Voice Male--Spring 2007
Men and Pornography
Real Men, Real Choices
By Robert Jensen
Real Men
First, let me say what I don't mean by the term "real men." I am not referring to some concept of an "authentic" masculinity, to some notion of what it means to be a real man. In this sense, there are no real men. Masculinity, like femininity, is a trap, a way to constrain human beings--wildly variable in our capacities--into predetermined social roles that define and confine rather than open up and liberate.
But in shaping a political strategy, we must take note of where and how real male humans really live in the real world. After many years of talking to men, in formal research interviews and informally, here's what I've concluded:
Although we can never know who they are, there likely are some men who are beyond the reach of the call to love and justice, probably forever. Some men are so committed to dominance and male supremacy that they have, for all practical purposes, lost their souls. There are no doubt complex explanations for this, but in practical political terms, these men are not my target audience. The same can be said of some white people, some rich people, some Americans. For whatever reason, some people in positions of privilege and power seem beyond the reach of an appeal based in empathy and shared humanity. Coming to terms with that rather sad reality is difficult, but necessary. The good news, however, is that we don't have to win over every single man to change the culture.
Our focus should be on the men who are struggling. These are the men I know and speak with often. That is the man I am. We struggle to make sense of our socialization. We struggle to be decent in a world in which it's easy to simply accept our privilege and power. Often, we fail. But there's a case that can be made to those men, a combination of an argument from justice and an argument from self-interest. The argument from justice is simple: Participating in the sexual exploitation industries--pornography, prostitution, strip bars--is incompatible with a serious commitment to our stated principles; there can be no gender justice in a world where some women can be bought and sold.
But we also have to offer men a vision of the world that gives them a way out of the masculinity trap. Many men feel distress over the way in which patriarchy undermines our humanity. I emphasize this not to elevate men's pain, but to argue that if we don't take account of men's pain we may not be able to change the world to end men's violence against women.
I was slow to understand this, and ironically it was Gail Dines who helped me--or, perhaps, forced me--to see this. Gail has a son, and we have talked often about her hopes for a world in which her son, and boys and men like him, can find space to be fully human. Gail has often told me that I can be too hard on men, that in my anger--at men and at myself--I was missing an essential aspect of this work. I was missing the universal love that the late Andrea Dworkin expressed, not only for women but for men. It took me longer than it should have to fully understand that feminism--especially the most radical feminism--is rooted not in contempt for men but in holding men accountable out of a faith in human beings.
That's what I want for my son. Like Gail, I have one child, a boy. And, like Gail, I want my boy to be a decent person in a world where being decent is the norm. I don't want him to be a man. I want him to be a human being. My boy came into this world as a human being. He deserves the chance to hold on to that humanity, as we all do. And if we don't find a way to allow our boy children to do that, I fear that our girl children have no chance.
Real choices
The pornographers and their apologists have done a masterful job of focusing the debate on the choices of women who participate in the industry. If women choose to perform in pornography, who are we to condemn them? I agree; I have never condemned the women in pornography, nor has anyone in the feminist anti-pornography movement. Many complex questions arise from women's participation in pornography, none of which are my subject here. Instead, I want to refocus on men and our choices. The questions I want to ask are not about why women choose to perform in pornography, but why men choose to masturbate to pornography. What does that choice that a man makes mean for women, and what does it mean for the man?
Porn PointsEffects on Children
Effects on Users
Effects on Relationships
Effects on Women's Safety
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My argument is simple: When men choose to spend their money on pornography, they are (1) contributing to the subordination of women in the sexual exploitation industries; and (2) robbing themselves of the possibility of being fully human.
On (1): For the sake of argument, let's assume that some women who perform in pornography make completely free choices to participate, as women in the industry often assert that they do, with absolutely no constraints or limitations on them. That could be the case, though it doesn't alter the unavoidable conclusion that some number of women in the industry--likely a majority--choose under conditions that make choice much more complex (histories of sexual abuse, economic hardship, perceived and/or actual lack of opportunities, within a culture that glamorizes the sex industry).
In most cases, the consumer has no reliable way to judge which women are participating in the industry as a result of a meaningfully free choice. When a consumer plays a DVD at home, he has no information that could help him make such a judgment. Therefore, he likely is using a woman whose choice to perform was not meaningfully free.
But what if he had information about the nature of the conditions, objective and subjective, under which the women made that choice? Even that is not so simple. So long as the industry is profitable and a large number of women are needed to make such films, it is certain that some number of those women will be choosing under conditions that render the concept of "free choice" virtually meaningless. When a man buys or rents a DVD, he is creating the demand for pornography that will lead to some number of women being used--that is, being hurt in some fashion, psychologically and/or physically--no matter what he knows or thinks he knows about a specific woman.
So, a man's choice to buy or rent pornography is complicated by two realities. First, he likely can't know the conditions under which women made their choices, and hence can't know how meaningful the choices were. And second, even if he could make such a determination about specific women in a specific film he watches, the demand for pornography that his purchase helps create ensures that some other women will be hurt.
No "bad" orgasms?
