The Aesthetics of Degradation
by Adrian Nathan West
Back in the 1980s, a radical feminist extremist and gender
separatisr named Andrea Dworkin gained notoriety as a prominent
anti-pornography activist. Her writings analyzed pornography, a lot
of which was literary in the form of the written word, and her
interpretations were full of fallacies of composition, appeal to
emotion arguments, ad hominem attacks on men as a collective whole,
massive cherry picking, conspiracy theories, misattributions, and an
extremist hyperbolic tone that made her difficult to take seriously
as the social critic she claimed to be. She argued that male
sexuality is inherently violent, that the male orgasm is a form of
violence, that pornography was invented to oppress women, and that
female porn performers are bigger victims than people who died in the
Holocaust because, according to her, Holocaust victims didn’t have
to be photographed playing with their genitals before being killed.
All of these brilliant ideas can be found in her hate-filled rant
Pornography: Men Possessing Women. And
while that information can easily be found, if anyone can find
empirical
evidence that death camps for porn stars are real, than I will
concede that argument to the she-demon Ms. Dworkin. Even worse, she
used her phallic symbol of a bullhorn to protest horror movies and
collaborated with the conservative Christian right wing of the Reagan
administration calling for a ban on all pornography. But if there was
an ounce of truth in anything Andrea Dworkin said, it was that some
people get sexual thrills out of seeing women being tortured and
humiliated.
There
is a cautionary tale here. Andrea Dworkin took her views to such an
extreme that she looked like a loudmouthed buffoon. Having such a
prominent voice in the feminist movement possibly set the cause back
by at least a decade. By turning the volume up to maximum on her
anti-pornography crusade, she wasted a lot of people’s time that
could have been used to address more prominent issues affecting
gender politics. And by setting the impossible task of banning
pornography, she almost guaranteed that
the sex industry would continue to grow and flourish. The lesson to
be learned for activists of all kinds is that taking the wrong
approach to your issue can kill your credibility when a more modest
approach can yield more results and possibly even keep your pet
issues alive in public discourse.
As
time has gone on, the availability of pornography has become more
widespread, more mainstream, and in some cases more degrading and
extreme. Adrian Nathan West addresses this phenomenon of extreme
pornography in his short book The Aesthetics of
Degradation. While he didn’t
make the same exact mistakes that Andrea Dworkin made, he does wind
up in a similar space by constructing an ineffective argument.
This
extended essay starts off describing some porn the author has
watched. I’ll spare you the stomach-churning
details here but I will say
that what he describes is gross. For some reason, West feels
compelled to explain why it is disgusting and degrading as if the
audience couldn’t figure that out for themselves. But in case you
couldn’t, he offers a semi-Freudian interpretation of why anal sex
makes him feel sick. Then he goes online and finds an interview with
a female performer in which she brags about her ability to do extreme
sex acts while being filmed. What was he expecting? Besides he
doesn’t consider the possibility that what she said in the
interview could be part of a marketing strategy. He also doesn’t
consider the possibility that her interview could have been written
by someone in a porn studio’s advertising department. Porn
is a business after all. Is
this even important? Well maybe because I feel like West missed some
opportunities to further examine his subject matter and the strange
space that pornography occupies in the way that it combines
performance and authenticity presented through the filters of editing
and marketing.
But
in any case, this leads the author to ask the ever mystifying
question of: why some women choose to do this. He finds his answer in
the phenomenology of Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre. I’ll
give West some credit here. He makes a key idea,
common to both philosophers, comprehensible which isn’t easy
considering the arcane style of writing they both have. West explains
that chronological time is the basis for building an individual’s
identity since memory is a building block we use to make us into
ourselves. Chronological memory is a resource we use to navigate our
way through life. In the case of female porn stars, this personal
chronology
has been disrupted at some point, through trauma like neglect or
abuse, that compromises their ability to make effective decisions.
This appears to make sense, but my objection to this claim is
epistemic, He writes as if this claim is absolutely true and yet I
don’t see how he can claim it as such without accessing the
subjectivity of a representative sample of all female porn stars.
It’s an easy over-generalization. It certainly is plausible, but
without enough data I can’t accept it as anything other than
speculation. I’m also wary of his concept of decision making; just
because a woman doesn’t make the choice he thinks she should make,
it
doesn’t mean that she made a wrong choice or even an ineffective
choice. West never takes the broader picture into consideration here.
A
lot of the rest of the book is a mishmash of odds
and ends, abruptly switching from one subject to another without any
clear transitions.
West alternates between descriptions of pornography that get more
violent and disgusting as the essay progresses, testimony from female
porn stars, philosophical musing, and commentary from the serial
killer Ed Kemper who describes his feelings of lust and violence
toward his victims. The Ed Kemper quotes are problematic since, not
only are they non sequiturs, but it amounts to a false analogy
considering West doesn’t include any quotes from male porn stars or
directors who express the same sentiments. This is a dirty rhetorical
trick because we are supposed to associate the feelings of a serial
killer with pornographers and porn consumers without any clear
connection between them. As far as I know, there haven’t been any
male members of the porn community who have been serial killers and
actually the number of them who have murdered people has been too
small to be statistically significant. A guilt by association
argument is especially bad when there is no grounds for association
to begin with. As for porn consumers, articles on the
Psychology Today website
show only a weak correlation between pornography consumption and acts
of violence. An article I found on NPR stated
that violent pornography is somewhat popular with women consumers,
particularly if they are suffering from PTSD. So again, I don’t
feel that West has taken the full range of possibilities into
consideration when writing this essay. Even worse, his style of
writing is disorganized and disorienting. I can’t tell if this is
meant to be some kind of deliberate postmodern derailment or if it’s
just bad writing, but it doesn’t work for me.
