Friday 12 August 2011

The Sunny Side of Smut

It used to be tough to get porn. Renting an X-rated movie required sneaking into a roped-off room in the back of a video store, and eyeing a centerfold meant facing down a store clerk to buy a pornographic magazine. Now pornography is just one Google search away, and much of it is free. Age restrictions have become meaningless, too, with the advent of social media—one teenager in five has sent or posted naked pictures of themselves online, according to the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.
With access to pornography easier than ever before, politicians and scientists alike have renewed their interest in deciphering its psychological effects. Certainly pornography addiction or overconsumption seems to cause relationship problems [see “Sex in Bits and Bytes,” by Hal Arkowitz and Scott O. Lilienfeld; Scientific American Mind, July/August 2010]. But what about the more casual exposure typical of most porn users? Contrary to what many people believe, recent research shows that moderate pornography consumption does not make users more aggressive, promote sexism or harm relationships. If anything, some researchers suggest, exposure to pornography might make some people less likely to commit sexual crimes...
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Melinda Wenner Moyer @'Scientific American'

3 comments:

  1. From my own experience - that being working with teenagers and studying the media from an academic perspective - ease of access to hardcore porn via the net has definitely influenced and affected not only attidudes towards sex by young people but more worryingly their sexual behaviour and expectations.
    Watching porn will not turn people into rapists or predatory abusers, but it will turn them into bullies and crap lovers. roy

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  2. 2Roy/
    I remember being quite shocked when I discovered what my two eldest boys were watching back when the net was a relatively new thing...I suppose it's all about how we as parents explain that it's all unreleastic and not the way that people behave in 'real' life. They do seem now quite well adjusted men of 23 and 25!
    I do remember when I lived in porn-tolerant Am*dam back in the early to mid eighties there was a relative lack of sex crimes tho...
    I do really worry about society's sexualisation of very young girls tho!
    A minefield for sure Roy!
    Regards/

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  3. Hey, I'm sure your kids turned out to be well-rounded human beings.
    Your comment about Amsterdam is pertinent but really isn't that about sex rather than porn?
    Many young kids now seem to be gaining their sex education through watching porn. This is certainly having an effect. Effecting body image (their own and attitudes as to how their partner should be), and because there aren't too many people willing to discuss things with them (especially in the States and in the UK), these 'performances' they're viewing are becoming precedents for behaviour (again, both for themselves and their partner).
    And as for the sexualization of children, porn has been promoting that 'ideal' since the Victorian era.

    [Hmm, thinking about this is an interesting way of spending a day off from work, during a miserably bleak (weather-wise) mid-August afternoon - cheers for the stimulation. roy]

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