Anti-pornography campaigners have frequently claimed that porn studies need to take the economics of pornography seriously, yet often this amounts to little more than the idea that pornography is a capitalist product. This article brings together J.K Gibson- Graham’s work on post-capitalism and Eve Sedgwick’s notion of ‘paranoid’ and ‘reparative’ reading in order to think about the performative effects of the narratives we use to talk about the pornography industry. It proposes a move away from a capitalocentric understanding of online pornography towards a ‘diverse economies’ approach: one that demonstrates the multitude of ways in which pornography exists outside of the rubric of capitalism. This helps to avoid the affective state of para...
This article examines the lack of research on the pornography industry and the means of addressing t...
An increasing amount of sex work in the United Kingdom is now digitally mediated, as workers and cli...
In an earlier article in this journal, I critiqued a particular theoretical approach to prostitu-tio...
This article investigates pornography’s free speech at a time when commercial pornography has floode...
This article focuses on the historical roots of pornography in different media. Theoretically, it is...
The history of public discourse (and in many cases, academic publishing) on pornography is, notoriou...
With the internet being more accessible and more faster than ever, online pornography have undergone...
This study examines the impact of new technologies on the production and consumption of pornographic...
Electronic commerce offers immense opportunities to the producers of pornographic products and servi...
This essay considers the viability of pornography marketed as resistant or revolutionary within hege...
This article examines the lack of research on the pornography industry and the means of addressing t...
Despite their increasing size and ease of access, the pornography and erotica industries have receiv...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
The Digital Networks, Digital Pub(l)ics panels (two panels in total) develop a critical conversation...
It has been an assumption of most anti-pornography discourse that porn damages women (and children) ...
This article examines the lack of research on the pornography industry and the means of addressing t...
An increasing amount of sex work in the United Kingdom is now digitally mediated, as workers and cli...
In an earlier article in this journal, I critiqued a particular theoretical approach to prostitu-tio...
This article investigates pornography’s free speech at a time when commercial pornography has floode...
This article focuses on the historical roots of pornography in different media. Theoretically, it is...
The history of public discourse (and in many cases, academic publishing) on pornography is, notoriou...
With the internet being more accessible and more faster than ever, online pornography have undergone...
This study examines the impact of new technologies on the production and consumption of pornographic...
Electronic commerce offers immense opportunities to the producers of pornographic products and servi...
This essay considers the viability of pornography marketed as resistant or revolutionary within hege...
This article examines the lack of research on the pornography industry and the means of addressing t...
Despite their increasing size and ease of access, the pornography and erotica industries have receiv...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
The Digital Networks, Digital Pub(l)ics panels (two panels in total) develop a critical conversation...
It has been an assumption of most anti-pornography discourse that porn damages women (and children) ...
This article examines the lack of research on the pornography industry and the means of addressing t...
An increasing amount of sex work in the United Kingdom is now digitally mediated, as workers and cli...
In an earlier article in this journal, I critiqued a particular theoretical approach to prostitu-tio...