Pornifying the Network

Authors

  • Rebecca Holt Concordia University (Canada)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/aprja.v9i1.121494

Keywords:

Network Experience, Internet Pornography, Cyberporn, Big Data

Abstract

Watching pornography online is a deeply personal, if not secretive act, yet the ease with which a near-infinite supply of adult content is shored up by networks of shared experiences. In fact, the persistent assumption that consuming adult content is a ‘closed’ experience has largely stunted efforts to reconceptualize online pornography as a “network experience.” As Wendy Chun asks, “Why are networked devices described as ‘personal,’ when they are so chatty and promiscuous?” This article, therefore, attempts to ‘pornify the network’ by tracing the movement, flows, and processual emergence of networks that have been crucial to the formation and continued proliferation of online pornography. Two case studies are used to illustrate the persistence of this framework: the first theorizes ‘edging’ in early online pornography, while the second puts into question the politics of the world’s largest porn website deploying user data for titillating effect. Theorizing a pornified network ultimately reroutes persistent technological imaginaries of the network through affect, sensation, and the entanglements of desire.

Author Biography

Rebecca Holt, Concordia University (Canada)

Rebecca Holt is a PhD candidate in Film and Moving Image Studies at Concordia University, Montreal. For her dissertation, Rebecca is researching MindGeek—the company responsible for Pornhub and most other popular pornographic platforms. Rebecca locates MindGeek alongside other tech giants to understand the impact of online pornography on digital culture, new economies, and the Internet at large. She is a coordinator and member of the Global Emergent Media Lab at Concordia University.

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Published

2020-08-04