 | Paganism: Paganism PornographyBy Mike
Nichols
Paganism & Pornography
At times my political views seem to lead me into contradictions.
Last month saw me writing a furious letter to Penthouse magazine concerning
their misinformed story on Witchcraft. Within two weeks I was writing to the
head of the QuickTrip Corporation protesting the removal of Penthouse from their stores. You'd think I would
have been happy at a blow struck against a magazine that maligned my religion.
Not so. At stake is the free expression of ideas. Misinformation and censorship
are both threats to
that freedom. Of the two, I judge censorship to be the greater threat. As long
as publishing continues unimpeded, retraction of misinformation is possible.
When publishing is censored, even that becomes impossible.
But Mike, you say, aren't you a
Pagan and a Witch. Certainly. And don't most Witches consider themselves
feminists? I know I do (if, by "feminist", you mean one who believes
in the equality of women and men). And aren't most feminists opposed to
pornography? Tricky. My own answer: not necessarily. And certainly NOT at the
expense of the First Amendment. After my bout with QuickTrip, I started
pondering how other Pagans viewed the pornography-vs.-censorship issue. My
hunch is that, despite Pagan/feminist consensus on most issues, there would be
a real split here. While most feminists may oppose pornography, I suspect that
a surprising number of feminists who are also Pagans would support
pornography, or at least one's right to publish it. And one needn't look far
for the reasons.
Isaac Bonewits (author of Real
Magic)
once observed to me that at most Pagan households he's stayed in, there is
usually a stack of Playboys and Forums in the master bedroom. And they are
enjoyed by both partners. I would have been surprised had it been otherwise.
Sexuality is a crucial issue to Paganism. After all, in high contrast to the
traditional Christian view of sexuality as inherently evil (original sin),
Paganism espouses sexuality as inherently sacred, or sacramental. It is no
coincidence that the sex act itself, in the context of Wicca, is called
"the Great Rite". There is ample evidence of a "Tantric"
strain of practice within our native Western European religious traditions
before it was suppressed by Christianity.
But Mike, you may say, surely you
are confusing sexuality with pornography. Being opposed to pornography doesn't
mean you're against sexuality, does it? It depends. Primarily it depends on who
is allowed to define "pornography." And from a Witch's perspective,
such thoughts can be chilling. Anyone with even a cursory knowledge of the
history of Witchcraft and its persecution will remember how may Witches went to
the pyre accused of sexual crimes. From the viewpoint of the medieval Church, any sexuality that was
practiced outside of heterosexual marriage (and for the sole purpose of
procreation) was pornographic (in the sense of being sexually offensive or
obscene) and should be censored. Inquisitors routinely accepted confessions of
Pagan sexual license as proof of demonic activity.
It was the Christians who eventually
put a stop to the open marriages, group marriages and Tailltean marriages
allowed by the Pagan Irish brehon laws. It was the Puritans who declared the
"pornographic" Maypoles illegal, along with seasonal frolics in the
woods. It was the Christians who condemned young girls for their "painted faces"
and insisted they keep their hair hidden and wear clothes that covered the
entire body, even in hottest weather. It was the Puritans who believed that
dancing was immoral, and music (other than church music) was indecent. In
short, any activity which encouraged sexuality was viewed by them as
"pornographic", and must be censored.
When the people who define
pornography are the Christian Fundamentalists, Witches are bound to get
nervous. Fundamentalists may go far beyond the most ardent feminists in what
they find "sexually offensive." You don't believe me? Have you had a
chance to glance at Georgia's new anti-sodomy law? It's real. It's on the
books. And it's there because sodomy (even between consensual adults!) falls
outside the Christians' narrow concept of "sex as God intended it".
I've got news: a lot of Pagan sexuality falls outside "sex as God intended
it." That is why, when I hear of radical feminist Andrea Dworkin marching
arm in arm with Jerry Falwell in her anti-pornography campaign, all the alarm
bells in my head go off at once!
