Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography / Edition 1

Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1876756497
ISBN-13:
9781876756499
Pub. Date:
05/01/2005
Publisher:
Spinifex Press
ISBN-10:
1876756497
ISBN-13:
9781876756499
Pub. Date:
05/01/2005
Publisher:
Spinifex Press
Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography / Edition 1

Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography / Edition 1

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Overview

Including the latest research on prostitution and pornography, this essay anthology shows how the sex industries harm those within them while undermining the possibilities for gender justice, human equality, and stable sexual relationships. From sex industries survivors to social activists and theorists such as Taylor Lee, Adriene Sere, and Kristen Anderberg, this volume assesses from a feminist perspective the racism, poverty, militarism, and corporate capitalism of selling sex through strip clubs, brothels, mail-order brides, and child pornography.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781876756499
Publisher: Spinifex Press
Publication date: 05/01/2005
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 464
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.77(d)

About the Author

Christine Stark is a feminist writer, artist, speaker, activist, and member of the Minnesota Indian Women's Sexual Assault Coalition. Rebecca Whisnant is a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Dayton.

Read an Excerpt

Not For Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography


By Rebecca Whisnant, Christine Stark, Kerry Biram

Spinifex Press

Copyright © 2004 Rebecca Whisnant and Christine Star
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-876756-49-9



CHAPTER 1

How prostitution works

Joe Parker


Introduction

Prostitution, pornography, and other forms of commercial sex are a multi-billion-dollar industry. They enrich a small minority of predators, while the larger community is left to pay for the damage. People used in the sex industry often need medical care as a result of the ever-present violence. They may need treatment for infectious diseases, including AIDS. Survivors frequently need mental health care for post-traumatic stress disorder, psychotic episodes and suicide attempts. About a third end up chronically disabled and on Social Security. The sex trade plays an active role in promoting alcohol and drug problems. Pimps also use prostituted women in forgery and credit card fraud. The community must pay for chemical dependency treatment, insurance costs and incarceration. In addition to these costs, the community loses the contributions which might have been made to legitimate community productivity by those used up in the sex industry. The operators of sex businesses not only do not pay for these expenses; many manage to avoid paying taxes at all.


The johns

No business can afford to create a product for which there are no buyers. The first step in understanding the sex industry is to understand the customers, the johns.

Real sexual relationships are not hard to find. There are plenty of adults of both sexes who are willing to have sex if someone treats them well, and asks. But there lies the problem. Some people do not want an equal, sharing relationship. They do not want to be nice. They do not want to ask. They like the power involved in buying a human being who can be made to do almost anything.

The business of prostitution and pornography is the use of real human beings to support the fantasies of others. Anyone working in prostitution who tells a john too much about who they really are interferes with the fantasy. They risk losing a customer, and may get a beating as well. In real relationships with real people, you are stuck with the limitations of who you are, who your partner is, and what you can do together without hurting each other.

Some people do not want real relationships, or feel entitled to something beyond the real relationships they have. They want to play 'super stud and sex slave' or whatever, inside their own heads. If they need to support their fantasies with pictures, video tapes, or real people to abuse, the sex trade is ready to supply them. For a price, they can be 'a legend in their own minds'.

The most common type of prostitution customer is the user. He is quite self-centered, and simply wants what he considers to be his needs met. The user would deny any intent to harm anyone, and might even claim some empathy for the sex workers he uses. However, his empathy does not extend to discontinuing his using behavior, nor to helping anyone escape from the sex industry. He does not care whether the person he is using is unwilling or unusually vulnerable. He simply feels entitled to whatever he wants, whenever he wants it. If someone is hurt, that is not his problem. He feels that the fee he pays covers any damages. He sees himself as a respectable person, and works to protect that appearance. Users provide a large, safe, and steady income for the pimps and other 'businessmen' of the sex industry.

Sadists are people who have the ability to take pleasure in another person's fear, pain, or humiliation. They constitute about ten percent of the population. Sadists vary in severity, ranging from those who just make you feel bad, to those who do torture murders. There is a definite practice effect. If they are allowed to hurt people often, their sadism gets worse. Physical, sexual, and emotional abuse by sadists drives their child victims from their homes into the street, trying to escape. The pimps and 'chickenhawks' take it from there.

