the crop, similarly, instructs Vatsyayana, that men and women acquire knowledge of Kama by the time they reach youth and pursue it even though dangers exist; and those who become accomplished in Dharma, Artha, and Kama would attain highest happiness in this world and hereafter.596597

According to the Buddha, happiness is of two types: one derived from "domestic life" and the other from "monastic life", and between the two, monastic kind is "superior".598 As a result of the Buddha's effective advocacy for monasticism, in Buddhist communities, marriage and divorce remained civil matters and never acquired sacremental significance.599 Counsel over sex life for householders was minimal, while for the monks it was extensive as in Vinaya since all sexual behaviors were meant to be suppressed for the sake of enlightenment.600 The early Buddhist texts castigated women as detrimental beings. The Buddha himself said often that a woman's body is "a vessel of impurity, full of stinking filth. It is like a rotten pit ... like a toilet, with nine holes pouring all sorts of filth."601 Once when it came to his notice that a monk, Suddina, transgressed celibacy with his wife for the sake of progeny, the Buddha chided him saying, "It were better for you, foolish man, that your male organ should enter the mouth of a terrible and poisonous snake, than that it should enter a woman."602 Per the Buddha, all sexual desires are incompatible with enlightenment.603 In Buddhism, people who even derive pleasure from watching others engage in sexual activity were relegated as pandaka (pusillanimous).604 The Buddha said sexuality is a fetter that must be evaded completely and men who engage with it are "impure" and will not be freed from "old age".605 After the Buddha died in old age,606 subsequent generations of Buddhists resolved their problematic attitudes towards sex by accommodating different views.607608

According to Indonesia's foremost Islamic preacher, Abdullah Gymnastiar, shame is a noble emotion commanded in the Quran and was held high by Muhammad, who had been quoted as saying "Faith is compiled of seventy branches... and shame is one of them." To cultivate shame in Muslims, their sexual gaze needs to be checked, as unchecked gaze is believed to be the door through which Satan enters and soils the heart.609 In 2006, when anti-pornography protests erupted in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority country, over the publication of the inaugural Indonesian edition of Playboy – Abdullah called for a legislation to ban pornography and embarked on a mission to shroud the state with a sense of shame, giving the slogan "the more shameful, the more faithful". During these protests, Indonesia's foremost Islamic newspaper, Republika, published daily front-page editorials which featured a logo of the word pornografi crossed out with a red X. The Jakarta office of Playboy Indonesia was ransacked by the members of Islamic Defenders Front (Front Pembela Islam or FPI), and bookstore owners were threatened not to sell any issue of the magazine. Consequently, in December 2008, Indonesian lawmakers signed an anti-pornography bill into law with overwhelming political support.610

Highly religious people are more likely to support policies against pornography such as censorship.611 Ironically, regions with highly religious and conservative people were found to search for more pornography online.612 Religious people are prone to having obsessive thoughts regarding sin and punishment by God over their pornography use causing them to feel ashamed, and perceive themselves to have pornography addiction while also suffering from OCD related symptoms.613 A study of sexually active religious people found those who are highly spiritually matured have less shame, while those not spiritually matured have high shame.614

See also

Notes

Citations

Works cited

Books

Journals and magazines

News and websites

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pornography.
  • The dictionary definition of pornography at Wiktionary
  • Quotations related to Pornography at Wikiquote

References

  1. Pornography can be defined as "material [e.g., pictures, films, videos or text] deemed sexual, given the context, that has the primary intention of sexually arousing the consumer, and is produced and distributed with the consent of all persons involved" (McDonald & Kirkman, 2019, p. 163). Central in the definition of pornography is the consent of all persons involved. Therefore, materials that were produced or distributed without the consent of at least one person involved (e.g., "revenge porn", "child pornography") were excluded from this definition (McDonald & Kirkman, 2019).[12] Pornography is best defined as a medium, such as a picture, video, or text, that is intended to be treated as sexually arousing (Rea, [41]). [...] pornography is framed as an aid for sexual arousal (Parvez, [32]).[13] Using pornography means to intentionally look at, watch, read, or listen to sexually arousing material (pictures, videos, films, written text or audio) which depicts nudity or explicit sexual behavior. This does not include participating in interactive sexual experiences in person or online, such as a "lap-dance" in a strip club or a live sex chat.[14]