Usually, I find myself in agreement
with most feminist ideology; if other feminists are for it, then I'm for it.
But another good litmus test of my politics is to switch on channel 50; if the
Fundamentalists are for, then I'm against it. Dworkin's anti- pornography
campaign represents the first time these two barometers of my politics have
collided. Obviously, I better look a little deeper and pay very close
attention.
Andrea Dworkin, together with law
professor Catherine MacKinnon, have authored several anti-pornography laws
(similar to one just defeated by popular vote in the state of Maine) which
would make it illegal for anyone to sell pornography. These laws have received
widespread support from Right-wing anti-obscenity enthusiasts, such as Attorney
General Edwin Meese, whose Commission on Pornography recently turned in a
highly biased report to President Reagan. When Meese's commission had called 54
witnesses to testify to the "evils" of pornography, and only four to
defend it, editor Hugh Hefner accused the commission of "sexual
McCarthyism". Andrea Dworkin seems to believe that an alliance with such
Christian Fundamentalists will serve women's rights, not endanger them. But all
my background as a feminist and as a Witch leads me to conclude just the
opposite - just as Elizabeth Cady Stanton concluded long ago - that the
institution of Christianity is more responsible than any other for the
repression of women in our society. Dworkin's stance, it seems to me, is a
dangerous and unholy alliance.
So if Dworkin, MacKinnon, Falwell,
and Meese are on the same side of the net, who is on the other side? That ,
too, tells a story. Naturally, Hugh Hefner and Bob Guccione. But also: the
ACLU, People for the American Way, the American Booksellers Association, and
the American Library Association, to name a few. Interestingly, there are also
some well-known feminists in the anti-Dworkin camp, like Kate Millett and Betty
Friedan, who argue that if pornography is bad, censorship is worse. It is
comforting to me as a Pagan to realize that even feminists are split on this
one.
Only last week, the ABA announced
its intent to join Playboy and the ACLU in bringing suit against the Meese Commission
for sending a letter (on U.S. Department of Justice stationery) to convenience
stores such as Seven-Eleven "alleging that your company is involved in the
sale and distribution of pornography". Significantly, the law suit is
being directed by ACLU lawyer Barry Lynn - the same Barry Lynn who defended
Witches and Pagans against the infamous Helms amendment only last fall. Well,
you may say, naturally Mike Nichols is going to take their side; he's an
ex-librarian, a bookstore owner and publisher himself. Maybe so. But when the
country's publishers, bookstores and libraries are in trouble, then we are all
in trouble. You have only to remember libraries like Alexandria and Caernarvon,
destroyed by religious fanatics, and modern-day bookburnings of
"obscene" material, to get the point.
But Mike, you now protest, you have
been using the word "pornography" in a very loose way. According to
the dictionary, pornography is any material that is "sexually
arousing". And surely none would protest tasteful erotica; we only object
to pornography that is negative, violent, degrades women, promotes child abuse,
etc. First of all, I would point out that the good folk on Meese's commission
may not agree with you about what is "tasteful erotica". Again,
remember Georgia's new law. Second, I would argue that there is still no study
(aside from the highly dubious Meese Commission report) that connects
pornography with violent sexual behavior. In fact, all the best evidence points
in the other direction. Countries with the most permissive pornography laws
(such as Sweden and Denmark) have the lowest proportional incidence of rape and
other sexual crimes. And the recent books on convicted rapists, like The
Rapist File and Men on Rape, have constantly shown a negative correlation between
pornography and rape - these men actually read pornography far less than the average man.
Indeed, psychological profiles show these men to be almost Puritanical in their
sexual attitudes. They would very likely to be the first to applaud the Meese
Commission report.
Or, for the sake of argument, let's
suppose that pornography does influence behavior (a very unlikely supposition).
If so, then surely all literature influences action. Consequently, we'd better
seriously consider a ban on movies like "Rambo", or any senselessly
violent war movie.
