Content-Type: text/html Lesbian Porn: Does Juliette Love Justine? Carolyn Lea Georgia State University Women's Studies 392 Scenic Lane Auburn, Georgia 30203 (404)822-9570 Lesbian Porn: Does Juliette Love Justine? Carolyn Lea Promoters of lesbian pornography contend that it is both liberating and transgressive, freeing lesbians from a prescriptive sexuality which they attribute to radical feminism. From a radical feminist perspective, these texts do little to challenge a paradigm of dominance and submission, and in fact serve to reinscribe the very conditions they claim to subvert. An analysis of texts by Pat Califia and Joan Nestle, will show how a sexuality of difference, a hetero-sexuality, is perpetuated, while no alternatives are proposed. Carolyn Lea Lesbian Porn The issues of pornography and sexuality have been divisive and hotly debated factors in feminism, particularly since the early 1980's. Adding to the complexity of the issue, has been the development of a lesbian sex industry. In the early 1980's lesbian pornography made an appearance and had found a definite niche by the late 1980's. The late 80's and early 90's have seen an explosion of sexually explicit material aimed at the lesbian market. Like heterosexual pornography, lesbian porn has assumed many forms, including 'erotic' stories, film, magazines, video, and theater. We have also seen the advent of live sex shows, lesbian prostitutes, lesbian phone sex and sex shops catering to lesbians. The women who produce and support this development claim that lesbian pornography is liberating and transgressive, that is that it goes beyond set boundaries and limits, violating and breaking codes imposed by the dominant culture. Does lesbian pornography subvert the dominant paradigm or reflect it? And how do the texts legitimate or disprove the argument of liberation and transgression? An analysis of these texts will reveal that there is no difference in the message of lesbian porn and heterosexual porn and the sexuality being promoted by the lesbian sex industry is one which embraces the heterosexual dynamic of dominance and submission. Hence what is subverted is feminism itself and the construction of a sexuality based on mutuality and egalitarianism. Feminist argument concerning the proliferation of the lesbian sex industry has centered on ideological differences, the division falling along the dividing line of an earlier critique of heterosexual pornography and sexuality. There are basically two camps: the sexual libertarian position and the radical feminist position. This study will proceed from the position of radical feminism and look at how the texts actually work to perpetuate the dominant/submissive pattern of sexuality. The Sexual Libertarians and Their Views on Pornography Libertarian theory, or sex radical theory, is based on the ideas of the work of the sexologists, the 'sexual revolution' of the 1960's and the work of gay male theorists such as Michel Foucault and Jeffrey Weeks. Denise Thompson has defined libertarian as: ...an insistence on freedom from constraint, a rejection of any form of restriction on sexual behaviour especially moral prohibition, the advocacy of a plurality of 'sexualities', and a reluctance to relinquish the vision of 'sexual liberation'...Underlying this commitment is a belief that there exists some 'true' kind of sexuality, an intrinsic property of the individual which is suppressed by 'society', but will come into its full flowering once the social restrictions have been removed. The political str ategy which follows from this commitment to the 'repression hypothesis' involves the refusal to take a stand against any form of sexual desire or activity, and the pejorative labeling of any such stand as 'moralistic' (1991,10). Libertarian 'feminists' celebrate pornography, as well as the sexual 'perversions', as liberating. They attack anti-porn feminists for endorsing what they call a 'prescriptive' sexuality (Califia, 1980; Echols, 1984; Hollibaugh, 1984; Nestle, 1987; Rubin, 1984; Smyth, 1990,1992; Willis, 1983). Paula Webster has attacked anti-porn feminists for 'depriving' us of such 'perverse' pleasures as "voyeurism, bondage, s/m, fetishism, pornography, promiscuity, and intergenerational" sex (Webster, 1984, 386), while Amber Hollibaugh accuses anti-porn feminism of alienating women who: ...don't come gently and don't want to...are the lovers of butch or femme women; who like fucking with men; practice consensual s/m; feel more like faggots than dykes; love dildoes, penetration, costumes; like to sweat, talk dirty,...think gay male porn is hot...