Then
the author goes from bad to
worse. He goes from vilifying pornographers for using money to
exploit women of lower financial status to vilifying them for
exploiting stupid women. He really does classify female porn
performers as literally stupid after comparing them to retarded
people. He really does use the word retarded too. His argument is
that retarded people need to be protected from predatory and
exploitative adults and stupid people are only one step above
retarded people in intelligence levels.
Therefore stupid people need to be protected from those who exploit
them too. Stupid people are incapable of making effective choices for
themselves and therefore end up allowing pornographers to make
choices for them. The solution to this problem is for intelligent
people with good intentions to make choices for stupid
people so they don’t get exploited. I’ll concede that some female
porn stars probably are stupid, but when your defense of them
involves
their humiliation and degradation with terms like “retarded” and
“stupid”, I think you might want to re-evaluate how you go about
approaching this problem and what your true intentions really are.
Spitting on the people you
claim to be defending is kind of a low blow.
The
remainder of the book involves the author hanging out with a Catalan
performance artists who reenacts scenarios from violent pornographic
films as an art project. This guy doesn’t get around to saying much
and most of these passages serve no useful purpose in the essay. But
what he does do is make an argument of determinism to say that female
porn stars do degrading porn because they have no choice; they are
only responding to stimuli in the environment and this is a symptom
of capitalism. He doesn’t explain this concept beyond merely making
the claim. But anyhow, I suppose that means that people producing
violent porn also have no choice other than to obey capitalist
stimuli and porn consumers have no choice either. I guess nobody
anywhere, no matter what they do or
who they are, have any choice
other than to obey whatever environmental stimuli come into their
empirical range and goddamnit if we just got rid of the capitalist
system than that could never happen again.
Yeah right.
In
the end, I wondered why West bothered to write this essay. He doesn’t
actually argue for or against anything. What is he trying to prove?
That violent, degrading, disgusting pornography is...violent,
degrading, and disgusting? Why not argue that the sun is hot or that
ice is cold? He makes no demands on the reader or society either. He
proposes no solution to what he describes as media
created with the intent to humiliate and degrade women. He sounds to
me like a guy who spent a lot of time watching this crap until it
made him sick to his stomach and he wrote this as therapy, complete
with some philosophical concepts and postmodernist name dropping to
make it look academically legitimate. (See what Alan Sokal and Noam
Chomsky say about that in their criticisms of postmodernist
pseudo-intellectualism) I might actually be inclined to agree with
West if I could actually pinpoint what it is he is arguing for. He
presents no thesis to defend, just a collage of information all
related to one subject.
As
for extreme pornography, here is what I think is going on. Being the
kind of business it is, it is going to attract some unsavory people.
Some men want to abuse and humiliate women so they get into the
pornography business. With enough money to produce films and hire
lawyers, they get female performers to sign legal contracts and forms
of consent, some of which are vaguely worded and don’t specifically
say what the performers will do. Since the films are made as works of
art produced for commercial purposes, these abusers have found a
loophole in the First Amendment and their films are protected as
freedom of speech.
Pornography
involving the use of minors is illegal, as it should be, because the
need to protect children overrides the luxuries of the First
Amendment. In most cases I am opposed to censorship and pornography
won’t, can’t, and shouldn’t be banned. Andrea Dworkin went on a
fool’s errand when she tried to have pornography censored.
Besides, most pornography is
neither violent nor extreme. If you can’t see a difference between
depictions of consensual vanilla sex and the things described by
West, you might be a bit of an extremist yourself. But
I do think more regulation is necessary. People involved in the
production of pornography should be held to the same OSHA standards
as people working in factories or any other occupation. If sex
workers are truly workers, they have the same rights to health and
safety standards as anybody else. Part of that means drawing a strict
line of demarcation between “consent” and “informed consent”
because the two are not the same. Porn producers need to be held
legally responsible to prove that their performers know what they are
getting into and they need to prove that consent is no given under
coercion, intimidation, manipulation, or any other form of duress.
In
the end, I might be inclined to agree that the kinds of violent
pornography described by Adrian Nathan West is disgusting and is a
sign that we live in a sick society. The problem with The
Aesthetics of Degradation is
that his writing is so poorly executed, depending on appeals to
emotion, disorganized writing, and failing to make a definite point
about anything, that I don’t feel he sufficiently made his case,
whatever that was meant to be. It’s hard to agree with somebody
when you aren’t sure as to what you are agreeing on. He makes the
Andrea Dworkin mistake of over-emphasizing his case to the point
where it becomes trivialized and rendered ineffective. I can’t say
this book is of much use unless you just want to read about something
that disgusts you. If you are that kind of masochist then there are
better places to get what you want.