On (2): During a discussion of negative sexual experiences, I once heard a man say, "There's no such thing as a bad orgasm." I assume that he meant getting off is getting off--no matter what the circumstances or methods, it's always good. But there are bad orgasms. There are orgasms that hurt people, mostly women and children. And there are orgasms that keep men cut off from ourselves.
In using pornography, we men not only objectify women but also objectify ourselves. In my experience, which is also the experience of many men I've talked to over the years, we feel ourselves go emotionally numb when viewing pornography and masturbating, a state of being "checked out." To enter into the pornographic world and experience that intense sexual rush, men tend to turn off some of the emotional reactions that typically are connected to sexual experience with a real person--a sense of the other's humanity, an awareness of being present with another person, the recognition of something outside our own bodies. For me, while watching pornography over the past decade as a researcher, I could feel it happen--that emotional numbness, that objectifying of self.
Meg Baldwin, a feminist law professor at Florida State University who left academia to run a women's center, once gave me more insight into this process. Baldwin, who has worked for years with women who are prostituted, said one of the common experiences of those women is coping with the unprovoked rage and violence that johns will direct at them. Baldwin told me that after hearing countless stories about this reaction by men, she concluded the rage was rooted in this self-objectification. She sketched this process:
Men typically go to prostitutes to have a sexual experience without having to engage emotionally. Yet when they are in the sexual situation, they sometimes find themselves having those very same emotional reactions they wanted to avoid, simply because our emotional lives cannot be completely controlled. When they feel those things they wanted to suppress, the johns lash out at the most convenient target--the women who they believe caused them to feel what they didn't want to feel.
If Baldwin is right--and, based on my own experience, I believe she is--we could say that men turn women into objects in order to turn ourselves into objects, so that we can split off emotion from body during sex, in search of a sexual experience in which we don't have to feel. But because sex is always more than a physical act, men seeking this split-off state often find themselves having strong emotional reactions, which can get channeled into violence and cruelty.
Again, the women in those situations endure the violence connected to men's inability to be fully human. But this system also doesn't produce truly healthy lives for men. Is an orgasm really worth all that? I think there are lots of bad orgasms in a world in which men are socialized to suppress the complex emotional realities involved in sex. Women suffer the consequences in dramatic ways. Men often suffer quietly, until they lash out. When we men can't face our own pain, what are the chances we can empathize with women's pain?
What is sex for?
I want to conclude by talking about sexual morality.
Before you all run for the exits, let me explain what I don't mean by that term. I don’t mean sexual morality in the typical way the phrase is used in this culture, the "morality" of so-called family values. We must reject, of course, the patriarchal impositions of a traditional set of sexual norms that tend to be rooted in the control of women, the dominance of men, and the denial of the humanity of lesbians and gay men. Over the years many of us have shied away from any talk about the moral issues involved in sexuality out of a fear of being labeled reactionary.
But we must not be afraid to talk about the need in any culture for there to be a collective conversation about the simple question "What is sex for?" For liberals and libertarians, the question isn’t central; sex is for whatever any individual or group of individuals wants. For religious conservatives, the answer is dictated by patriarchal tradition, and sex is something dangerous that must be tightly controlled. That’s why pornography is so attractive to both liberals and conservatives. Liberals celebrate it and march into the adult bookstore proudly; conservatives decry it as they place their order online.
It's pretty clear what sex is for in the world of pornography. In an Adult Video News story on gonzo directors, the writer described the typical viewer as "the solo stroking consumer who merely wants to cut to the chase, get off on the good stuff, then, if they really wanna catch some acting, plot and dialog, pop in the latest Netflix disc." In other words, sex is for simple physical sensation, delivered as efficiently and quickly as possible, with no concern for who is used in the process or how they are used. In that world, pornography will always be attractive because pornography works: it delivers that orgasm. Once a man has accepted that understanding of sex, the quest is for the best pornography to deliver that orgasm with the most intensity, and other considerations--about the costs to the people who make pornography, the politics of the images, or the harms that may result from the industry--drop out of sight.
The mystery of humanity
For me, the question "what is sex for?" is one of those questions that is meant never to be answered. The point isn't to try to take the mystery of sex and contain it. The point is to understand the importance of the question and create the conditions for an open, honest, searching--and likely unending--discussion of it. The goal is not to run from the complexity, but to understand how the joy in that mystery can be deepened by collective conversation aimed not at control and domination, but at liberation and equality.
The feminist anti-pornography movement is, of course, fundamentally political--it's about changing an inherently unjust distribution of power. But at the core of any politics is the most basic moral question: What are people for? What kind of animals are we? What does it mean to be human in the modern world? Part of that question is wrapped up in the meaning we make of male and female, part of which is coming to judgment about what sex is for.
All these are fundamentally moral questions, and the long-term success of our politics depends on having answers that can speak to these questions, with which we all are struggling, or should be.
Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and serves on the advisory board of the Men's Resource Center for Change and Voice Male magazine. His latest book is Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity (South End Press, 2007). He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu and his articles can be found online at http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/index.html. This article is an edited version of a talk given to the Pornography and Pop Culture conference at Wheelock College, Boston, March 24, 2007.