  2. Anthropologist Paul Mellars of Stony Brook University in New York state says the focus on exaggerated sexual features fits with other artifacts found from the period, including phalluses carved out of bison horn and vulva inscribed on rocks. "It's sexually exaggerated to the point of being pornographic", Mellars says. "There's all this sexual symbolism bubbling up in that period. They were sex-mad." Conard used radiocarbon dates from bones and other artifacts found nearby to date the figurine. "It's at least 35,000 calendar years old, but I think it's much older than that", Conard says.[19]

  3. Representative studies indicate that pornography use is a common recreational activity—equivalent with other digitally mediated behaviors (e.g., video games, social media)—with a majority of men and a sizable plurality of women reporting regular use of pornography.[218]

  4. Using a large longitudinal sample of university students (N = 892) over a three-month time lag with two waves and a cross-lagged panel design, we found that pornography use does not prospectively predict the perpetration of intimate partner violence, and that the perpetration of intimate partner violence does not prospectively predict pornography use. Further, gender does not moderate these relationships.[281]

  5. McNair 2013, p. 20. - McNair, Brian (2013). Porno? Chic!: How Pornography Changed the World and Made it a Better Place. Routledge. ISBN 9780415572903. https://books.google.com/books?id=f47qOw2w5Q0C

  6. etymonline 2023. - "porn (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023. https://www.etymonline.com/word/porn#etymonline_v_18480

  7. Liddell & Scott 1940. - Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). A Greek–English Lexicon. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-864226-8. Archived from the original on 12 February 2023. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=pornogra/fos

  8. Athenaeus 1927. - Athenaeus (1927) [3rd CE]. "Book 13.567b". The Deipnosophists (in Greek). Translated by Gulick, Charles Burton. Harvard University Press, London. ISBN 9780674993617. Archived from the original on 6 December 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221206063327/https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2008.01.0405%3Acasaubonpage%3D567b

  9. McNair 2013, p. 21. - McNair, Brian (2013). Porno? Chic!: How Pornography Changed the World and Made it a Better Place. Routledge. ISBN 9780415572903. https://books.google.com/books?id=f47qOw2w5Q0C

  10. etymonline 2022. - "pornography". Online Etymology Dictionary. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2011. https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=pornography

  11. etymonline 2023. - "porn (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023. https://www.etymonline.com/word/porn#etymonline_v_18480

  12. etymonline 2023. - "porn (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023. https://www.etymonline.com/word/porn#etymonline_v_18480

  13. Talvacchia 2010. - Talvacchia, Bette (2010). "Pornography". In Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W.; Settis, Salvatore (eds.). The Classical Tradition. Cambridge, Mass. and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=LbqF8z2bq3sC&q=devil+poseidon+pan&pg=PA264

  14. Talvacchia 2010. - Talvacchia, Bette (2010). "Pornography". In Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W.; Settis, Salvatore (eds.). The Classical Tradition. Cambridge, Mass. and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=LbqF8z2bq3sC&q=devil+poseidon+pan&pg=PA264

  15. Talvacchia 2010. - Talvacchia, Bette (2010). "Pornography". In Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W.; Settis, Salvatore (eds.). The Classical Tradition. Cambridge, Mass. and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=LbqF8z2bq3sC&q=devil+poseidon+pan&pg=PA264

  16. OED 1989. - "pornography". Oxford English Dictionary. 1989. Archived from the original on 30 July 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2023. https://www.oed.com/oed2/00184357

