Gay lorn.

When no one is looking, many women are watching lgbtq+ porn

Back in 2015, the wildly well-liked online pornography site Pornhub — which boasts over 115 million daily views — published a finding that took sexuality researcher Lucy Neville by surprise: Women are responsible for more than a third of the site’s male lover male porn views.

The finding planted the seed for what would eventually develop a book, “Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys,” which was published earlier this month. In it, Neville, a lecturer at the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom, investigates what women savor about consuming homosexual male erotica and how it fits in with their perceptions of gender and sexuality.

"They are definitely objectifying women and not treating them like people," Christina said of straight porn. "A lot of the time it seems like the women aren't actually enjoying it."

Neville interviewed and surveyed more than 500 women over five years for the project. Many of the women with whom she spoke said “a lot of the problem they hold with heterosexual porn is that they focus on the female body" without paying enough attention to men.

“Gay porn gives an opportunity to look

Porn laid bare: Male lover men, pornography and bareback sex

Sharif Mowlabocus ; Justin Harbottle ; Charlie Witzel ; (2013) Porn laid bare: Queer men, pornography and bareback sex.Sexualities, 16 (5-6). pp. 523-547. DOI: 10.1177/1363460713487370

This article details the preliminary findings from Porn Laid Bare, a collaborative research undertaking between the University of Sussex and the Terrence Higgins Trust, Brighton. We explore the multidimensional affair that respondents identified as having formed with pornographic material, together with its role within gay male subculture. We then regard how interview respondents understood and conceptualised bareback pornography. Our findings reveal consistent contradictions between general discussions of gay pornography and specific discussions of bareback representations. Utilising Dean’s (2009) work on bareback subculture and the ‘ambivalent gift’, we develop a critical reading of these contradictions in order to recognize the methods by which the anxieties and pleasures of bareback pornography were handled by respondents.

Occupied text not available from this repository.


Источник: https://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint

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gay lorn.

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