(1984, 403). It has been suggested that not only has radical feminism tried to 'censure' sexuality and impose a 'politically correct' sex, but that feminism lacks the tools to develop a sexual politics, and that sexuality should remain outside the realm of politic (Echols,1984; Rubin, 1984; Smyth, 1992). Given the promotion of 'perversity', pornography, the 'illicit' and 'taboo' as transgressive, radical and revolutionary (Bright, 1992; Califia, 1983; Dolan, 1987; Henderson, 1992; Smyth, 1990, 1992; Snitow, 1983; Vance, 1984), and the fact that libertarian voices have dominated feminist discourse on sexuality (Thompson, 1991, 8), it is not surprising that the 1980's produced a fertile ground for the production of lesbian pornography. Jill Dolan, for example, has claimed that power, sexuality, and desire can be reclaimed from a strictly male domain with new and different meaning. She sees lesbian pornography, even when there is "some direct appropriation of male forms" as acquiring new meaning when "used to communicate desire for readers of a different gender and sexual orientation" (1987, 171). Susie Bright, lesbian "sexpert" and editor of the lesbian porn magazine On Our Backs, argues that women have always used erotica, relying on images men had produced for them, even using feminist critiques of male writers, such as Kate Millett's of Henry Miller in Sexual Politics, to masturbate. She sees woman produced erotica as being from a "...contemporary clit's-point-of-view..."(1992, 126), and calls for us to redefine objectification: "In sexual literature and art, the process of objectification is a very natural and sensitive one...Women's contribution to erotic objectification has been to expand the territory of compelling sexual possibilities; not only to romanticize, but to virtually fetishize erotic environments." (1992, 127). In her analysis of On Our Backs and Macho Sluts, a collection of pornographic short fiction By Pat Califia, Lisa Henderson argues that the texts may be seen as both transformative and transgressive. She argues the texts demystify sexuality and provide us with "anti-repressive lesbian sexual portrayals...these images trade at once on liberatory imagination and subcultural cachet." The transgressive qualities she found in these texts include "romance,...penetration, sadomasochism, dominance-submission,...butch-femme, humping, cruising, leather, bestialit y, bondage,...cross-generational seduction, public sex, exhibitionism, anal fucking,...fisting." Lesbian porn producers are seen as uppity women who have made a declaration of sexual independence, appropriating sexual stances and strategies from the gay male community. She concludes these images transgress anti-porn feminism as well as the heterosexual status quo and affirm that which is most threatening - lesbian sexual desire (173-187). Gillian Rodgerson also defends and applauds the explosion of lesbian porn, which she prefers to call erotica, perceiving a feeling of shame and guilt to be attached to the word porn. She sees lesbian created porn as different from heterosexual porn, as more personal. She identifies the work being produced as often being from a feminist perspective, and decries anti-porn feminists seeing the work as exploitive (275-279). In her article, "The Pleasure Threshold," Cherry Smyth sees the viewing of lesbian porn as representing rebellion against a "prescriptive feminist sex which must be equal, nurturing, non-penetrative and romantic. To thrill, porn needs to be illicit. By watching lesbian porn we are transgressing a feminist taboo, as well as the wider socio-political taboo, which invests the act with the thrill of the forbidden." Looking at the film Clips, Smyth found the female come shot as powerfully dramatic and subversive. The film portrays a butch-femme couple and their experiences with a dildo. At one point the butch fucks the femme with the dildo and the femme/bottom enjoys being filled up. Smyth sees the dildo as subverting the potency of the penis and quotes Peg Byron from an article in The Voice, "Lesbians looked to gay men's porn for material taboo in their own circles...With their elaboration on technique, especially the pleasure of penetration, gay men have ironically contributed to the renaissance of vaginal sex amongst lesbians." In Queer Notions, Smyth looks at the adoption of a queer ideology by lesbians. She sees the move as being a rebellion against feminism and a sexuality constructed on ideas of sameness and equality, feeling there was something to be learned from gay men. She sees the writing of sex radicals such as Joan Nestle, Carole Vance, Gayle Rubin and Ann Snitow to be the queerest elements to have emerged from feminism. Queer theory has been primarily defined by gay men, such as Simon Watney, and a most basic tenet is the right of unhampered sexual access (Jeffreys, 1993; Smyth, 1992). Smyth sees gay male sex as more developed and sees lesbian imitation as transgressive. These transgressive acts include lesbians "fucking both gay and straight males, sadomasochism, wearing didoes, eroticizing the ass, and cottaging" or restroom sex. She admits that gay men have not reciprocated with an appropriation of lesbian practices, this being due to a lack of sexual and social power to which women have access. Sara Dunn, who identifies as pro-porn, disagrees that lesbian sex or lesbian porn is in itself radical. She writes, "By styling themselves (and being styled) the illicit ones, the bad girls (as opposed to the good girls who don't like