  17. McKee et al. 2020. - McKee, Alan; Byron, Paul; Litsou, Katerina; Ingham, Roger (April 2020). "An Interdisciplinary Definition of Pornography: Results from a Global Delphi Panel". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 49 (3): 1085–1091. doi:10.1007/s10508-019-01554-4. PMC 7058557. PMID 31549362. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7058557

  18. Graves 2015. - Graves, Thomas (2015). "Pornography, definition of". The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality: 861–1042. doi:10.1002/9781118896877.wbiehs362. ISBN 978-1-4051-9006-0. https://doi.org/10.1002%2F9781118896877.wbiehs362

  19. Mikkola 2019, p. 2-12. - Mikkola, Mari (2019). Pornography: A Philosophical Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190640088. Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=RpSBDwAAQBAJ

  20. Pornography can be defined as "material [e.g., pictures, films, videos or text] deemed sexual, given the context, that has the primary intention of sexually arousing the consumer, and is produced and distributed with the consent of all persons involved" (McDonald & Kirkman, 2019, p. 163). Central in the definition of pornography is the consent of all persons involved. Therefore, materials that were produced or distributed without the consent of at least one person involved (e.g., "revenge porn", "child pornography") were excluded from this definition (McDonald & Kirkman, 2019).[12] Pornography is best defined as a medium, such as a picture, video, or text, that is intended to be treated as sexually arousing (Rea, [41]). [...] pornography is framed as an aid for sexual arousal (Parvez, [32]).[13] Using pornography means to intentionally look at, watch, read, or listen to sexually arousing material (pictures, videos, films, written text or audio) which depicts nudity or explicit sexual behavior. This does not include participating in interactive sexual experiences in person or online, such as a "lap-dance" in a strip club or a live sex chat.[14]

  21. McNair 2013, p. 19. - McNair, Brian (2013). Porno? Chic!: How Pornography Changed the World and Made it a Better Place. Routledge. ISBN 9780415572903. https://books.google.com/books?id=f47qOw2w5Q0C

  22. McNair 2013, p. 19. - McNair, Brian (2013). Porno? Chic!: How Pornography Changed the World and Made it a Better Place. Routledge. ISBN 9780415572903. https://books.google.com/books?id=f47qOw2w5Q0C

  23. Lubey 2022, p. 31. - Lubey, Kathleen (2022). What pornography knows : sex and social protest since the eighteenth century. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503611665. https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=31053

  24. Rudgley 2000, p. 184-200. - Rudgley, Richard (2000). "Venus Figurines: Sex Objects or Symbols?". The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-86270-5. Retrieved 28 September 2017. https://books.google.com/books?id=vhSHn-B89A0C&pg=PA195

  25. Tarrant 2016, p. 11. - Tarrant, Shira (2016). The pornography industry : what everyone needs to know. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190205126. Archived from the original on 5 March 2023. Retrieved 11 January 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=QSp2CwAAQBAJ

  26. Anthropologist Paul Mellars of Stony Brook University in New York state says the focus on exaggerated sexual features fits with other artifacts found from the period, including phalluses carved out of bison horn and vulva inscribed on rocks. "It's sexually exaggerated to the point of being pornographic", Mellars says. "There's all this sexual symbolism bubbling up in that period. They were sex-mad." Conard used radiocarbon dates from bones and other artifacts found nearby to date the figurine. "It's at least 35,000 calendar years old, but I think it's much older than that", Conard says.[19]

  27. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  28. Nemet-Nejat 1998, p. 137. - Nemet-Nejat, Karen Rhea (1998). Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood. ISBN 978-0313294976. https://archive.org/details/dailylifeinancie00neme/page/137

  29. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  30. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  31. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  32. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  33. Black & Green 1992, p. 150-152. - Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. The British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-1705-6. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2020. https://books.google.com/books?id=05LXAAAAMAAJ&q=Inana

