Eleanor
Diamond Member
social sanctions against sex work (the bullet) are a powerful force, and you are are standing in its path to said target (sex workers).
I'm not sure if you mean to be as defeatist and disempowering as you seem to be. The bullet metaphor implies a inevitability in the reactions, not just now but forever. That's a pretty defeatist attitude. Right up there with "women can't do math." Here is the thing: if your take on the implications of evolutionary socio-biology is right, it at worst absolutizes and at best naturalizes the status quo. Both ways the tendency is to "explain away" the problem. "That's just the way it is, so suck it up and get used to it." Personally, I hate this answer. I find it dehumanizes both victims and perpetrators. It is an excellent device for letting everyone off the hook.
Plus, I'm not sure we shouldn't stand between the bullet and the innocent victim. I think it has to be an option, case by case. In a lot of cases, I guess I think if one can do so effectively, one should do just that.
Depends on the job, and who is hiring I'd think. Depends on the porn as well. I'm not arguing there is not bias or discrimination, there is. And this is far from the only kind. There are a lot of things one would be well advised not to put on a resume. Resume's are PR items, not depositions where you tell the whole truth about yourself. My point is that there is not inevitability here - just like not all people who smoke pot die under a bridge of a heroin overdose (the popular narrative often told to elementary school children) not all people who go into sex work end up social pariahs. And if we care about the people who go into sex work, particularly those who do so because they are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, I don't think it helps them to propagate or buy into that bleak narrative. It doesn't help to ignore the risks either. But when we sell the risks too hard, it tends to diminish the possibility of positive outcomes. Best, in my view, to try to be factual and realistic about the situation.Put "porn star" on your resume and go try and get a job.
I care a lot about being clear about agency - what it is and isn't and that means trying to be pretty careful about inevitability and, for lack of a better term, evitability. Effective agency depends on accurate understanding of reality. Without that, we have to rely on luck. Best to have both.
The above gets just a tad too far away from personal responsibility for me. Systemic, cultural forces are absolutely mammoth agents in the creation of individual behavior, and yes, media outlets are a big contributor to this effect, but I cannot shake feeling there is an echo here of the thinking that goes "She wouldn't have been a victim if she hadn't been wearing that."
My experience with modesty and womanhood has been shame. Crushing, sickening, toxic shame.
It is all these layers that make it all such a muddle. And the fear gets used against people (men and women.) It seems to me that making it ok to ostracize or disenfranchise individuals for symbolic or arbitrary reasons (like being gay or liking sex) is bad. More and more people are finally in a place to start thinking rationally and pragmatically about how much freedom we can routinely grant individuals and still have a functioning society, and balance social necessity against what actually promotes human flourishing. Just-so stories about sociobiology aren't particularly helpful in this regard.
Shame is a social emotion - it is taught to children. Shame only makes sense in a social/interpretive context. Unfortunately, like all emotions it is a conditioned response, so it changes more slowly than the cognitive structures it was built on. So even if one no longer believes nudity to be shameful, if one was raised to feel that it was, the conditioned response still happens. Depending on the severity of the training, it may be very difficult indeed to recondition this response, whether it is impossible is an open question. Because brains are so very plastic I tend to think that in principle it is possible, but we just don't have very reliable ways of doing it yet. This has led many people to become a lot more careful about what we train our children to be ashamed of.
I'm sorry @Simply Simon, I can't imagine the shame you feel is even remotely deserved. Unless you are a innocent-torturing remorseless predator, (and I'm pretty sure you are not!) that degree of shame (and most lesser degrees as well) is wholly uncalled for. I'm sorry you suffer with it. If I had a magic wand, I'd disappear that shame pronto.
Last edited: