Pornography and its alleged harmfulness has been a burning issue in
politics and the media throughout 2013. British Prime Minister David Cameron
wants porn-filters, scientists want to know what porn does to our brains and
the city of Los Angeles wants its porn performers to wear condoms at all times.
When it comes to gay porn though, there is plenty of discussion in
academia but barely any in the media.
So let’s get started.
Gail Dines is the author of Pornland: How Porn has Hijacked our
Society; she is a professor in sociology and a founder member of the activist
group Stop Porn Culture. She is the perfect person to tell us whether these
ample sociological debates over pornography are inclusive of gay porn and, if
so, what the pressing issues are.
Dines proves to be very enthusiastic to discuss the matter.
‘The fight has always been between women and straight porn,’ she
says. ‘I think that gay men have not got into this, and if they have, they’ve
sided with the pro-porn feminists.’
Dines has plenty of questions about the gay porn industry but the
one she speaks most animatedly about is the issue of racial stereotyping.
‘When I was researching my book on gay porn I was shocked at the
level of racism,’ she says. ‘A lot of gay porn is racist in the way it
hyper-masculinizes black men and feminizes Asian men.
‘Asian men are always turned into “twinks” and “fuckees”, while the
black men are always the “fuckers” of as many men as they can lay their hands
on – especially white men.
‘In this country [the USA], racism has always been sexualized. The
idea is that black women are whores and black men are animalistic “fuckers” who
are after white women.
‘That’s the history of racism in America – black people were
defined out of humanness into animalistic sexuality and that’s what was
legitimizing the lynching of black men and the raping of black women.
‘It swirls around the culture – those racist, sexist stereotypes
are in this [American] culture – so when they come to produce porn, it’s just
sexualizing the stereotypes of black and Asian men.’
This is just one topic GSN discussed with Gail Dines, others will
be covered in a later feature, but endemic racism is such a strong allegation
to make against the gay porn industry it merits seeking a case for the defense
here and now.
Mike Stabile and Jack Judah Shamama run Gay Porn Blog, a popular
website for blogs, videos, news and discussion of all things within the gay
porn industry. They say they have been ‘blogging about gay porn since there was
an internet with porn to blog about’, so they know the industry as well as anyone.
Stabile and Shamama prove to be very approachable and provide firm
responses to Dines’ views on racism in porn.
Stabile says: ‘Yes, porn has strains of racism. But so do politics,
so does larger culture.
‘Where porn differs is that it offers tremendously varied versions
of gay life; there are Asian tops and plenty of black bottoms. Part of the
excitement about the internet is that you can see your body, and your
sexuality, represented without limits.
‘So yes, if you’re looking for racism, you’ll find it – that’s what
free speech is about. Sometimes it’s ugly, but it’s wrong to paint with too
broad a brush.
Shamama adds: ‘When people start to talk about porn (especially gay
porn) in the context of social responsibility I tend to get nervous because if
you follow their arguments out to their logical conclusions they always seems
to end up advocating for censorship, whether they mean to or not.
‘You can take any creative medium – modern art, rap music – and
cherry pick racist or sexist examples (especially when you take them out of
context) and easily apply that to the medium as a whole.’
So is gay porn fundamentally racist, as Gail Dines says? Or are
videos featuring Asian ‘twinks’ and black ‘fuckers’ just one sub-category in a
pluralistic industry that seeks to cater for all tastes?
GSN took to some gay porn forums to garner the opinions of the
consumers themselves.
On the forums of gay porn site Just Us Boys, user ‘Agromac’ told
us: ‘So long as you bear in mind what porn is then you’re alright – it’s
entertainment, fantasy. If you start thinking it’s more than that, like a
reality for which to strive, then you’re in trouble.
‘If porn does have any kind of stereotypes, then there has to be a
market for it, but then that’s where the fantasy comes in – bear in mind it's
not reality.’
User ‘ElmosToe’ said: ‘The racial stereotypes found in porn exist
because they exist in society first. Porn can be harmful in the sense it merely
perpetuates those stereotypes and can contribute to a lack of respect towards
others by the viewer.
‘Personally, I think some people can tend to, unintentionally, turn
what they don’t understand and may fear into a fetish as a way to explore and
understand their curiosity.
‘An example of this would be the myth that black men have bigger
dicks. This took root several centuries back, starting in Europe and eventually
carrying over to the US. The idea of “sexual threat”, that black men in
particular were sub-human, animalistic and lust-driven.’
Also among these responses were several negative reactions to the
idea of academics being vocal about gay porn.
‘PAbear’, for example, said: ‘They need to get a grip. It’s not
about making societal commentary, it’s about getting your dick hard and then
getting off.