  34. Robins 1993, p. 189-190. - Robins, Gay (1993). Women in Ancient Egypt. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-95469-6. Turin erotic papyrus. https://archive.org/details/womeninancienteg00robi

  35. Robins 1993, p. 189-190. - Robins, Gay (1993). Women in Ancient Egypt. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-95469-6. Turin erotic papyrus. https://archive.org/details/womeninancienteg00robi

  36. Robins 1993, p. 189-190. - Robins, Gay (1993). Women in Ancient Egypt. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-95469-6. Turin erotic papyrus. https://archive.org/details/womeninancienteg00robi

  37. Smith 2009. - Smith, Helena (9 December 2009). "Laid bare: the sex life of the ancient Greeks in all its physical glory". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 18 September 2021. Retrieved 6 March 2023. https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2009/dec/09/museums-greece

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  39. Pomeroy et al. 1999, p. 110. - Pomeroy, Sarah B.; Burstein, Stanley M.; Donlan, Walter; Roberts, Jennifer Tolbert (1999). Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195097436. Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=xu0ITwAf7IAC

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  41. Cartledge 2002, p. 89. - Cartledge, Paul (2002). The Greeks A Portrait of Self and Others. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0191577833. https://books.google.com/books?id=r-I4gcBlTqcC

  42. Parrinder 1996, p. 5-40. - Parrinder, Geoffrey (1996). Sexual Morality in the World's Religions. Oneworld Publications, Oxford. ISBN 9781851681082. https://books.google.com/books?id=7LsnAAAAYAAJ

  43. Parrinder 1996, p. 33. - Parrinder, Geoffrey (1996). Sexual Morality in the World's Religions. Oneworld Publications, Oxford. ISBN 9781851681082. https://books.google.com/books?id=7LsnAAAAYAAJ

  44. Perhaps no culture has cultivated sexual pleasure as a spiritual ideal to the extent of the ancient Hindus of India. From the fifth century ce onward, temples show sculptures of gods, nymphs, and ordinary people in erotic poses. Hindu sexual practices were codified in a sex manual, the Kama Sutra, which illustrates sexual positions, some of which would challenge a contortionist. It also holds recipes for alleged aphrodisiacs. This manual is believed to have been written sometime between the third and fifth centuries ce, when Christianity was ascending in the West. In its graphic representations of sexual positions and practices, the Kama Sutra reflected the Hindu belief that sex was a religious duty, not a source of shame or guilt.[28] Spiritual liberation is said to be a great bliss (ananda) that is the result of the internalization and transcendence of the very same sexual fire that is experienced in limited amounts through sexual engagement. Ultimately, for Hindus, sexuality is not one thing and spirituality another. They are, rather, two aspects of the very same fire, a fire that both gives rise to life and makes possible its transcendence. Or, one might say that they are but two names for a single internal river, which, has the capacity to flow in two directions.[29] Bhartrihari is a true representative of Indian culture in his extreme views on sex and renunciation. In his Sringarasataka {verse 19} he says: "In the worthless and changeable world, learned men should either pass their days in drinking the nectar of spiritual knowledge or devote themselves to the pleasant enjoyment of women, whose breasts and buttocks are both hard and thick set and whose hips and loins are fully developed and extended." ... The poet considers the sensual pleasures as the ultimate end of heaven which is reserved for the fortunate few [verse 57].[30]

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  457. She didn't know that the dangers of it, like if the condom breaks, and that we could get more STI's with the micro-tears, and just the condoms in general: Swelling, yeast infections, things of that nature—she just had no idea.[268] After hours of sex with no breaks, attempting to endure the friction of the condom in your vagina or anus is...impossible. And to do this daily amounts to an occupational work hazard. Of course, due to the lack of respect towards the adult business and blatant disregard from society regarding the sexual comfort or even opinions of female performers, none of this mattered. No one asked us.[269]