Sadists are attracted to prostituted women and children because they are willing to get into a car or come to a place where the sadist can be in control. Sadism is about control. Hurting people who cannot stop them is their most intense and pleasurable form of control. Sadists play close attention to matters of power. They are most brutal with small women and children, and are more careful with larger women and men. They avoid people who may have someone to protect them, or someone who may take revenge on the victim's behalf. There are pimps who specialize in supplying victims to sadists, and who base their fees on the amount of damage done to the victim. Sadists are found at all levels of society, including the respected and powerful. They often use this position of respect or power by saying, 'You are just a whore; nobody is going to believe you.' If they do kill someone, they are very aware that, to some extent, the effort society puts into finding the killer will reflect the value placed on the victim. People working in prostitution are safe victims.

Necrophiles are people who can take pleasure in filth, degradation, and destruction. They are the users of the sick, the old, the psychotic, the brain damaged, the 'tracked' and tattooed casualties of the sex industry who are in the end stages of their lives. For necrophiles, broken bodies and broken minds are a turn-on. They glory in their superiority over ruined human beings, and feel entitled to express their contempt in every way. Necrophiles must keep their perversion secret from their friends and families, both to protect their social standing, and to protect their fantasies of superiority. Normal people just would not understand.

Child molesters participate in the sex industry in several ways. Some have been aware of a sexual attraction to children, often of a particular age and sex, from some time in late childhood. They then make the choice to act on it. Some have sadistic characteristics. Children are easier than adults to control. The molester's own children, in his own home, are the easiest of all to control.

Necrophilic child molesters enjoy the knowledge that, when the molesters are finished with them, the children's lives will never be the same. They enjoy the fact that the children may later self-destruct in addiction, prostitution or suicide. It proves that they were right.

Sex offenders against children operate with varying degrees of sophistication. Some do careful 'grooming'. They use pornography to break down resistance, and supply drugs, alcohol, and money. Others just start out with forcible rape. Many claim unusual 'love' for children. They claim that sex between adults and children is not harmful, and should be legalized. Pedophiles actually teach children that they are helpless, hopeless, worthless, and only good for sex and hurting. A large portion of workers in the sex trade started out as sexually abused children. Some were even 'broken in' by being shared with or rented out to others by their own families.

There are specialist pimps who provide children to johns. The fees vary depending on the age, sex and appearance of the child, as well as the amount of damage the child has already incurred. When caught, the pimps and johns claim not to have known the child's real age. There is a market for small adults made up to look like children, both for direct sex and for pornography. But the truth is in the fees: real children sell for more than fake ones.


Prostitution buffs

Prostitution buffs are like police and fire buffs, that is, they are people with an intense interest in those occupations even though they do not belong to them. Prostitution buffs are people with a morbid fascination for or obsession with prostituted persons and their activities. Some characterize themselves as 'researchers', and amass hundreds of pages of notes and photographs that somehow are seldom published.

Others claim to be intent on religious redemption of 'sinners', and spend huge amounts of time in vice areas, but never quite manage to offer anyone any practical help.

A third group consists of 'community livability' activists, who blame the people being prostituted for the behavior of the johns, pimps, and drug dealers.

As with any obsession, with some people it may get out of control. Police buffs may take unlawful police action, and some fire buffs eventually set fires. Each type of prostitution buff strongly believes in their own rationalizations for their activities, and would vehemently deny any personal sexual interest. The trouble is, it is obviously there. They show a lot of subtle signs which may indicate to someone working in prostitution that they may be potential customers.

When a prostituted person approaches the buff to offer their services, the response may be unpredictable and dangerous. Sometimes the buffs will accept their services, and the worker may never realize that they are anything but a normal trick. At other times, they will be met with rage, as if they are making a heterosexual or homosexual attack on the buff. They may be beaten, knifed, or thrown out of a moving vehicle.

Most of the 'research' and 'religious' buffs are men, and they spend enough time studying their subject so that their identifications of who is and who is not prostituting are fairly accurate. Many of the 'community livability' activists are women. Some may use pepper spray or draw weapons on young people who are in no way involved, but who fit whatever stereotype the activist has created of what a prostitute should look like.