any sexual explicitness at all), these writers rely on the same sexual double-standards, the same sex-associated shame and guilt which they claim it is their mission to remove. The bad girls need the good girls to make them feel good (i.e., bad). Dunn questions the claim of lesbian pornographers that to transpose the language of sexual liberation to a lesbian context is enough to create change, denying the political impact of lesbian porn, and seeing it as merely a tool to promote sexual enjoyment (1990). Radical Feminism Radical feminists have experienced the attack on anti-porn feminists and radical feminism as an attack on the basic tenets of feminism and as part of the backlash against feminism in the culture at large (Jeffreys, 1990, 1993; Kitzinger and Perkins, 1993; Liedholdt, 1990; Penelope, 1992; Raymond, 1991; Stock, 1990; Thompson,1991). Radical feminism, British revolutionary feminism and lesbian feminism have in common the same basic premise - that feminism is the struggle against male domination, that women as a class are oppressed by the male 'sex' class and that sex class oppression forms the origin of all other oppressions. While recognizing diversity, radical feminism holds that all women are oppressed as women and that this forms the basis of commonality between women despite differences of class, race, and sexual orientation. The dominant paradigm is one of dominance and submission in which sex is eroticized subordination. Critical to radical feminist theory is the argument that sexuality and sex roles have been constructed to perpetuate male dominance or phallocratic reality, and that the undoing of patriarchy requires a critical analysis of sexuality as well as the deconstruction of roles (Atkinson, 1974; Hester, 1992; Jeffreys, 1990, 1993; McKinnon, 1989; Thompson, 1991). Hence it is not surprising that the libertarian quest for "sexual liberation" and the uncritical adaption of male sexual values as positive, is seen as the cooption of feminism. They argue that libertarian volumes such as Carole Vance's Pleasure and Danger minimize the very real sexual violence women experience, and that the arguments advanced as protecting individual privilege and choice with regard to sexual practice are the same as those used by men to retain their sexual privilege and access. Advocating patriarchal sexual relations, whether leftist male or gay male, is seen to ultimately be serving the oppressor (Jeffreys, 1990, 1993; Liedholdt, 1990; McKinnon, 133-142; Morgan, 1984, 114-117; Stock, 1990, Thompson, 1991). Women adopting malestream theory and advancing it as revolutionary for women is not new. Sheila Jeffreys has looked at how the role played by the development of sexology, and the sexual revolution of the 1920's, impacted the militant feminism of the period in her book The Spinster and Her Enemies (1985). The work of sexologists such as Havelock Ellis worked to concretize and popularize ideas about sexuality, such as women's innate masochism, masculine dominance and female submission (See also: Ellis, 1913; Hester, 1992, 83-92; Jackson, 1984a, 1984b). Women like Stella Browne and Ellen Key became followers of Ellis helping to popularize his ideas among women. She follows her analysis of the detriment of the sexologists, looking at contemporary work such as that of Kinsey and Masters and Johnson, to feminism in Anti-Climax (1990). She also looks at how the sexual revolution of the 1960's was sold to women as liberating while positioning them to better service men's needs. She argues that sexual liberation did not offer women any real gain and was at times directly opposed to the goals of the women's movement. Jeffreys looks at the eroticization of power difference and how it has emerged in heterosexual as well as the lesbian and gay communities. She proposes that women not equate all pleasure with positivity, but rather analyze the source of our desire and the construction of our sexuality. In her most recent work, Lesbian Heresy, she looks at the emergence of the lesbian sex industry, and how it has adopted the hetero values of dominance and submission. She also contends that a lesbian alliance with gay men is detrimental to a lesbian feminist agenda (1990, 145-210; 1993, 117-148), the political agenda of gay men being the perpetuation of phallocentrism. Jeffreys derides lesbian pornography as perpetuating heterosexual - which she defines as desire based on difference, regardless of the sex of the partners - desire. She sees the new erotica as providing women with two roles: It allows women to put themselves in the place of men and find the objectification, fetishisation and humiliation of women exciting or to adopt the old-fashioned submissive roles which are also plentifully available in this erotica so women now have a choice whether to get turned on by taking either a dominant or submissive role towards another woman. (1993, 26) She is also critical of the return of butch-femme role playing, it's imitation of heterosexual roles and the hierarchal relationship it establishes between women. She