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  543. Griffith et al. 2013, pp. 621–632. - Griffith, James D.; Mitchell, Sharon; Hart, Christian L.; Adams, Lea T.; Gu, Lucy L. (2013). "Pornography Actresses: An Assessment of the Damaged Goods Hypothesis". The Journal of Sex Research. 50 (7): 621–632. doi:10.1080/00224499.2012.719168. ISSN 0022-4499. JSTOR 42002094. PMID 23167939. S2CID 21131799. https://www.jstor.org/stable/4200209

  544. Tricarico 2018, p. 61. - Tricarico, Giorgio (2018). Lost Goddesses: A Kaleidoscope on Porn. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780429915857. https://books.google.com/books?id=TCZTDwAAQBAJ

  545. Tricarico 2018, p. 68. - Tricarico, Giorgio (2018). Lost Goddesses: A Kaleidoscope on Porn. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780429915857. https://books.google.com/books?id=TCZTDwAAQBAJ

  546. Pettis 2014, p. 62. - Pettis, Jeffrey B. (2014). "Androgyny". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). Fordham University, New York, US: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

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  548. Madden 2014, p. 1778. - Madden, Kathryn (2014). "Tantrism". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). National Institute for the Psychotherapies, New York, US: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

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  550. Camphausen 1999, p. 225. - Camphausen, Rufus C. (1999). The encyclopedia of sacred sexuality : from aphrodisiacs and ecstasy to yoni worship and zap-lam yoga. Inner Traditions. ISBN 978-0892817191. https://www.abebooks.com/9780892817191/Encyclopedia-Sacred-Sexuality-Aphrodisiacs-Exstasy-0892817194/plp

  551. Biernacki 2006, pp. 202–205. - Biernacki, Loriliai (2006). "Sex Talk and Gender Rites: Women and the Tantric Sex Rite". International Journal of Hindu Studies. 10 (2): 185–206. doi:10.1007/s11407-006-9022-4. JSTOR 20106970. https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs11407-006-9022-4

  552. Amazzone 2014, p. 546. - Amazzone, Laura (2014). "Durga". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA, USA: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

  553. Jain (2014), pp. 14–15; Leeming (2014), pp. 1646–1647; Sarbacker (2011), pp. 34, 38. - Jain, Andrea (2014). Selling Yoga: From Counterculture to Pop Culture. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199390250. https://books.google.com/books?id=x2u6BAAAQBAJ

  554. Jain 2014, pp. 14–15. - Jain, Andrea (2014). Selling Yoga: From Counterculture to Pop Culture. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199390250. https://books.google.com/books?id=x2u6BAAAQBAJ

  555. Bailey 2014, p. 1669. - Bailey, Lee W. (2014). "Shiva". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). Ithaca College, USA: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

  556. Plancke 2020. - Plancke, Carine (2020). "Yoni touch and talk: Sacralizing the female sex through tantra". Sexualities. 23 (5–6). University of Ghent, Belgium: 834–848. doi:10.1177/1363460719861832. https://doi.org/10.1177/1363460719861832

  557. Bailey 2014, pp. 1669–1670. - Bailey, Lee W. (2014). "Shiva". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). Ithaca College, USA: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

  558. Narayanan 2008, p. 569Lidke 2003, p. 125Saran 2018, pp. 10, 45 - Narayanan, Vasudha (2008). Flood, Gavin (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9788126516292. https://books.google.com/books?id=LexraSEgRfIC

