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The Politics of Sex
Prostitution and Pornography in Australia since 1945
This political history of the sex industry in Australia since World War II cogently presents all sides of a complex and changing debate.
Barbara Ann Sullivan (Author)
9780521556309, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 7 September 1997
290 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.43 kg
This political history of the sex industry in Australia since World War II cogently presents all sides of a complex and changing debate. It looks at how prostitution and pornography are regulated, and how debates about them are produced. Sullivan examines statutes, parliamentary debate and legal discourse, moving beyond standard descriptions of the case for and against increased regulation. Looking at the broader societal context, she traces changing attitudes to what is normal and abnormal sexual conduct, using examples from newspapers, novels, films and demographic statistics. The book presents a number of cases that highlight questions of censorship and of literature vs pornography. It also critiques debates about prostitution and pornography that have been central to feminism. Broad in scope, the book extends from prohibition to the present period of legalised prostitution and pornography.
Part I. Forming the Sex Industries: 1. Marking danger: prostitution and pornography before 1945
2. A new moral economy? the immediate post war years 1945–55
Part II. The Sexual Revolution: 3. The sexual revolution and pornography 1955–69
4. Revolutionary limits: governing prostitution 1955–69
5. Libertarian movements 1970–5
Part III. After the Revolution: 6. New sexual politics 1975–85
7. Current issues.
Subject Areas: Biography: historical, political & military [BGH]