The website, called SuicideGirls, was founded by Selena Mooney and Sean Suhl in Portland, Oregon. When they lunched it in late 2001 their main goal was nothing extraordinary they just wanted to see alternative beauties (girls with tattoos, unusual haircolors and piercings in this case) naked. At least that's what they claim when the main reason for the creation of their site is asked. The real answer for the question "what is the purpose of the SuicideGirls?" is not easy to find. Lots of fans state this movement is a new generation of feminism and it is about giving women a chance to express themselves in their own way and to make them see how beautiful they are even if their looks are quite the opposite of the beauty of mainstream.
Eventually the base of operations left Portland and moved to Los Angeles, California in 2003 when the website became popular and it couldn't be named "underground" anymore. In 2006 the 1000th Suicide Girl joined the site and now the number of models is over 2000. Beside them there are hundreds of girls who are already members of the site but only as "hopefuls". It means that maybe someday they can become Suicide Girls too. The site works as any other website with a forum does so it has its average members who just want to watch the girls and communicate with each other about any kind of topics and are willing to pay for it.
According to the website the audience of suicidegirls.com consists of over 5 million unique visitors a month. Domain Tools (one of many domain industry tracking sites) states something completely different. The actual online traffic based on their statistics is about 180 000 unique visitors per month. Those who have membership are mostly men but almost half of th...
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...o Money Shot? Commerce, Pornography and New Sex Taste Cultures" Sexualities, Oct2007, Vol. 10 Issue 4, p441-456
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A pornographic world [What is normal] by Robert Jensen takes an inside look at the culture of masculinity and what role pornography takes in shaping that culture. Jensen describes how he was forced to play a “macho” role as a child out of fear of being bullied and ridiculed for not being manly enough. Pornography use started for him and his friends in grade school – they would steal magazines and hide them to share in a group later. He talks of how he learned of a social concept, called the “ideal of prostitution” (the notion of men “buying” women in various forms of undress, solely for their pleasure), at a young age. While there has always been a stigma around pornography, whether stemming from moral or religious reasons, Jenson continued to use porn until his 30s.
Dizard, Wilson, Jr. Old Media New Media: Mass Communications in The Information Age. New York: Longman, 2000.
The existence of pornography is not a new invention. For years, humans have found certain depictions to be sexually arousing. Holmes and Holmes (2009), for example discuss how in ancient civilizations, Mesopotamia, for example, there were depictions of men and women in sexually explicit scenes on various household goods, such as plates and washbasi...
27 Baird, Robert M. and Stuart E Rosenbaum. Pornography - Private Right or Public Menace Pg. 52
In this essay, we shall consider the so-called "reputable" mainstream American companies that are reaping huge profits from Internet porn, as well as related considerations.
Slade, Joseph W. Pornography and Sexual Representation: A Reference Guide. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2001. Print.
Men are more likely to carry out a suicide and women are more likely to attempt
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Merskin, D (2004) Reviving Lolita? : A Media Literacy Examination of Sexual Portrayals of Girls in Fashion Advertising. In American Behavioral Scientist, vol. 48: pp.119-129. London: Sage Publications.
Yifen, Wang, and Chen Wei. "Progress or Pornography." News China Magazine RSS. News China, Dec. 2012. Web. 12 Apr. 2014.
Laura Kipnis has described pornography as “an archive of data about...our history as a culture”. Therefore if, she described it as such, what can it tell us about the sexual history of the 20th century? Examining the history of the forms of archive from pornographic playing cards to blu-ray discs and the internet, this shows the ever changing form of how as a society we view pornography. From the forms of archive come the social implications of pornography. This will be examined through the 1986 Meese Commission in the United States of America into the pornographic industry. Finally, this exposition will also examine the differing views of Gay and Straight pornography and the changes that have taken over the 20th century. Overall, the 20th century was a fundamental shift in sexual attitudes towards pornography.
Siegel, Lisa Z. International Exposure: Perspectives on Modern European Pornography: 1800-2000 . Rutgers University Press, 2005.
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