  559. The picture of human gender that emerges in the classical age of Hinduism (ca. 300 C.E.) is one in which a bi-gendered soul reincarnates into both female and male bodies, which are themselves bi-gendered in the sense that all bodies always contains both a female principle, and a male principle. In a theological sense, all beings are spiritual androgynes. Human beings are sexually inclined because sexuality is God's creative energy, and a function of Its inclination to reunite the two poles of Its bipolar being. This thematic is worked out in numerous ways in the Hindu scriptures in such a way that a serious student of Hinduism can find a paradigm for nearly all possible sexual relationships.[345] The copulation of Shiva and Shakti represent the nondual nature of reality itself, and it is erotic energy, sometimes believed to be located in the concentrated substance of sexual fluids, that is imagined as flowing from the bottom of the spine to the top of the spine, where the erotic union between Shakti and Shiva occurs. This is especially the case in some tantric traditions, where techniques of erotic visualization or ritual copulation are used for the sake of stimulating and then sublimating energy toward higher states of knowledge, culminating in the realization of nonduality.[340] [I]n the tantric sexual ritual of maithuna, the sensation of bliss (ānanda) at the heart of the sexual act is seen as the power of the goddess (Śakti) in a tangible form, and the discernment of that reality differentiates maithuna from the mundane expression of intercourse, and activates the inner transformation of the sādhaka.[346]

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  561. Madden 2014, pp. 1778–1779. - Madden, Kathryn (2014). "Tantrism". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). National Institute for the Psychotherapies, New York, US: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

  562. Madden 2014, pp. 1778–1779. - Madden, Kathryn (2014). "Tantrism". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (second ed.). National Institute for the Psychotherapies, New York, US: Springer Reference. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.

  563. Tantra is not easy to define but the word was applied to scriptures, of which there were many varieties, and it was perhaps derived from a root meaning a 'thread', suggesting the male and female principles of which the universe is woven. It has been said that Tantra was the rediscovery of the mystery of woman, for every woman became an incarnation of the Shakti, the divine woman and mother. In rituals the female yogi, the yogini, was naked and aroused the feeling of terrifying emotion before the cosmic mystery of creation. Every naked woman incarnated Prakriti, Nature, and in ritual she became the goddess, the Shakti. ... For Tantra the greatest energy was sexual and the sexual organs represented cosmic powers, as symbolized in the linga of Shiva. Some yogis worshipped their own linga, with full ritual, and sexual arousal indicated the coming of the divine presence. The snake was naturally a symbol of sexual power, in the kundalini and other concepts. Similarly the female yoni was worshipped, and many sculptures depicted not only the female body but its prominent genitals. Sexual intercourse (maithuna) of any kind was treated in a ritual fashion, between husband and wife, or different partners, or with a temple girl. Sexual union was transformed into a ceremonial through which the human couple became a divine pair. ... Sexual union thus provided a complete model of the union of God and the soul. Since it was so profoundly Indian, Tantra not only flourished in theistic Hinduism but also in pantheistic, it developed in ascetic Buddhism, and some of its methods were adopted by even more ascetic Jainism.[349] In tantrism, an orgasmic sexual union is equated to the achievement of a high state of spirituality (Skora 2007; Lousada and Angel 2011), while these sex rites are also said to have elevated women’s identity (Shaw 1994; Biernacki 2006).[350]

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  583. Volk et al. 2016, p. 244–259. - Volk, Fred; Thomas, John; Sosin, Lisa; Jacob, Victoria; Moen, Carolyn (April–September 2016). "Religiosity, Developmental Context, and Sexual Shame in Pornography Users: A Serial Mediation Model". Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity. 23 (2/3): 244–259. doi:10.1080/10720162.2016.1151391. S2CID 147808068. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10720162.2016.1151391

  584. Volk et al. 2016, p. 244–259. - Volk, Fred; Thomas, John; Sosin, Lisa; Jacob, Victoria; Moen, Carolyn (April–September 2016). "Religiosity, Developmental Context, and Sexual Shame in Pornography Users: A Serial Mediation Model". Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity. 23 (2/3): 244–259. doi:10.1080/10720162.2016.1151391. S2CID 147808068. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10720162.2016.1151391

  585. Volk et al. 2016, p. 244–259. - Volk, Fred; Thomas, John; Sosin, Lisa; Jacob, Victoria; Moen, Carolyn (April–September 2016). "Religiosity, Developmental Context, and Sexual Shame in Pornography Users: A Serial Mediation Model". Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity. 23 (2/3): 244–259. doi:10.1080/10720162.2016.1151391. S2CID 147808068. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10720162.2016.1151391