But surely the Dworkin/MacKinnon
laws focus on more specific problems than these examples would indicate. What,
in fact, is Dworkin's own definition of pornography? And would modern Pagans
find objections to her definition? They'd better! Because some of Witchcraft's
most cherished images, myths, and symbols would fall under Dworkin's labrys.
The most recent issue of Woman of Power published an interview with
Dworkin, which included the text of the revised Dworkin/MacKinnon
anti-pornography law. The "Definitions" section begins: "(1)
Pornography is the graphic sexually explicit subordination of women through
pictures and/or words that also includes one or more of the following:
"(i) women are presented
dehumanized as sexual objects, things, or commodities;" Last week, I was
fortunate to attend Starhawk's splendid slide presentation on the "The
Rebirth of the Goddess". As I sat in the audience watching slide after
slide of Neolithic Goddess figures, I realized these were quintessential
women-dehumanized-as-sexual-objects. The greatly exaggerated sexual organs, the
arms and legs barely indicated, quite often without faces, and sometimes
without heads, fit Dworkin's definition perfectly. And yet to me, and I suspect
to most other Pagans, these are sacrad objects - symbols of the Great Goddess
of the matriarchal period.
"(ii) women are presented as
sexual objects who enjoy pain or humiliation;" The single most common myth
in modern Witchcraft must surely be the Descent of the Goddess into the Underworld.
After being stripped of her jewels, she kneels naked and bound before the Lord
of Death who scourges her ("tenderly") with a whip. "And she
cries out, 'Now I know the pain which is one with love and pleasure.'",
according to one common text seen in Books of Shadows. A patriarchal subversion
of the original myth? Perhaps. Who can say for sure? But one thing is quite
sure: the myth, as it now stands, is sacred to many Pagans, both male and
female, who see many mythic attributes and magical correlations within it, and
who would greatly oppose its censorship.
"(iii) women are presented as
sexual objects who experience sexual pleasure in being raped;" There is
almost a contradiction of terms here: if one is enjoying the experience, it can
hardly be called rape. Still, many Pagan myths, from Persephone to Creidddylad
to Guenevere, center on scenes of rape, sexual abduction, coercion and/or
seduction. And Pagans would hardly be well-served to have such myths censored,
or stripped of their abundant sexual content. Rape itself is sometimes an
allegory for the more violent forces of Nature, and Pagans can learn much from
studying the old myths. I'm reminded of psychologist Bruno Bettleheim's
arguments as to why fairy tales for children should not be "cleaned up".
The violence in them is allegorical and absolutely requisite to the deep
meaning of the tale.
"(iv) women are presented as
sexual objects tied up or cut up or mutilated or bruised or physically
hurt;" Many books on contemporary Witchcraft contain pictures of women
being initiated into the Gardnerian tradition, who are naked and bound. Both
the binding and the ritual nudity have specific magickal associations within
modern Wicca, in part related to the myth cited above. The Eight of Swords in
the Tarot deck would also become "pornographic" by this definition.
And many Pagan creation myths speak of the Goddess, or her daughter, as being
cut up or dismembered, her various body parts forming the fabric of our
universe. Again, sacred images to the Pagan.
"(v) women are presented in
postures or positions of sexual submission, servility or display;" Such
ritual postures (or "asanas") as the kneeling posture, the "God
position" ( a salute to the Death Lord), the "Goddess position"
(arms and legs outstretched), the women-as-altar position (used in some
traditions of the Craft), not to mention various Tantric exercises, could all
be construed to fit this definition. Again, these postures are not exceptions,
but are common to many traditions of the Craft today.