‘Remember, porn is a tool. It’s a tool for the makers to make money
and it’s a tool for the viewers to get off. We’ve got to stop making it the
be-all-and-end-all of society.’
This skepticism for academic criticism echoes a comment from
Stabile of Gay Porn Blog: ‘At the end of the day, Ms Dines doesn’t like
sexuality. She's called for Playboy to be banned and for BDSM images to be
outlawed.
‘Sexuality may not be a big part of her life, but it’s a big part
of the lives of a lot of people – men, women, gay, straight, black, white,
Asian. And for those of us who do like porn, and don’t see sexuality as a
negative, we don’t want to be told that what we’re looking at is wrong or
shameful.’
There seems to be a general acceptance on both sides of this debate
that racial stereotypes do indeed exist in gay porn, but are they present in ‘a
lot of it’, as Gail Dines says, or in ‘cherry-picked examples’ as Jack Judah
Shamama says?
One repeated suggestion is that, in porn, racial stereotypes only
exist only as a reflection of the society they are created for; that if there
were no demand then there would be no supply.
If, by this logic, the accusations of racism were turned from the
creators of gay porn onto the consumers of gay porn, surely the same questions
would still apply; is it endemic or is it isolated examples? Is it just
harmless sexual fantasy that has no decisive influence on society, or something
more sinister?
If we are to separate porn consumers from the visual porn industry
itself, then it is worth looking to the written erotica industry.
The publishing industry for gay erotica is very precise in its targeting
of specific reader preferences and caters largely (although certainly not
exactly) to the same consumers as gay visual porn.
Make Mine to Go author Dilo Keith (a professional pseudonym) writes
gay erotica that is fuelled by a lifetime’s immersion in gay culture and by her
own experiences in BDSM culture.
A self-described ‘queer female’, Keith says she is an avid reader
of written gay fiction, but only an occasional watcher of gay porn; so she
knows the audience well, but is neither an avid consumer nor a critic of visual
gay porn itself.
She is the closest we are likely to get to an informed but
impartial opinion.
‘My experience [with gay porn videos] is mostly from what I see
posted on sites like this [Just Us Boys forums],’ Keith tells us. ‘Men, more
than women, tend to get turned on by very specific things, including race. I
don’t think gay and non-gay men differ all that much.
‘I don’t get the sense there’s a huge amount of racial inequality
depicted, not more than any other element.
‘Like most porn, it can perpetuate stereotypes, encourage turning
people into fetish objects and so on. But non-porn media does the same thing by
creating unrealistic standards for beauty or success or whatever.
‘For most men, racial preferences probably don’t cause a problem in
real life – it’s just what they want to watch. I’d rather not encourage more
racially-based porn, but I’m not going to support regulating something there’s
a market for if it involves consenting adults who do no actual harm as a result
of it.’
Whether or not this is correct, that there is ‘no actual harm’ as a
result of racial stereotyping in gay porn, is a matter of each individual’s
moral opinion.
Likewise, whether or not gay porn is a ripe subject matter for
academic debate is open to question.
But while pornography at large is being hotly debated in politics
and the media, and with gay porn being largely ignored in both arenas, the most
important thing is to ask the questions.
I read this article 2x - once at Gaystar News and again here and to me, it is still a confusing mish-mash of opinions.
ReplyDeleteIs the Gay porn industry racist? Of course it is, but there is variety enough to satisfy every proclivity imaginable. As a business, the porn industry caters to and cashes in on our own inbred 'racism' as Gay men; I.E. 'No fats, no fems, no daddies, no Blacks, no Jews, no Asians, ete, etc."
I don't consider myself a racist, but I know what turns me on. ☺☺
No porn is not racist! It's about preference, what is marketable to the target population. In the porn industry their is something for everyone.
ReplyDeletePorn is definitely racist. It's one of the reasons I left the industry.
DeleteYour "viewpoint" is nothing more than of the common Black sell-out. One who instead of calling out racism when it's right in your face, calls it "preference" instead. For you were weak-minded enough to listen to the White-domination of gay media that has guilted Blacks into thinking they're being drama-queens and wrong if we dare to called a spade, "a spade" when it comes to racism.
http://www.tresx-rayvision.com/2010/05/dumb-black-sell-out-mo-fo.html
thanks for your comment LeNair, I always look forward to what you say because of your work within the porn industry.
DeleteYes, even Diesel Washington called out a few porn stars for using the term "preference" over "racist". I for one believe that the industry is incredibly racist. I mean, it's right in your face . . . Thug Hunter? Really, though?
Deleteyeah I don't get those sites @ all
Delete