sees the libertarian fascination with 'perversity' as being part of a desire to romanticize decadence and play the role of outlaw and rebel while failing to challenge hetero-reality (1993 99-115). Looking at the positions of the different feminist camps from a radical feminist perspective, Denise Thompson criticizes the position of the sexual libertarians, finding it antithetical to feminist values. Thompson argues that the libertarian position has its basis in liberal individualism, which conflicts with the feminist concept of the social construction of sexuality. She challenges the position of the sex radicals when they attack radical feminism as being moralistic, claiming that all judgement precedes from a moral position and that feminism is founded on ethics (1991, 177-190). She argues that the feminist critique of pornography is not a campaign against individuals, but of a certain form of sexual desire (1991, 195). Reclaiming is itself problematic for Julia Penelope, who finds the reclaiming of butch-femme role playing regressive drawing on her own experience as a 'stone butch,' a woman who does not allow another woman to touch her. Role playing is a staple of lesbian erotica. Penelope also expresses concern over the uncritical reclaiming of words, such as erotic, which is a positive word in patriarchal society, denoting class and the dressing up of sex, unlike porn which is associated with a lower class of producer and audience. She is also concerned with reclaiming such words as 'pussy', 'box', 'crack', 'hole', and 'split tale', arguing that we cannot disassociate the meanings these words carry from the intentions men have given them. (Smyth, for example, reclaims "the right to call my cunt, my cunt, to celebrating the pleasure in objectifying another body, to fucking women and to admitting that I also love men...[1992, 27].) She sees the new-erotics as taking us backward not forward (1992, 98-112). Celia and Jenny Kitzinger look at how lesbian porn has utilized the conventions of male pornography, even quoting pro-porn Barbara Smith, cofounder of a black feminist press, admitting that lesbian pornography appears little different from that of straight men. In the images they looked at in Quim, a British lesbian porn magazine, they found that "Far from 'transgressing' traditional representations, they reinscribe them: the dominatrix, the bound woman on a rack, the huge (albeit detachable) dick." They argue that what is being transgressed, when lesbians appropriate the symbols of domination, is feminism, with the porn advocates characterizing feminists as prudes, censorious and moralizing. They call upon lesbians to not just produce images which turn us on, but to examine the construction of desire, to question 'pleasure' and not assume it to be unproblematic. (1993, 9-25). Clearly, the majority of writing has not concentrated on the content of lesbian porn, but has centered on questions concerning the meaning of lesbian porn - particularly whether or not it is liberating or oppressive. In addition, writers have focussed on the 'right' to produce porn, putting down anti-porn feminists, and the supposed radical impact of lesbian-produced porn. Radical feminists have concentrated their efforts, to a large degree, on self-defence. Still, they have dared to question the construction of desire and sexuality, rather than embrace as radical anything that turns you on. Methodology This study will provide a textual analysis of 'erotic' writings by two women, Pat Califia and Joan Nestle. Both are recognized by sexual libertarians as being on the cutting edge in their exploration of lesbian sexuality and identity. These texts are produced by women who identify as lesbian and address a lesbian audience, although Califia states in her introduction she has no objection to non-lesbian readers enjoying her book (1988, 17). Califia's collection of short fiction, Macho Sluts, deals with lesbian sadomasochism. Due to the controversial nature of the work, Macho Sluts has been widely written about by both libertarians (Henderson, 1992) and radical feminists (Clarke, 1993, 123; Jeffreys, 1993, 131-134; Kitzinger and Kitzinger, 1992, 22-23; Miriam, 1993). Califia has played a leading role in popularizing the practice of lesbian sadomasochism and was a founder of Samois, the first lesbian S/M group in the United States. She wrote Sapphistry: The Book of Lesbian Sexuality, a lesbian sex manual calling for the celebration of and tolerance for 'diverse' sexual practices in 1980. Her impact on the lesbian community has been estimable in that she has contributed to the widespread acceptance of S/M and the silencing of critique (Caplan, 1985, 161; Penelope, 1992, 113-131; Stein, 1993). Nestle has primarily written essays, but she has included her 'erotic' stories in two collections, A Restricted Country and an anthology The Persistent Desire: A Femme-Butch Reader, which she edited. Again, these stories are being chosen due to interest they have generated ( Jeffreys, 1993, 29, 63, 66, 73, 107; Penelope, 1992, 15; Rodgerson, 