Customer streams

Three forces generate streams of customers for prostitution: isolation, sexual abandonment, and unusual interests. Prostituted people are used to service populations that are physically isolated from the life of their communities. These customers come from such sources as military bases, logging or mining camps, and farm labor camps. Operators of these facilities are often involved in arranging prostitution services through local pimps.

Other customers are isolated by travel, such as seamen, truckers, and traveling businessmen. Hotels, motels, bars and other businesses which provide support services for travelers often also participate in arrangements for sexual services.

In some religious cultures, and some individual family cultures, sex is regarded as an unpleasant duty of marriage, and once the childbearing years are over, one partner may cut the other off from sexual activity. The sex industry does not reach out to middle-aged women, so their only choice is to have affairs. This may be morally unacceptable to them, or eligible partners may not be available. For them, there may be no solution.

For men, prostitution is quite available, and many men may see it as less wrong than having affairs, or as requiring less effort. These men provide a large and steady income for the sex industry; most of these johns would be classified as 'users', and an unclear proportion of them might not be prostitution customers if they were not isolated.

Customers who remain in or near their home communities are more likely to use prostituted people due to unusual interests, such as sadism, pedophilia, or sexual addiction. They are isolated by the nature of their desires, rather than their location. For example, men who prefer sex with boys, but who do not view themselves as homosexual, support a whole segment of the industry involving prostituted males. It is unclear whether local law enforcement efforts, or the openness and aggressiveness with which the sex industry is allowed to operate in a community, affects the stream of 'special interest' customers.

A large portion of prostituted people are also used in and around the communities where they grew up. The fact that survivors often meet previous tricks in local grocery stores and other random places can be a considerable problem for their recovery.

For those whose special interests place them at serious legal risk in their own community, there is sex tourism. Some cities in the US are well known to run more 'wide open' than others, that is, there are fewer and weaker laws on the books, and police and other officials are discouraged from enforcing them. These conditions are often the result of cooperation between business and elected officials, who are repaid by the sex industry in various ways.


The pimps

No one really wants to have sex with five, ten, or twenty strangers a day, every day. Besides coping with the sheer numbers of sex acts involved, some of those strangers are going to use a person in ways that are bizarre, painful, disgusting, and occasionally fatal. When people who have worked in prostitution say that they have been subjected to repeated rape, they are not exaggerating or being 'hysterical'; they are being legally precise. Rape is sexual intercourse against the will of the victim, carried out by threat or force.

In prostitution, the john performs the sex act with the unwilling victim, but subcontracts the intimidation and violence to another man, the pimp. The john would like to believe he is paying for sex, but the person he has sex with gets little or none of the money. The money goes to the pimp to pay for the force needed to keep prostituted women and children working. It goes to the drug dealer who provides whatever it takes to keep the workers from becoming psychotic or committing suicide. It goes to pay the businessmen who provide the real estate, support services, and legal protection for the trade.

Pimps come in three general types. Media pimping, like other kinds, involves selling fantasies that ultimately hurt people. Two of their central lies are that women are only good for sex, and men are only good for violence. They claim that they produce sex and violence because that is all that sells. In fact, many other things sell as well or better. (For example, Walt Disney and Steven Spielberg productions often are very successful.) Media pimps often have a tremendous sense of superiority over 'common' people, yet lack the intelligence and creativity to do high quality work. They enjoy their alternative, selling a degraded view of the human race.

Advertisers often implicitly promise that buying their products will bring happiness, power, and sexual success. After spending their money, the victims of this 'bait and switch' scam find that they get only a pack of cigarettes, a bottle of shampoo, or a magazine full of dirty pictures. They are just as lonely and unhappy as before, but their money is gone.

Media pimps perform another 'bait and switch' function, in cooperation with business-level pimps. They attract young people hoping for fame and fortune in the legitimate entertainment business, and manipulate them into the lower levels of the sex industry. They degrade ordinary people living ordinary lives by showing only idealized characters with perfect bodies, high-powered jobs, and plenty of money. The characters' problems are always solved in an hour or two, and always with a liberal application of sex and violence.

Real people, whose lives cannot hope to measure up to these 'ideals', are made to feel inferior and worthless. The media pimps work to divert people from the ups and downs of real life into dependence on the fantasy worlds that they sell. The sex industry, above all, sells fantasy regardless of who gets hurt.

