Gail Dines
Born
Manchester, The United Kingdom
Genre
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Pornland: How Porn Has Hijacked Our Sexuality
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published
2010
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17 editions
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Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Text-Reader
by
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published
1994
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9 editions
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Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Critical Reader
by
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published
2014
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9 editions
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Pornography
by
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published
1997
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11 editions
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Dedicated to the People of Darfur: Writings on Fear, Risk, and Hope
by
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published
2009
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6 editions
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Exploiting Childhood: How Fast Food, Material Obsession and Porn Culture are Creating New Forms of Child Abuse
by
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published
2013
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5 editions
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Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Critical Reader
by |
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BUNDLE: Dines: Gender, Race, and Class in Media (Third Edition) and Wilson: Racism, Sexism, and Media
by
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published
2010
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4 editions
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Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Critical Reader
by |
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“If tomorrow, women woke up and decided they really liked their bodies, just think how many industries would go out of business.”
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“Pornography is to sex what McDonalds is to food. A plasticized, generic version of the real thing.”
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“For some, measuring porn’s real-world effects boils down to one extreme and ultimately misleading question: “Does it lead to rape?” What is overlooked here is the more subtle question of how porn shapes the culture and the men who use it. No anti-porn feminist I know has suggested that there is one image, or even a few, that could lead a nonrapist to rape; the argument, rather, is that taken together, pornographic images create a world that is at best inhospitable to women, and at worst dangerous to their physical and emotional well-being. In an unfair and inaccurate article that is emblematic of how anti-porn feminist work is misrepresented, Daniel Bernardi claims that Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon believed that “watching pornography leads men to rape women.”³ Neither Dworkin nor MacKinnon, pioneers in developing a radical feminist critique of pornography, saw porn in such simplistic terms. Rather, both argued that porn has a complicated and multilayered effect on male sexuality, and that rape, rather than simply being caused by porn, is a cultural practice that has been woven into the fabric of a male-dominated society. Pornography, they argued, is one important agent of such a society since it so perfectly encodes woman-hating ideology, but to see it as simplistically and unquestionably leading to rape is to ignore how porn operates within the wider context of a society that is brimming with sexist imagery and ideology.”
― Pornland: How Porn Has Hijacked Our Sexuality
― Pornland: How Porn Has Hijacked Our Sexuality
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