1993, 275). Nestle, like Califia, has played an instrumental role in the lesbian community. She founded the Lesbian Herstory Archives in New York City, and, more importantly, for the purpose of this study, she has been the spokesperson for those wishing to reclaim and embrace lesbian role playing. Nestle's work has functioned to validate the re-emergence of butch-femme role-playing, which was strongly critiqued by lesbian feminists of the seventies, within the community. Although Califia and Nestle have contributed to the construction and model of contemporary lesbian sexuality through their writings ( Lesbian Contradiction, 1993; Off Our Backs, 1993, 23.8, 23.9), these works have yet to be critically examined. This analysis will do that by examining the representation of woman, lesbian and sexuality in Macho Sluts, "My Woman Poppa" from Persistent Desire, and the erotic stories in A Restricted Country. Looking at the Message For both Califia and Nestle, power inequity is a requirement for sexual arousal. In Califia's, work women are sadist/masochist, top/bottom, master/slave, dominatrix/submissive, butch/femme, teacher/pupil, mother/daughter. In "The Finishing School" Berenice is the mother to Clarissa, whom she is educating to play the role of sex slave (1988 63-84). "Jessie" tells the story of Liz's one-nighter with a rock singer, Jessie, a top (sadist). Liz tells Jessie about her introduction to rough sex by a dominatrix, a woman who usually performed the role with men, but had taken Liz under her wing to find out what it would be like with women (1988, 28-62). In "The Surprise Party," male cops play top to the woman's bottom. The three men are given a name, her lover is given a name, but the she remains anonymous (1988, 211-242). For Nestle, the roles are butch/femme. In "My Woman Poppa" her lover plays a traditional masculine role, while she plays "mother", "wife", and "slut" to her. In "A Different Place" the butch, as in "Woman Poppa" is identified as having a muscular body and doing a "man's job." In Nestle's stories, the butch plays the sexual aggressor, the femme serves the butch. She dresses in slips, black stockings and sling-back heels, and wears lipstick and nail polish (1987, 135; 1992, 349). In adapting roles culturally encoded with power or powerlessness, the heterosexual dynamic is reinscribed. As Sheila Jeffreys noted (1993,26,) woman is given the option of playing oppressor or oppressed, subject or object, fucker or fuckee. The perception of sex as an activity where power inequities inhere is further enhanced through the use of language as active/passive. For both writers, sex is something done to one person by another. The woman poppa says "you are so good to fuck" (1992 350). In Nestle's "Margaret" the butch responds to taunting that she is butch enough to "make you cry when you come," and she "forces" the femmes thighs apart, the femme "swells to her taking" (1987, 155-156). In "A Different Place" Jay takes the woman beneath her, fucks and penetrates her. She has "brought this woman to her pleasure and now she is going to bring her home" (1987, 136, 137) In "The Gift of Taking" the butch "forces" her lover's legs apart, her mouth open, and forces fingers inside of her (1987, 128- 130). In Califia's "Jessie," Jessie positions mirrors so Liz can see everything that is "done to" her. In "The Calyx of Isis" Alex humped Michael as Michael fucked Roxanne. Roxanne is spread open and "drilled," forced to yield, brought to her knees. In "The Surprise Party," the woman is pinned down, the cock is slammed into her, pushed into her, battering her. In all of Califia's stories the tops "do" the bottoms. The bottoms are taken, fucked, made, forced, the top gives "it" to the bottom (1988). The use of active/passive language thus serves to further eroticize positions of dominance and submission. For both writers the bottoms, the femmes, are revealed to be wanting and needing willing to be acted upon, receiving pleasure from the vexation. Lesbian sexuality is ensconced in the language of heterosexuality. There is no room for a language that permits subjectivity to both partners. Degradation is another element used to accentuate the power differential. For both writers, humiliation and degradation is imbued with an erotic charge. In Nestle's "The Gift of Taking," the femme is "submissive" and is told that while she is a powerful woman out in the world, when with her (the butch) she will be in her hands. Joan (the femme) is told by her butch lover to open up and take her in. The woman then taunts Joan suggesting that maybe she can't, "maybe I'm too much for you" (1987, 128,129). For Califia, degradation, humiliation and punishment are defining characteristics of the erotic exchange. In her sadomasochistic scenarios, bottoms are "punished" when they fail to meet the behavioral standards expected by their masters. Both top and bottom respond sexually to these scenes of physical and verbal abuse. In "Jessie," Jessie calls Liz a slut, bitch, whore and cunt, then tells her she has been a bad girl and she