Lesbian pornography
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2025) |
![](http://up.wiki.x.io/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/Three_Lesbians_with_Salami_no_watermark.jpg/250px-Three_Lesbians_with_Salami_no_watermark.jpg)
Lesbian pornography is a form of adult entertainment that features sexual activity between women.[1] Its primary goal is sexual arousal in its audience and is most often produced as erotic content aimed at heterosexual male, homosexual female, and bisexual audiences. Although it has also been found that many heterosexual females prefer this genre of porn due to its greater focus on women's pleasure.
Homoerotic art and artifacts depicting women have a long history, reaching back to various ancient civilizations. Every medium has been used to represent women having sex with each other. In contemporary mass media, this content is primarily disseminated through home videos (including DVDs), cable broadcasts, emerging video-on-demand and wireless markets, as well as online photo sites and Lesbian pulp fiction.
Audience
[edit]Deborah Swedberg, in an analysis published in the NWSA Journal in 1989, argues that it is possible for lesbian viewers to reappropriate lesbian porn. Swedberg notes that, typically, all-women films differ from mixed porn (with men and women) in, among other things, the settings (less anonymous and more intimate) and the very acts performed (more realistic and emotionally involved, and with a focus on the whole body rather than just the genitals): "the subject of the heterosexually produced all-women videos is female pleasure". She argues (against Laura Mulvey's "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cineman" and Susanne Kappeler's Pornography and Representation, for example) that such movies allow for female subjectivity since the women are more than just objects of exchange.[2] Appropriation by women of male-made lesbian erotica (such as by David Hamilton) was signaled also by Tee Corinne.[3]
Starting in 2013, Pornhub has published annual reports of user activities and found that the lesbian category has been consistently the most popular among female viewers since 2014 when gender statistics were first gathered (except in 2020 when the data was limited), and that women in general regardless of sexual orientation are more likely to search for lesbian-associated terms such as "scissoring" than men.[4] Several articles, including those by Cosmopolitan and Women's Health magazines, have supported these findings through research of their own.[5][6]
Mainstream inauthenticity
[edit]Mainstream lesbian pornography is criticized by some members of the lesbian community for its inauthenticity.[7] According to author Elizabeth Whitney, "lesbianism is not acknowledged as legitimate" in lesbian porn due to the prevalence of "heteronormatively feminine women", the experimental nature, and the constant catering to the male gaze, all of which counter real life lesbianism.[7]
A study conducted by Valerie Webber found that most actors in lesbian porn consider their own pornographic sex somewhere on a spectrum between real and fake sex, depending on several factors.[7] They were more likely to consider it authentic if there was a real attraction between themselves and the other actor(s) in the scene,[7] and if they felt mutual respect between themselves and the producers.[7]
Authenticity in porn is disputed because some assert that the only authentic sex has no motive other than sex itself.[7] Porn sex, being shot for a camera, automatically has other motives than sex itself.[7] On the other side, some assert that all porn sex is authentic since the sex is an occurrence that took place, and that is all that is needed to classify it as authentic.[7]
With regard to the authenticity of their performance, some lesbian porn actors describe their performance as an exaggerated, altered version of their real personality, providing some authenticity to the performance.[7] Authenticity depends on real life experiences, so some lesbian porn actors feel the need to create an entirely different persona to feel safe.[7] Webber writes of Agatha, a queer actor in lesbian porn who "prefers that the activity and ambiance of her performances be very inauthentic, because otherwise it feels 'too close to home'", referring to the oppression and verbal abuse she is subject to by homophobic men in her daily life.[7]
Penetration
[edit]Like in straight and gay male porn, there is an emphasis on penetration in lesbian porn.[7] Even though studies have found that dildos have minimal use in real life lesbian sexual activity,[7][8][9] lesbian porn prominently features dildos.[7] According to Lydon, the ability to achieve orgasm clitorally, as opposed to penetratively, eliminates the need for a phallus and, by extension, for a man.[7] For this reason, male producers continue to include, and male viewers continue to demand, a phallus as a central feature in lesbian porn.[7]
See also
[edit]- Bara
- Bisexual pornography
- Boyd McDonald
- David Hurles
- Erotic literature
- Gay pulp fiction
- Gay sex roles
- Gay sexual practices
- List of actors in gay pornographic films
- Sex industry
- Yuri
References
[edit]- ^ Rutter, Jared (July 2008). "The New Wave of Lesbian Erotica". AVN. pp. 80–88. Retrieved December 22, 2009.
- ^ Swedberg, Deborah (1989). "What Do We See When We See Woman/Woman Sex in Pornographic Movies". NWSA Journal. 1 (4): 602–16. JSTOR 4315957.
- ^ Henry, Alice (1983). "Interview [with Tee Corinne]: Images of Lesbian Sexuality". Off Our Backs. 13 (4): 10–12. JSTOR 25774959.
- ^ "You searched for year in review - Pornhub Insights". 5 December 2024.
- ^ "The Mysterious Straight-Girl Appeal of Lesbian Porn". 22 January 2015.
- ^ "Here's Exactly Why Straight Women Often Prefer Lesbian Porn, According to Sex Experts". 16 June 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Webber, Valerie (2012). "Shades of gay: Performance of girl-on-girl pornography and mobile authenticities". Sexualities. 16 (1–2): 217–235. doi:10.1177/1363460712471119. S2CID 144842110. Archived from the original on December 8, 2014. Retrieved December 8, 2014.
- ^ Jerrold S. Greenberg; Clint E. Bruess; Sarah C. Conklin (2010). Exploring the dimensions of human sexuality. Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. 489–490. ISBN 9780763797409. 9780763741488. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
- ^ Jonathan Zenilman; Mohsen Shahmanesh (2011). Sexually Transmitted Infections: Diagnosis, Management, and Treatment. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. pp. 329–330. ISBN 978-0495812944. Retrieved November 4, 2012.