
Where to read
As an affiliate, we may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through these links — at no extra cost to you. Learn more.
This book studies the literary and cinematic functions of the pornographic as a development from a poetics of obscenity. It focuses on the developments of French, British, and American artistic pornography since the eighteenth century. Discussing female literary figures including Hall, Wharton, Nin, "Reage," Jong, and Shulman; such men as Cleland, Sade, Beardsley, Lawrence, Joyce, and Miller; and film makers such as Brakhage, Jack Smith, Bruce Conner, Bertolucci, Oshima, and Wertmuller; Michelson analyzes both the use of aesthetic pornography and the philosophical, cultural, and legal implications of its use. He proposes that realizing the obscene --in the sense of speaking the unspeakable-- is the principle aesthetic function of pornography.
- Publisher
- State University of New York Press
- First published
- 1987
Available formats
- Print — 312 pages · ISBN 9780791412237
Reviews (0)
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.