Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 218
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-5431-3 • Hardback • August 2007 • $125.00 • (£96.00)
978-0-7425-5432-0 • Paperback • August 2007 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
978-1-4616-3952-7 • eBook • August 2007 • $48.50 • (£37.00)
Katrien Jacobs is assistant professor in new media at City University of Hong Kong. She has lectured widely on gender, sexuality, new media art, globalization, and censorship. She is the author of Libi_doc: Journeys in the Performance of Sex Art.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 1 Netporn Browsing in Small Places and Other Spaces
Chapter 3 2 Post or Perish: The New Media Schooling of the Amateur Pornographer
Chapter 4 3 Porn Arousal and Gender Morphing in the Twilight Zone
Chapter 5 4 Eros in Times of War: From Cross-Cultural Teasings to the Titillation of Torture
Chapter 6 5 Post-Revolutionary Glimpses and Radical Silence: Netporn in Hong Kong and Mainland China
Chapter 7 Conclusion
Katrien Jacobs's Netporn is an eyewitness account of sex life on the new digital frontier and an analytical report on how sensual imagination and activity is changing our world. From personal investigation and interviews with Internet porn producers and consumers, Jacobs is able to mark the evolving contradictions of an area where sex as freedom and expression runs up against commercial exploitation and government censorship. This up-to-date investigation makes concrete the sometimes vague and hyperbolic discussions of digital networking, and thus it carries on a substantial description of the interactive exchange between new media technologies and the new social relations, behaviors, and body functions. Thoughtful, sober, and adventurous, this is THE landmark study of new media for our time.
— Chuck Kleinhans, Northwestern University; co-editor, Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media
Pornography drives new technologies. Avant-garde porn enthusiasts and producers have a passion to learn about Webcams, video streaming, blogs, and peer-to-peer file exchanges. Katrien Jacobs is one such pioneer who takes the reader on a journey into the world of Internet porn. Jacobs provides cutting-edge scholarship on understudied cyber-subcultures that have grown up around the sharing of sexually explicit materials as she models a new type of cultural research for the digital age. It should be read by all those interested in the questions surrounding the intersection of technology, identity, gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and cyber-culture. The sections on warporn and Abu Ghraib and on the netporn "blogolution" in greater China are two highlights. Jacobs clearly shows that sex and the digital revolution go far beyond Euro-American networks.
— Gina Marchetti, Pratt Institute
In resistance to the restrictive economy of the state and capital, as well as the rigid and globalizing nation-state surveillance Web, net porn practitioners in Jacobs's study are not only swapping porn and exchanging juicy scenes, but also staging pleasurable even sublime experiences through creating disorderly tastes and desires that enact the exuberance and ecstasy of our culture. As such, Netporn constitutes a powerful and timely intervention into the infringing and criminalizing power of the growing exclusive society as well as the regulatory state.
— Josephine Ho, National Central University
Jacobs's alluring book turns up the heat on media theory in its analysis of the world of Internet pornography. It represents the complex world of producing and consuming Internet pornography as a critical space of subcultural sexual experiments, and in so doing, compels us to experience the morphing patterns of arousal, at both the intellectual and bodily levels. Netporn is a serious academic achievement, even as it offers us a sweet temptation.
— John Nguyet Erni, Lingnan University, Hong Kong; author, Unstable Frontiers: Technomedicine And the Cultural Politics of Curing AIDS