"(vi) women's body parts -
including but not limited to vaginas, breasts, buttocks - are exhibited such
that women are reduced to those parts;" I couldn't have devised a more
precise description of a sheila-na-gig had I tried! It is Ireland's ancient
symbol of the great Goddess: a huge distended vagina, held open by two small
hands, with a head peeking over the top and two small feet at the bottom. And
virtually every "yoni" symbol in the world also falls under this
category. Again, a great portion of Starhawk's brilliant slide collection of
sacred vulvae would have to the classed as "pornographic" by this
definition. Even feminist artist Judy Chicago's brilliant work, "The
Dinner Party", would also be censored under this clause.
"(viii) women are presented
being penetrated by objects or animals;" Artificial phalli have a long and
dignified history in the realm of magic. I don't suppose I'd be giving away any
women's mysteries to mention that female Witches "rode" their
broomsticks vertically more often that horizontally. The evidence of the many
phallically-carved broomsticks, staffs, hobby-horses ("ride a cock- horse
to Banbury Cross") and wands (many of them smeared with belladonna and
other hallucinogenic drugs) bear mute witness to their use. I might also
mention, as a minority viewpoint, the attention given to artificial phalli in
Gavin and Yvonne Frost's Church and School of Wicca. Whether or not one agrees
with this usage, its place in traditional Witchcraft can hardly be contested.
As for the animals, there are too many Pagan myths to recount wherein a god or
goddess turns into a animal and mates with a human.
"(ix) women are presented in
scenarios of degradation, injury, torture, shown as filthy or inferior,
bleeding, bruised, or hurt in a context that makes these conditions
sexual." This last phrase is basically a summation of the Dworkin
viewpoint, all of which I have answered in previous arguments. In an attempt to
avoid accusations of sexism, this section concludes "The use of men, children
or transsexuals in the place of women in (1) above is pornography for purposes
of this law." My arguments would apply equally to these categories as
well.
One final point is that Pagan myth
and literature is not the only sacred literature that contains sexual and/or
"pornographic" material. So does virtually every other sacred
literature in the world, including the Christian Bible! Although you may feel
that I stretched a point or two to make my arguments fit the Dworkin ordinance,
still I hope my general concerns carry conviction. And if the carefully worded
definitions of the Dworkin/MacKinnon law conflict with Pagan sensibilities,
just imagine what the broader, looser definitions of the Meese Commission would
be like.
Thus, if it comes down to a choice between
pornography and censorship (a distasteful choice to many), then I believe we
are safer to support the rights of those who publish, sell, distribute, and
enjoy pornography. If you don't want to use it yourself, you don't have to.
Dworkin and MacKinnon argue that pornography should be an "exception"
to the First Amendment. I disagree. To support censorship - even in this
limited form - would be a fatal mistake for a minority religion that sees
sexuality as sacred. Paganism remains the strongest antidote we have to the
repressed sexual attitudes of our patriarchal Judeo-Christian society. We must
not give up our right and our freedom to depict sexual energy in all its
beautiful, myriad and diverse forms.
Bibliography:
á
Brownmiller, Susan, Against Our Will, Bantam, 1976.
á
Dershowitz, Alan M., "A 20th Century Inquisition",
Penthouse, July 1986.
á
Goth, A.N., Men Who Rape, Plenum Publishing, 1979.
á
Green, Michelle, "The Shame of America", People, June 30,
1986.
á
Hefner, Hugh M., "The Blacklist", Playboy, July 1986.
á
McGrath, Peter, "New Themes and Old Taboos", Newsweek,
March 18, 1985.
á
Namuth, Tessa, et. al., "The War Against Pornography",
Newsweek, March 18, 1985.
á
Nobile, Philip & Nadler, Eric, "Ed Meese Gives Bad
Commission", Penthouse, July 1986.
á
Stoil, Julie-Maya, "Radical Visionary for Justice", Woman
of Power, Winter/Spring 1986.
á
Sussman, Les & Bordwell, Sally, The Rapist File, Chelsea House,
1981.
á
Various press releases from People For the American Way, People For
the American Way, monthly.
Please visit Mike Nichols at
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/7280
Document Copyright © 1986, 2002 by Mike Nichols
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