The media pimps have a lot of money. They own magazines and newspapers, and produce movies and television programs. They can afford to hire law firms and advertising agencies to further their interests. Their money can buy access to political officials, and special treatment for their businesses. In return they offer favorable media exposure and large campaign contributions. Their money often goes to support various front organizations which work to direct public discussion toward 'free speech rights', and away from the damaging effects of the sex industry on the women and children used in it.

Business-level pimps extract profits from the sex industry in ways that minimize the risk of public exposure or criminal prosecution. They own the bars and strip clubs which attract concentrations of potential johns. They offer jobs as dancers and hostesses to vulnerable young people who are potential candidates for more direct use in the sex trade. They own the adult book stores, massage parlors, motels, and legal brothels. They posture as legitimate businessmen, conceal their ownership behind corporations and front men, and deny knowing that their property is being used in the sex industry. They charge sex businesses far higher rents and fees than they could get from legitimate tenants, which indicates that they know what the businesses are doing.

Through contacts in the business community, they arrange for sexual services for visiting businessmen, politicians, celebrities, and sports teams. By keeping these arrangements secret, business pimps ensure a degree of protection for their other activities from their customers in high places.

Business-level pimps separate themselves from the 'dirty workers' of the sex trade by treating them as independent contractors rather than as employees. This enables them to avoid having to pay taxes, overtime pay, health insurance, and workers' compensation. If one of the workers is arrested, the businessman is protected from any legal involvement. They subcontract any violence needed to the street-level pimps.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Not For Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography by Rebecca Whisnant, Christine Stark, Kerry Biram. Copyright © 2004 Rebecca Whisnant and Christine Star. Excerpted by permission of Spinifex Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Permissions,
Introduction Rebecca Whisnant and Christine Stark,
PART ONE Understanding systems of prostitution,
How prostitution works Joe Parker,
Confronting pornography: Some conceptual basics Rebecca Whisnant,
Blow bangs and cluster bombs: The cruelty of men and Americans Robert Jensen,
The use of new communication technologies for sexual exploitation of women and children Donna Hughes,
In and out: A survivor's memoir of stripping Taylor Lee,
Pornography, prostitution, and women's human rights in JapanSeiya Morita Prostitution and the new slavery Vednita Carter,
King Kong and the white woman: Hustler magazine and the demonization of black masculinity Gail Dines,
Nobody's concubine Chong Kim,
Prostitution in Vancouver: Pimping women and the colonization of first nations Melissa Farley and Jacqueline Lynne,
The journey home: An interview Samantha Emery,
Pornography, prostitution, and a beautiful and tragic recent history Andrea Dworkin,
PART TWO Resisting the sexual new world order,
Prostitution for everyone: Feminism, globalisation and the 'sex' industry D.A. Clarke,
Left Labor in bed with the sex industry Joyce Wu,
Resisting the promotion of prostitution in Canada: A view from the Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter Lee Lakeman, Alice Lee, and Suzanne Jay,
Can prostitution be safe?: Applying occupational health and safety codes to Australia's legalised brothel prostitution Mary Lucille Sullivan,
Sex and feminism: Who is being silenced? Adriene Sere,
No more 'Porn Nights' Kirsten Anderberg,
Girls to boyz: Sex radical women promoting prostitution, pornography, and sadomasochism Christine Stark,
PART THREE Surviving, conceiving, confronting,
Strategies of connection: prostitution and feminist politics Margaret A. Baldwin,
Making hay while the sun shines: The dynamics of strip clubs in the Upper Midwest and the community response Sherry Lee Short,
What does pornography say about me(n)?: How I became an anti-pornography activist Rus Ervin Funk,
Who are women in pornography?: A conversation Ann Simonton and Carol Smith,
Cuntspeak: Words from the heart of darkness Jane Caputi,
Prostitution as a harmful cultural practice Sheila Jeffreys,
Pornography and international human rights John Stoltenberg,
Against their will: Nepal's activist theatre fights girl-trafficking Carol Davis,
Fighting the war against sexual trafficking of women and girls Leslie R. Wolfe,
List of contributors,
Index,

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