The Sex Industry: Socialism or Censorship?

By Lev Lafayette and Anthony Leong

An article in response to 'Labor Left in Bed with the Sex Industry', 
published in Green Left Weekly, Issue 456, p15

The crucial political question facing any inquiry into the erotica industry 
under capitalism is whether one places economic class or biological sex as 
the principle unit of analysis.

The article in last weeks Green Left Weekly by Joyce Wu (Labor Left in Bed 
with the Sex Industry) is an excellent example of the theoretical and 
practical impoverishment of the latter school of thought. Wu is a recently 
converted disciple of the sexual sectarianism of Associate Professor Sheila 
Jeffreys whose misandry and heterophobia has been past noted by Green Left 
Weekly. Jeffreys claims that "Male supremacy is centred around the act of 
sexual intercourse ... justified by heterosexual practice" and "the sexual 
revolution was a counterrevolution and constituted a timely adjustment to 
the fine tuning of the heterosexual institution" (1).

This article seeks to elucidate the reactionary politics advocated by Wu 
and Jeffreys who, under the guise of feminism, would further the 
denigration of women, suppress sexually explicit media and establish a 
permanent state of division on the basis of biological difference. In 
contrast it proposes a socialist feminist analysis and alternative that 
places the rights of workers as primary, rather than aesthetic interpretations.

Labor Left Conference

In the first instance however, it is necessary to expose the distortions 
and misinterpretations of the first session of the July 1st Labor Left 
conference as reported by Wu. Statements like "Lafayette claimed that 
feminism is merely a sectional interest, rather than of universal concern" 
are for example a complete fabrication. Further, Wu's claim that an 
independent feminist speaker was excluded from the first session beckons 
some further investigation.

Wu had, prior to the conference, several weeks of in-depth conversations 
with Lafayette as conference organiser. At no stage in those proceedings 
was any complaint made about either Peter Torneys or Maureen Matthews 
speaking roles. Indeed, the latter was accepted with noted enthusiasm and 
Torney was described as "great to listen [to]". (2)

However, ten days before the conference, Lafayette received a phone call 
from Wu's university tutor demanding that she be placed on the speaking 
list otherwise a protest would be organised. This attempt at political 
blackmail was rejected outright. Not only are Wu's politics concerning 
erotica thoroughly reactionary, but at a conference where all speakers were 
experts in their field, it would be ridiculous to include someone whose 
industry knowledge seems to consist of little more than a few months of 
Internet vouyerism.

The demand placed by Wus tutor was that an independent speaker, that is, 
someone with no connection to the industry, had to be included. In 
opposition to their claim that it is not possible to criticise an industry 
whilst being a member of it, it was suggested that perhaps it was 
appropriate to have a feminist speaker who was, or had been a sex industry 
worker. This suggestion was, to say the least, treated with complete 
comtempt, in line with Jeffreys argument that sex workers are deluded 
victims and Wu's proposals that the legal rights of sex workers should be 
abolished. (3)

Sexuality: Natural or Constructed?

The position supported by Wu and Jeffreys is that sexuality is a 
construction and that resistant sexualities are not an expression of 
preference or desire, but rather are political statements (4). Wu claims, 
in criticism of Dr. Jim Cairns, that "biology itself is a human discourse 
which is not free from the influences of the socio-political context it 
arises in" (5).

This absolute social constructionist argument is as dangerous and as 
extreme right-wing as their complement, the absolute biological determinist 
position. Fortunately, both positions when exposed to empirical tests and 
the reality of human agency are exposed in their irrationality.

As if it isn't already trivially self-evident in the first instance, sexual 
desire is a biological function as natural as breathing, eating, sleeping 
and excreting. Whilst the social constructionist line may try to place 
sexual desire in a different category to these other natural needs, the 
empirical evidence proves otherwise, not just through the science of 
pheromones but the evident sexual desires of those unfortunate individuals 
who have been raised outside of society (i.e., without discourse).

On the other hand, within the social context, sexual behaviour is a largely 
learnt trait, although given a few months of fumbling and experimentation 
the higher social primates do eventually seem to find out what works and 
what doesn't (as if adolescents don't already know this). Nonetheless, 
natural desires can either be liberated or repressed through the political 
and legal system or through cultural mores and prejudices. Either 
repressive process leads to social and individual pathologies, such as the 
suppression of consensual minority sexualities (e.g., gay and lesbian 
practise) or sexual violence.