needs to take her home with her and teach her a lesson. As the slave of the dominatrix who trained her, Liz had slept at the foot of the woman's bed and would be taught a lesson when the woman found fault with her. Now Jessie ties Liz up, slaps her, walks her to the bathroom and tells her to go. Liz finds this both humiliating and comforting. Liz's ankles are cuffed, her hands tied to the bed. Jessie asks if the mirrors, which allow Liz to see herself, excite or shame her and tells her they are meant to do both. Jessie drops hot candle wax on Liz, then Jessie inserts the candle in her anus. Liz at this point is feeling as though "I did not exist, except as a response to her touch. There was nothing else...no whim of my own will moved me" (1988, 58). Then Jessie beats her and climbs on top of her as Liz experiences "liberation and silence and obliteration" (1988, 59). In "The Finishing School" Clarissa spends her last night with her mother in the discipline chamber before being packed off to finishing school. The text reads "Dominance is not created without complicity. A well trained slave ...in love with her mistress and will weep for days if a fault is not reprimanded. If no punishment is forthcoming she will ask for it...(1988, 68). The mother, Berenice, whips Clarissa, calls her a little slut, common streetwalker, baggage, tart. Clarissa asks her mother to take her maidenhead. Berenice tells her she is jealous and tells her to apologize. "I'm nothing" Clarissa cried in ecstacy. "I deserve nothing but the most brutal and rigorous punishment. I beg your forgiveness, your clemency, your correction. I plead for the opportunity to expunge my guilt, to redress my failing..." (1988, 71). "The Calyx of Isis" is a tale reminiscent of The Story of O by Pauline Reague. Alex arranges for her lover, Roxanne, to be taken to a lesbian bar and sex club where she will be tested for her faithfulness. Alex asks Tyre, the club's owner, to arrange the "scene." Tyre employs several tops, including herself, to participate. Roxanne is manacled, has a hood placed over her head, and is taken to the dungeon by Tyre's driver Michael. She has a gag in her mouth and ear plugs. Califia describes her thus, "The hood made an alien face...It depersonalized her, made her even more sexy, removed any inhibitions the assembled dominatrices might have had..." (1988, 118). Roxanne is referred to as "the goods", an "uppity slave", "flashy piece of trash", and "ultimate bar-femme dressed up to play the whore for her butch." She is whipped with belts, canes, and riding crops. Fists are plunged inside her, she is given an enema and placed in a sling where two women insert their fists in her anus. She is ordered to crawl, to lick boots. Alex reminds Roxanne she owns her and she can decide who to give her to. Clothespins are hung from her flesh. Any sexual response is rewarded with more abuse. During one beating Roxanne tells herself that she is of no consequence, she renders herself will-less and invisible. The story ends with Alex claiming her property and putting slave rings into her nipples and vulva (1988, 84-176). In "The Hustler," a top who hustles other women is approached by a woman who has broken up with her girlfriend. The woman relates her treatment in her past relationship to prove her worthiness: Our tail-wagging, panting little woofer spent every possible minute with her, and when she did she was always in a set of wooden stocks and had a plug up her butt. Much was made of leashes and spanking bad puppies. She slept in ...doggie hut, and did all her drinking and eating out of little dishes on the floor...I was charmed. (1988, 133). In "The Surprise Party," the woman is penetrated repeatedly and in every orifice. She is beaten with a belt until she pisses on herself. Her "illusion of free will is destroyed." She is referred to as "cop meat." Throughout the story the men use and humiliate her and she loves it. They compare her to themselves calling her a bulldyke, says she wants to be a man. At the end it is revealed that the evening is a birthday gift from her lover (1988, 211-242). In all of these stories women are insatiable. The femmes, the bottoms are punished for their wantonness. They are bad girls, naughty girls. And they all want to be humiliated, they "consent" to it. Drawing on traditional pornographic conventions, the women solicit and are complicit in their degradation. They become the libertine, who rather than scream, enjoys herself and "chooses" to discharge in response to vexation (Kappeler 1986, 137). The tops play the role of phallic woman assuming the power of the masculine, accessing power and using it over other women. Both writers portray sex for the bottom or femme as a loss of self, of will, as complete submission and escape. So as the top, the butch, assumes the power of the phallus she does so at the expense of her bottom who is condemned to the traditional role of woman - wanton and will-less, her desire driving her beyond any control. Interestingly, tops are not only given the power of the phallus, they are also accorded penises. Nestle's woman poppa wears a cock. ...telling her what a wonderful cock she has...I do long to suck you, to take your courage into my mouth...my red lips and red tipped fingers massaging her cock...I give her the best I can licking the lavender cock it's whole length and slowly tongueing the tip...then I take her fully into my mouth...she reaches down and slips the cock into me...