The feminist pornography debates are centered around the
opposition between pro-censorship factions and the pro-sex radicals
or sex positives. But what exactly is the relationship between
these debates and postmodern theories of reading and
performativity? What happens to these debates when they are placed
in the context of colonial or U.S. racial histories? What is the
history behind today's sexual radicalism? How radical is it?
In the first section of Sex Positives?, Nicola Pitchford, Naomi
Morgenstern, Victoria L. Smith, and Gabrielle N. Dean focus on the
recent sex wars in U.S. feminism, especially within lesbian
culture. Elissa J. Rashkin, Gaurav Desai, and James Smalls broaden
the terms of the sex wars debates in the second section to include
sexualized racial and colonial representations, from Chicana,
African, and African-American perspectives. Finally, Sander L.
Gilman, Laura Ciolkowski, and Laura Frost explore a variety of
historical contexts for understanding contemporary forms of sexual
representation and the repression of such representations.
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