Alice in Pornoland: Hardcore Encounters with the Victorian Gothic
Laura Helen Marks
Abstract
This book argues that pornographic film relies on a particular "Victorianness" in generating eroticism—a Gothic Victorianness that is monstrous and restrained, repressed but also perverse, static but also transformative, and preoccupied with gender, sexuality, race, and time. Pornographic films enthusiastically expose the perceived hypocrisy of this Victorianness, rhetorically equating it with mainstream, legitimate culture, as a way of staging pornography’s alleged sexual authenticity and transgressive nature. Through an analysis of porn set during the nineteenth century and porn adaptations ... More
This book argues that pornographic film relies on a particular "Victorianness" in generating eroticism—a Gothic Victorianness that is monstrous and restrained, repressed but also perverse, static but also transformative, and preoccupied with gender, sexuality, race, and time. Pornographic films enthusiastically expose the perceived hypocrisy of this Victorianness, rhetorically equating it with mainstream, legitimate culture, as a way of staging pornography’s alleged sexual authenticity and transgressive nature. Through an analysis of porn set during the nineteenth century and porn adaptations of Lewis Carroll’s Alice books, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, this book shows how these adaptations expose the implicit pornographic aspects of “legitimate” culture while also revealing the extent to which “high” and “low” genres rely on each other for self-definition. In the process, neo-Victorian pornographies draw on Gothic spaces and icons in order to situate itself as this Gothic other, utilizing the Gothic and the monstrous to craft a transformative, pornographic space. These neo-Victorian Gothic pornographies expose the way the genre as a whole emphasizes, navigates, transgresses, and renegotiates gender, sexuality, and race through the lens of history and legacy.
Keywords:
Pornography,
porn studies,
Gothic,
Monstrosity,
Horror,
Victorian,
neo-Victorian,
Oscar Wilde,
Lewis Carroll,
Alice in Wonderland,
Dracula,
Jekyll & Hyde,
Dorian Gray,
nineteenth-century,
adaptation,
Robert Louis Stevenson,
Bram Stoker,
Duality,
Transformation,
sexual subjectivity,
technology,
history of sexuality,
heritage film,
queer studies,
sex work,
feminism,
cinema
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2018 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780252042140 |
Published to Illinois Scholarship Online: May 2019 |
DOI:10.5622/illinois/9780252042140.001.0001 |