A monthly podcast featuring interviews with academics and cultural influencers who help us help us think about pornography and sexuality in new and interesting ways.
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A monthly podcast featuring interviews with academics and cultural influencers who help us help us think about pornography and sexuality in new and interesting ways.
Professor Rebecca Sullivan joins us to talk about her role as the chair of the steering committee for the Sexuality Studies Association of Canada, and her book on the infamous second-wave feminist anti-porn documentary Not a Love Story: A Film About Pornography (1982). The film is directed by Bonnie Sherr Klein, a feminist filmmaker who was an important part of the National Film Board’s Studio D, a project focused on providing female directors the chance to make their own documentaries. The film is co-directed by stripper/activist Lindalee Tracey. And while the film seemed to have started out with the intention of being a progressive analysis of feminist sexual exploration, it eventually turned into the iconic anti-porn landmark that we know it as today. Over the last couple of decades, the film has been lambasted within porn studies circles due to its uncritical adoption of the views of anti-porn feminists like Susan Griffin and Robin Morgan. Interestingly, pornography/feminist scholar Rebecca Sullivan’s book: Bonnie Sherr Klein’s “Not a Love Story” (2014) is a reparative reading of the film that argues that in fact, the documentary’s importance is in offering a platform for sex workers to speak in their own voice throughout the film. While the film is best remembered for its anti-porn second half, Sullivan’s extensive interviews with Klein herself reveal an original intention to give voice and respect to the marginalized sex worker. And ultimately, Sullivan’s book is a cautionary tale of how a director’s intentions can radically change once the footage is turned over to an editor. This is a bold argument to make considering how much bad will the film has garnered over the years from sex-positive feminists. And in this interview, Professor Sullivan answers all the tough questions we ask regarding her alternative reading of the film. It’s a very enlightening conversation!
You can watch Not a Love Story on YouTube
More info about Bonnie Sherr Klein’s “Not a Love Story”
More info about Rebecca Sullivan
Editorial written by Sullivan titled: “Porn is a Part of Our Culture. Why Shouldn’t Universities Study it?”
“The Evolution of Porn Studies”
Info about Sullivan’s book with Alan McKee: Pornography: Structures, Agency and Performance (2015)
pornocultures.podomatic.com
facebook.com/AcademicSex
@PornoCultures
https://concordia.academia.edu/brandrroyo
Porno Cultures Podcast
A monthly podcast featuring interviews with academics and cultural influencers who help us help us think about pornography and sexuality in new and interesting ways.