08-21-2012, 09:27 AM | #121 | |
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08-21-2012, 12:28 PM | #122 | |
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08-21-2012, 01:02 PM | #123 | |
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I don't exactly disagree with those distinctions, but I don't think they're useful at all. Fanfic has a lot of what we call "PWP"--porn without plot--but the focus is on the characters and their relationship; the stories are focused on the personalities involved and how those are expressed through sex. There may not be a plot, or there may be a thin one ("it's Character A's birthday; Character B wakes up A with surprise birthday sex"), but it's obvious the main story is the sex. However, the story is *about* the characters--how they deal with sensuality, how they relate to each other, what they like or don't like, whether they're responsive, or dominant, or energetic, or perceptive, or vulnerable, or mischievous, or something else. We call it "porn" but it's nothing like mainstream "porn" literature. And while we sense a difference, we can't point to anything objective and say, "this, THIS, is what makes Fanfic Story X 'erotica' and Mainstream Lurid Novel Y 'porn'." And we're *really* not sure whether to call things "romance" or not. Does it stop being "romance" if there's enough explicit sex involved? Is the label an identifier of the contents, or the intended readership? |
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08-21-2012, 01:40 PM | #124 | |
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I've used this method to train myself to specifically not look at or think of people I know or are acquainted with in terms of eros; I only think erotic thoughts directed at fictional characters or people who intentionally present themselves as erotic objects. |
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08-21-2012, 02:04 PM | #125 |
affordable chipmunk
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yes, I too don't like it. It annoys me to think that mankind's most utterly lame perversions can be sold in convenience stores for a few bucks. What next? "The adventures of Pedophile Phil in Disneyland"? "Dick Dictator's secret garden of torture"?
sadly, I think it's only the beginning. Videogames will eventually evolve into VR and if you've watched "Minority Report", there was this lame scene of an old pervert getting his kick in a VR machine... all in the name of money and keeping perverts from actually doing more than just fantasising... |
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08-21-2012, 06:57 PM | #126 | |
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When I did I rarely had much personal interest in the characters or seek out specific authors. I enjoyed the books, but out of sight, out of mind. With other books (mystery/fantasy/science fiction/espionage etc.) I often did have an ongoing interest in the characters and would hope for a sequel or twenty. I have even been in the position of not wanting to continue reading a series after a long term supporting character was killed. Silly I know. Romance and erotic scenes will not put me off a book or a series, but if that is all there is I will rarely finish the book. Helen |
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08-21-2012, 07:51 PM | #127 |
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08-22-2012, 12:19 AM | #128 |
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When I'm in the convenience store, I seldom take notice of the adult magazines. I'm in there for a soda or perhaps a delicious microwaved sandwich.
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08-22-2012, 03:18 AM | #129 |
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If you feel passionately about it, don't support it by doing business with Amazon. There is, sadly, a market for all sorts of flith. Amazon is a business, and when the financial pressure to NOT sell certain types of goods is greater than the financial rewards of selling it, then the problem will solve itself. I don't see any legitimate reason to involve the state and force to dictate what sorts of things one party sells to another in a consentual and therefore mutually satisfactory exchange. What business is it of the masses? But if you feel that your support for Amazon supports the other material that they sell, the obvious recourse is stop supporting Amazon. Your conscience should be clear at that point as you have nothing to do with their activities at that point.
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08-22-2012, 07:57 AM | #130 | |
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08-22-2012, 08:34 AM | #131 |
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I'd sooner buy the adult magazine.
Last edited by Steven Lyle Jordan; 08-22-2012 at 08:40 AM. |
08-22-2012, 08:40 AM | #132 |
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Not if--as has been said before--you don't watch. It's the equivalent of "shock-jock" radio IMO, but what makes it acceptable is that no one's forcing you to tune in. Hate it and walk away.
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08-22-2012, 09:30 AM | #133 |
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Dexter yes, Breaking Bad not so much. I think the difference is in the evaluation of the various characters' deeds. Breaking Bad makes a clear case against a descent into crime and depravity and against using the ends to justify the means. Dexter makes an argument for a double-life and ends-justifying-means violence.
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08-22-2012, 04:10 PM | #134 | |
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I found Dexter disturbing in the same way I find Serge Storms disturbing. Not the violence or the vengeance, but the need to make the killer aware they are being killed in a gruesome manner for their past misdeeds. Obviously I am a prude in that I don't like mental or physical torture even if the torturee is deserving of it in the protaganoists viewpoint. I only watched two episodes of Dexter but I don't see it as any worse than your average thriller cut and slash movie. Probably no worse than the evil doll Chucky although I would have a hard time taking Chucky seriously.. Helen Ps I am also a prude because I don't like Saws or Halloween type movies, but I don't actually see them or Dexter as harmful to a half way normal person or even to society as a whole. Helen |
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08-22-2012, 04:25 PM | #135 |
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Yeah, but I have to live in the society of people that do watch! I know you said these things don't impact your "real" life, but I don't think that's true of most people.
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