Wu's position is regrettably typical of post-structuralist flights of fancy 
that tries to turn everything into the world into a matter of discourse. By 
conflating the signifier with the signified Wu's position logically leads 
to the ridiculous (but currently popular) idealist position that there is 
no independent reality outside language - something that even Derrida, the 
famous author of the misquoted phrase "il n'ya pas de hors-texte" (there is 
no outside text), used for mental states only.

The political danger of such a position is that it also commonly leads to 
cultural and political relativism (another popular, if stupid, notion), 
where differences in practise have moral equivalence. It is possible to 
describe the cultural norms of the Trukese and the Lepcha as equivalent? 
The Trukese of the Carolines, who advocate sexual experimentation by 
children and build tiny huts outside their main compounds for such purpose, 
are given the moral equivalent of the Lepcha of south-western Tibet and the 
Himalayas, whose men rape prepubescent girls with the pathology that they 
will not sexually mature without such an experience.

To reiterate, human sexual desire is a biological and natural fact. It is 
not a construction or a political statement or a discourse. Whilst it can 
be distorted or repressed by social laws and cultural mores, which leads to 
individual and social pathologies, the political task is to overcome these 
distortions in a manner which establishes relations built on individual 
freedom and mutual consensus. Anything else, despite whatever aesthetic 
spin academics wish to put on it, is repressive.

Erotica Under Capitalism

In many traditional societies it is possible to distinguish pornography (as 
commercial sexual media) from eroticism (as sacred offerings of sexual 
media). Of course, metaphysics has notorious slippage with objective 
reality and in many cases the two were conflated, such as the sacred 
prostitutes of the temple of Aphrodite in Cornith.

With the establishment of the modern secular state, this differentiation is 
longer viable. All sexual media, indeed all art, is commodified and is 
therefore simultaneously erotica and pornography, hence the insightful 
comment that "erotica is pornography for the rich".

Left to its own dysfunctional principle of social organisation, capitalism 
can lead to a situation where women and men, due to - and only due to - 
their proletarian status (i.e., they own nothing but their own labour) are 
forced as a matter of sheer survival to sell their bodies in sexual 
servitude in whatever legal and illegal markets exist.

It is through this process of class analysis that the social sexual 
pathology of capitalism can be elucidated. In nations where capitalism is 
almost entirely left to its own, unregulated devices, sexual exploitation 
reaches levels of almost unbelievable inhumanity. Almost invariably in such 
states, most of whom operate with political systems closer to traditional 
rather than modern societies (where men are the only legal owners of 
property), women are the overwhelming victims - and once again due to their 
class status rather than their sex.

To give credit where credit is due however, Jeffreys has done some 
admirable work and research from her Coalition Against Trafficking in Women 
group. However the irrational anti-erotica zeal by which this work is 
carried out has been condemned by a unified statement of the Prostitutes 
Rights Organisation for Sex Workers; the Sex Workers Outreach Project; 
Workers in Sex Employment in the ACT; Self-Help for Queensland Workers in 
the Sex Industry; The Support, Information, Education, Referral Association 
of Western Australia; The South Australian Sex Industry Network; The 
Prostitutes Association of South Australia; The Prostitute Association 
Northern Territory for Health, Education, Referrals; Cybelle; Sex worker 
Organisation Tasmania; Sydney Sexual Health Centre; Sydney Hospital; the 
Queer and Esoteric Workers Union and representatives of Asian sex working 
communities in NSW. (6)

The problem is that Jeffreys, Wu and their ilk lack the social theoretical 
rigour to differentiate between systematic procedures and structural 
effects. Reference to structural effects of the class system is, of course, 
intrinsic to any feminist analysis of erotica: the overwhelming majority of 
the means of production are almost universally owned by men, the workers 
are almost universally female and the media is almost universally produced 
with an orientation for male consumption.

These gross distortions of economy and representation have led to Jeffreys 
and Wu to place sex above class in their analysis. Erotica, in the 
misguided world of Wu is, "as the practice of patriarchy, which seeks to 
justify its status quo and domination through the construction of women as 
expendable object-commodities for the consumption of the male consumers" 
(7), an absolutist definition without consideration of alternate arguments 
that denies the existence of same-sex erotica, which denies any agency or 
input of the working actors and denies that women and men are consumers. 
Jeffreys in comparison, simply admits "I am not sure what erotica is" (8).

Against Censorship and for Liberated, Socialist and Feminist Erotica

Whilst modern capitalism, with its birthright from traditional and feudal 
systems of political economy includes male-dominated relations of 
production, this is a structural feature, not a systematic one. To analyse 
erotica in the manner of Wu and Jeffreys proposes that the primary 
adverserial conflict in erotica is between women and men, rather than 
worker and capitalist.

