Given all the reading I've done over the past few years in the course of my research, I've come across a good book or two. Since I've already done all the legwork of separating the good from the mediocre, you may as well benefit. The below are books I recommend to those interested in pursuing a deeper understanding of porn and the industry that creates it. (But don't worry...you can still call your Internet downloads "research" if you want..I won't tell..)
By Women in Porn
This book just plain needed to be written, and I'm glad Milne took on the task. This collection of frank essays written by women voluntarily participating in the porn industry lays important groundwork. It provides a statement from women that yes, many women enjoy work in the porn industry. My hope is that future writers can point to this book to help move past the eternal feminist debate over whether porn is inherently exploitative, whether it degrades all women, etc etc and start making more interesting contributions to the discourse on porn. We'll see. But in the meantime, thanks to Milne for getting the ball rolling.
Highly highly highly recommended. Some complain the book is too long--bullshit! It's riveting. And with tons of photos, perfectly configured to hold the reader's interest.
Tristan Taormino is my posterchild for hope within the porn industry. She is the revolution!
By Snooty (but smart!) Intellectuals
I resisted reading this book for so long, assuming Levy was uptight and overly critical of sexual expression. Once I finally broke down and read the book, I was amazed both at her tenacity and her insight. Levy articulates beautifully just what is wrong with Girls Gone Wild and stripper poles at mainstream bars. It's a quick read and well worth it.
Both these books are an abolute delight. "Philosophy of Sex" is a collection of important essays by other philosophers, while "Porn, Sex..." is straight-up Soble hilarity. Through an irrepressible and irreverent wit, Soble makes a number of bold philosophical claims about pornography, feminism and sex.
This book rocked me hard. Susan Faludi wrote an incredible article on men in the porn industry for the New Yorker back in the 1990s, and between that article and this book her ability as a feminist investigative journalist is unparalleled. Every woman (and man for that matter) should read this book. People who say it's out of date are crazy--it's horribly relevant, which is sad considering it was written almost 20 years ago.
This is another book written decades ago but which maintains so much relevance today. I'm deeply troubled that it appears to be out of print. This product was a product of the 1982 Barnard College conference on Sexuality, the conference which sparked the so-called Sex Wars of the 1980s. Even if you can only find this book in the library, it is well worth seeking out--at the very least, read the introduction.
Kipnis' book contains the only thorough treatment I've read about class issues wtihin porn. Don't bother with her follow-up "The Female Thing"--this book contains much more fresh insight.
This book was the inspiration for my thesis. I'm sad to say it's a bit dated, having been published in the late 1990s at the cusp of the Internet boom, but it still provides tons of great analysis into the economic and technological components of the porn industry. Lane also chronicles the inception of internet porn and women's key role within it (though not to as great an extent as I'd have liked, hence my thesis).