This book contains the oral testimony of victims of pornography, spoken on the record for the first time in history.
Speaking at hearings on a groundbreaking antipornography civil rights law, women offer eloquent witness to the devastation pornography has caused in their lives. Supported by social science experts and authorities on rape, battery, and prostitution, discounted and opposed by free speech advocates and absolutists, their riveting testimony articulates the centrality of pornography to sexual abuse and inequity today.
At issue in these hearings is a law conceived and drafted by Andrea Dworkin and Catharine A. MacKinnon that defines harm done through pornography as a legal injury of sex discrimination warranting civil redress. From the first set of hearings in Minneapolis in 1983 through those before the Massachusetts state legislature in 1992, the witnesses heard here expose the commonplace reality of denigration and sexual subordination due to pornography and refute the widespread notion that pornography is harmless expression that must be protected by the state.
Introduced with powerful essays by MacKinnon and Dworkin, these hearings—unabridged and with each word scrupulously verified—constitute a unique record of a conflict over the meaning of democracy itself—a major civil rights struggle for our time and a fundamental crisis in United States constitutional law: Can we sacrifice the lives of women and children to a pornographer's right to free "speech"? Can we allow the First Amendment to shield sexual exploitation and predatory sexual violence? These pages contain all the arguments for protecting pornography—and dramatically document its human cost.
Catharine A. MacKinnon is Elizabeth A. Long Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School and the James Barr Ames Visiting Professor of Law (Long-Term) at Harvard Law School.
Andrea Dworkin, internationally renowned radical feminist activist, was the author of many books, including the collection of essays Life and Death and the novel Mercy.
Table of Contents
Introductions
The Roar on the Other Side of Silence by Catharine A. MacKinnon
Suffering and Speech by Andrea Dworkin
The Hearings
The Minneapolis Hearings
Minneapolis: Exhibits
Minneapolis: Memo on Proposed Ordinance
Minneapolis: Press Conference
The Indianapolis Hearing
Indianapolis: Appendices
The Los Angeles Hearing
The Massachusetts Hearing
Massachusetts: Written Submissions
The Ordinances
Appendix: American Booksellers Ass'n. Inc. v. Hudnut
These are the hearings that began it all: a conversation so heated and inspiring that the ideas are still forceful, still fought over, still evolving towards resolution.
Mari Matsuda
Here, in this book, is the source of the most powerful assault on patriarchy in modern jurisprudence. MacKinnon and Dworkin's work is sometimes misunderstood as anti-sex. In fact, their theories and their practical work oppose the use, abuse, and dehumanization of women, and are built on the practice of listening to women, as these hearings conclusively reveal. — Mari Matsuda, Georgetown Law School
Frederick Schauer
The feminist anti-pornography movement has been extraordinarily successful. Although none of the proposed laws that are the subject of this book are now on the books, the movement whose inception dates roughly to the beginnings of the Minneapolis hearings has been highly successful in changing the views of many people about the harms of pictorial materials embodying or endorsing sexual violence against women, and about the circumstances of the production of a substantial amount of highly sexually explicit material. It would be a mistake to underestimate from the lack of formal legal success the political, social, and cultural importance, and in many respects, success, of the feminist anti-pornography movement. This effect is not only American but worldwide, and the presence of active, and often successful, associated movements in Canada, New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, and many other countries is largely a product of the events whose formal documentation is the bulk of this book. This material is a valuable part of history. — Frederick Schauer, John F. Kennedy School of Government
Jennifer Hornsby
There can be no doubt about the sincerity or the truth of the editors' belief that the material in this book belongs in the public domain. In cooperating with legislators in attempting to bring it about that pornography's dissemination be recognized as an actionable form of sex discrimination, MacKinnon and Dworkin's assumption was not only that women have been harmed by pornography, but that they have been silenced by it: so long as pornographers benefit (materially) from their (alleged) right to free speech (alleged by advocates of First Amendment protection for pornography), women lose out from their inability to exercise the same right. The hearings, whatever their legal upshot, thus empowered women--by enabling them to give voice to the damage pornography had done them. Publication of the transcripts in book form constitutes a further defense of women's rights. — Jennifer Hornsby, Birkbeck College, University of London
Gloria Steinem
In the words of real experience and personal testimony, In Harm's Way shows that pornography is to females what Nazi literature is to Jews and Klan propaganda is to Blacks. Whether or not all such hate literature is protected by the First Amendment, all must be rejected if we are to live together with dignity and safety.
Cass Sunstein
These hearings provide the underpinnings for a legal initiative that has gotten enormous attention, that raises a host of important and interesting issues, and that has often been misunderstood. [It constitutes] an important addition for academics and for others to the pornography debate. — Cass Sunstein, University of Chicago Law School
Patricia Williams
These are the hearings that began it all: a conversation so heated and inspiring that the ideas are still forceful, still fought over, still evolving towards resolution. — Patricia Williams, author of The Rooster's Egg and The Alchemy of Race and Rights