Under such circumstances the only practical political solution is the total 
censorship of actual or implied sexual expression. This position is 
strongly advocated by Jeffreys who claims a political objective of : "In a 
genuine social democracy in which women's interests were considered, 
pornography would not be available" (9)

Such a policy however, is already in place among fundamentalist religious 
states across the world. Indeed, Jeffreys is enthusiastically referenced by 
Islam: The Choice of Thinking Women(!) (10) which along with Jeffreys great 
desire for the abolition of sexual media, also advocates the abolition of 
abortion rights, opposition to cohabitation, opposition to divorce, and 
blames rape on the "free mixing between men and women". The entire 
orientation is supported by the premodern claims: "The more human beings 
rely on their own intellectual reasoning and abandon the guidance of their 
Creator, the greater their suffering" and "when a man and a woman are alone 
together, the third one present will be the Shayran (Satan), working to 
implant mischief between the two".

Against this, and other disenfranchisments of the rights of women, the 
nations with the highest levels of freedom in sexual expression backed with 
adequate levels of social security, such as Sweden, Denmark, Norway, 
Finland and increasingly Cuba, have the lowest levels of sexual violence. 
If this only occurred in one or two nations it could be written off as a 
freakish occurance. But this a fact that it is historically universal 
across all cultures and times (e.g., classical Hellenes, enlightenment 
France, 1920s China (11)).

With all these due considerations from natural and historical evidence and 
by using class analysis it is indeed possible to propose political 
objectives from a libertarian and socialist feminist perspective as 
endorsed by the Labor Left organisers:

"Individual adults, female and male, should be free to determine what 
erotica, if any, they choose to view. Individual adults, female and male - 
under conditions of adequate social security - can determine for themselves 
whatever employment they choose to undertake, including non-violent, 
consensual erotica. Proprietors in the sex industry should only employ 
individuals who are free and informed to choose such employment. Finally, 
the current gross structural distortions of female representation are due 
to an imbalance in proprietorship, workers rights and a lack of economic 
democracy, not to any innate characteristic of erotica itself." (12)

In concluding this article we take this opportunity to take up one more 
issue, again from a class analysis - the attempted eroticisation of 
non-sexual industries. In the mindless, amoral pursuit of profit, 
capitalist proprietors engage in the exploitative practise where employment 
serving beer or food becomes dependent on whether the worker has breasts on 
display. We condemn this practise, not on any basis of the supposed 
immorality of breasts on display, or a rejection of people being paid for 
having their breasts on display (otherwise we would oppose even more 
sexually explicit employment), or for that matter even on the basis of sex 
of the workers. We reject it because it is irrelevant to their 
productivity, it threatens the employment of other workers in the industry 
and it weakens wage claims of actual sex workers. We can now state, for the 
record, that we have initiated a campaign to introduce legislation in the 
Victorian parliament that abolishes such employment.

Ultimately, in a free society, where the institutional form of family has 
been abolished, where the state has withered away and private property 
ceases to exist, there will be no sex industry. Indeed, there will be no 
monied commodification of any human activity. There will be no division of 
labour. There will be no institutional, political or even structural 
difference in the social status between men and women. Human beings will be 
genuinely free to hunt in the morning, debate in the evening, form 
consensual sexual liaisons at night, without ever having to be a hunter, a 
critic or a sex worker. Whilst achieving such a society is indeed a 
practical question rather than an matter of ideals, its achievement will 
not occur by reactionary ideology and practise, but rather by workers 
taking control of the means of production - across all industries.

References

(1) Green Left Weekly, Issue 34, p19.
(2) Correspondence, June 7, 2001
(3) Jeffreys, S., Ms Magazine, 1996, "How Orgasm Politics Has Hijacked the
Women's
Movement" and Wu, J. Correspondence, June 4, 2001
(4) Wu, J., Correspondence, May 29, 2001 and Jeffreys, S., Anticlimax
(1990), p278
(5) Wu, J., Green Left Weekly, Issue 456, p15
(6) http://www.bayswan.org/Austraf.html
(7) Wu, J., Sexual Politics Essay, June, 2001
(8) Transcript of Sheila Jeffreys testimony to Federal Senate Committee
considering new film legislation (23 March 2000)
(9) ibid.
(10) http://www.islamiska.org/e/chap2.htm
(11) See in particular Women in the Chinese Enlightenment (1990)
(12) http://www.angelfire.com/zine/laborleft/response.html


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