(1992, 349-350). In her story "The Three," a butch straps on her cock to have two femmes suck and lick it. She then proceeds to fuck both femmes with her cock (1987, 142). In Califia's work, dildoes, knives, whip handles and stiletto heels all serve the dual role of fetish and phallus. In "Calyx," Michael wears a dildo which is used to penetrate vaginally as well as orally and anally. One woman slides a knife along Roxanne's thigh, another fucks her with a high heel. The handle of a whip is inserted in her (1988, 84-176). In "Jessie," the candle is phallus (1988, 58). These objects serve as penis and weapon. Sheila Jeffreys sees the use of dildoes as not only imitative of heterosexual sex, but also reflective of the influence of gay male porn on lesbians. In the use of a dildo, lesbians can identify with the male, the importance of having a penis and penetration. This in turn will provide her with the admiration of those women for whom masculine power has a "positive erotic weighting" as well as from gay men (1993 131,132). Jan Brown, a butch, explains the use of the dildo as: ...we also dream of the taking...we haul our cocks out of our pants to drive into a struggling body...we need to have a dick as hard as truth between our legs, to have the freedom to ignore "no"...We bought bigger dildoes... We bought the ones with simulated veins and balls from porn shops...Plastic dicks become much more than sex toys...when we strap it on it becomes ours...blowjobs...the image has no equality. A woman is on her knees...it is about the urge to dominate, take and degrade...The heat is in the history. Context (1992, 412-413). The popular use of the dildo in lesbian pornography appears to establish a reluctance to relinquish the power the phallus holds in patriarchal culture and its attendant erotic allure. Despite denial that dildoes have a connection to the penis, it is hard to imagine that they evolved out of nowhere or that the attraction would be so great if this were not the case. Like the role of butch and femme, it seems unlikely that the dildo evolved without model. But more disturbing than the imitation of the penis itself is the imitation of heterosexual power difference and the use of the dildo to take, pump, do, degrade. Califia and Nestle both use their texts as political forums, attacking 'censorious' feminism and defending their own stance as providing women with sexual agency which is equated with liberation. In her introduction Califia describes this free woman: ...the woman who travels, who wants to go where men go, and see what they see, who wears their clothes and appropriates their pleasures and mannerisms, who carries a razor,...(1988, 19). She defines porn as one of the commonest ways people learn about sex and equates anti-pornography feminists with the right-wing. In "Papa" Nestle seems overly concerned with conveying to the reader that her "woman poppa" "does not want to be a man" and that her ways are not a "betrayal of her womanliness" (1992, 348, 350) Nestle equates the anti-porn feminists with McCarthyites and refers to them as "the new vice squad" (1987, 149-150). Both women perceive the feminist argument to be one of prudish moralism. What they fail to acknowledge is their own allegiance to a sexual dynamic shaped by a history of women's subjugation. As Califia appears to admit, we learn our sexuality. There is nothing natural or innate in our sexual response to certain stimulus, including the pain and degradation Califia advocates. Lesbian pornography serves the same purpose pornography has always served. It provides women with the message that they are sex. And if we begin to feel titillated by the image of the abuse of other women we will act in accord with our patriarchal oppressor, not subvert or deter. Rather we construct our sexulity on the premise of woman as object. The idea that lesbian pornography is transgressive and subversive is not substantiated by the texts. As De Lauretis notes, "...this notion of lesbian desire as commodity of exchange is rather disturbing. For, unfortunately- or fortunately as the case may be - commodity exchange does have the same meaning 'between women' as between men, by definition..."(1988, 170). The creation of pornography, as well as the adoption of S/M and butch/femme roles seems to be founded in the desire to obtain outlaw status, and an avant-garde fascination with decadence. Jeffreys attributes the new attitude among lesbians to both a revived affinity with gay men as well as to the growing number of women who have the economic power to consume women in the same way men have (1992). 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