  586. Cole 2014. - Cole, Kristen L (24 July 2014). "Pornography, censorship, and public sex: exploring feminist and queer perspectives of (public) pornography through the case of Pornotopia". Porn Studies. 1 (3): 227–241. doi:10.1080/23268743.2014.927708. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F23268743.2014.927708

  587. Volk et al. 2016, p. 244–259. - Volk, Fred; Thomas, John; Sosin, Lisa; Jacob, Victoria; Moen, Carolyn (April–September 2016). "Religiosity, Developmental Context, and Sexual Shame in Pornography Users: A Serial Mediation Model". Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity. 23 (2/3): 244–259. doi:10.1080/10720162.2016.1151391. S2CID 147808068. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10720162.2016.1151391

  588. Kämmerer 2019. - Kämmerer, Annette (9 August 2019). "The Scientific Underpinnings and Impacts of Shame". Scientific American. Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 14 February 2023. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-scientific-underpinnings-and-impacts-of-shame/

  589. Kaufman 2004. - Kaufman, Gershen (2004). The Psychology of Shame: Theory and Treatment of Shame-Based Syndromes (second ed.). Springer Publishing Company. ISBN 9780826166739. https://books.google.com/books?id=YZFEzl4SuU4C

  590. In the bible, nakedness is a source of shame. The Book of Genesis 2:25 says of Adam and Eve, "And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed." That changed when they rebelled against God's commandment and ate of the tree of knowledge. From then on, they felt ashamed in each other's presence: "And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons." This biblical interpretation of nakedness as shameful still deeply informs the social norms and conventions that determine how we deal with human physicality and sexuality. Although our notions of whether, how, where and in the presence of whom a person may be undressed have changed over the centuries, the shame we feel when we transgress the norms has remained.[363] /wiki/Book_of_Genesis

  591. In much of Christian mythology, sex is a barrier to be overcome. Mortality is transcended and salvation achieved by redemption and ascetic denial of the senses, especially one's sexual impulses. Christian views have generally been very uncomfortable with any form of sensual pleasure, especially erotic and sexual pleasures. In the West, sexual pleasure is disruptive and dangerous to both the individual and society. It is a monster in the groin, which, if unleashed, could drive men to uncontrollable indulgence and destroy society. Work, not play, is redemptive. Sexual pleasure is moral when it leads men and women to undertake the burdens and responsibilities of raising children. In this view, sexual relations are immoral and sinful whenever they are indulged in outside marriage or without an openness to procreation. Thus orthodox Judaism, official Catholicism, and Protestant fundamentalists condemn masturbation and all forms of nonmarital, nonreproductive sex. Also unacceptable are alternate sexual behaviors and relationships—playful/recreational sex, gay unions, pre- and co-marital sex, and intimate friendships. In contrast, Hinduism celebrates sexual pleasure as a value in its own right, to be enjoyed for what it brings the participants. Kama, "the pursuit of love of pleasure, both sensual and aesthetic", represents one of the four goals of life in the Hindu tradition. In Hindu philosophy, Bhoga (sexual pleasure) is viewed as one of two paths leading to nirvana, the Buddha, and final deliverance. Yoga, spiritual exercise, is the alternate, and more demanding, path to liberation and the merging of the individual with the universal. In the Tantric yoga tradition, a man or woman can even practice channeling his or her sexual energies from the lowest chakra to the highest and achieve cosmic awareness and transcendence in solo sex or masturbation.[365]

  592. [T]he Goddess is not a static icon but an active partner with Siva in erotic love making. Watching this is so intoxicating that it befuddles the senses and opens the final door for the rising kundalinî. [...] watching Siva and Sakti in union is the equivalent of engaging in the fifth M oneself.[366]

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