Thursday, January 28, 2010

reference page for articles

Reference Page:

Bibliography For SP 410: Sex and Media


Attwood, F. (2005). Fashion and passion: Marketing sex to women. Sexualities, 8(4), 392-406.

Attwood, F. (2005). Tits and ass and porn and fighting: Male heterosexuality in magazines for men. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 8(1), 83-100.

Banks, J. (2003). Prurient Interests: Sexuality, Ideology, and Popular Communication. Popular Communication, 1(1), 5-13.

Berkowitz, D. (2006). Consuming eroticism: Gender performance and presentations in pornographic establishments. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 35(5), 583-606.

Brooks, G. (1999). The centerfold syndrome. In S. Maasik & J. Solomon (Eds.), Signs of life in the USA: readings on popular culture for writers (438-447). Boston: Bedford Press.

Brown, J. (2002). Mass media influences on sexuality. Journal of Sex Research 39(1), 42-46.

Collins, R.L., Elliott, M.N., et al. (2003). Entertainment television as a healthy sex educator: The impact of condom-efficacy information in an episode of Friends. Pediatrics, 112(5), 1115-1121.

Coon, D. R. (2005). Two steps forward, one step back: The selling of Charlie’s Angels and Alias. Journal of Popular Film and Television, 33(1), 2-11.

Davidson, A. & Wallack, L. (2004). A content analysis of sexually transmitted diseases in the print news media. Journal of Health Communication, 9(2), 111-118.

Dempsey, J.M., & Reichert, T. (2000). Portrayal of married sex in the movies. Sexuality & Culture, 4(3), 21-37.

Dennis, J. (2003). “Signifying same-sex desire in television cartoons. Journal of Popular Film & Television, 31(3), 132-141.

Dworkin, A. (1992). Against the male flood: censorship, pornography, and inequality. In C. Itzin (Ed.), Pornography: Women, Violence, and Civil Liberties (515-535). London and New York: Oxford University Press.

Hartley, N. (1997). In the flesh: a porn star’s journey. In J. Nagel (Ed.), Whores and other feminists (57-65). New York: Routledge.

Hubbard, R. (2000). The social construction of sexuality. In P. Rothenberg (Ed.), The social construction of difference: Race, gender, class and sexuality (64-67). NY: Worth Publications. (Original work published 1990)

Hunt, A. & Curtis, B. (2006). A genealogy of the genital kiss: Oral sex in the twentieth century. The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, 15(2), 69-83.

Huntemann, N. (2004). Pixel pinups: Images of women in video games. In R. Lind (Ed.), Race/Gender/Media: Considering Diversity Across Audiences, Content and Producers (251- 258) Boston: AB-Longman.

Jenkins, T. (2005). “Potential lesbians at two o’clock” : The heterosexualization of lesbianism in the recent teen film. Journal of Popular Culture, (38)4, 491-505.

Jensen, R., & Dines, G. (2004). Pornography in a pornographic culture: Eroticizing domination and subordination. In R. Lind (Ed.), Race/Gender/Media: Considering Diversity Across Audiences, Content, and Producers (274-281). Boston: AB-Longman

Jensen, R. & Jensen, J. (2007). Entertainment media and sexual health: A content analysis of sexual talk, behavior and risks in a popular television series. Sex Roles, (56), 275-284.

Kaufman, F. (2005). Debbie does salad: The food network at the frontiers of pornography. Harper’s Magazine. Accessed at: http://www.barbaranitke.com/harpersmag.html

Keller, S. & Brown, J. (2002). Media interventions to promote responsible sexual behavior. Journal of Sex Research, 39(1), 67-72.

Kim, J., Sorsoli, C.L., et. al. (2007). From sex to sexuality: Exposing the heterosexual script on primetime network television. Journal of Sex Research, 44(2), 145-157.

Kipnis, L. (1992). (Male) desire and (female) disgust: reading Hustler. In L. Grossberg, C. Nelson & P. Treichler (Eds.), Cultural Studies (373-389). New York: Routledge.

Krassas, N., Blauwkamp, J., & Wesselink P. (2003). “Master your johnson”: Sexual rhetoric in “Maxim” and “Stuff” magazines. Sexuality & Culture, 7(3), 98-120.

Levande, M. (2008). Women, pop music and pornography. Meridians, 8(1) 293-321.

Magnet, S. (2007). Feminist sexualities, race, and the internet: An investigation of suicidegirls.com. New Media & Society, 9(4), 577-602.

Markle, G. (2008). “Can women have sex like a man?”: Sexual Scripts in Sex and the City. Sexuality & Culture, 12, 45-57.

Mayer, V. (2005). Soft-core in TV time: The political economy of a “cultural trend”. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 22(4), 302-320.

Menard, D. & Kleinplatz, P. (2007). Twenty-one moves guaranteed to make his thighs go up in flames: Depictions of “great sex” in popular magazines. Sexuality & Culture, 12, 1-20.

McElroy, W. (1995). XXX: A woman’s right to pornography. New York: St. Martin’s Press.

Monet, V. (1999). What is feminist pornography? In J. Elias, V. Diehl Elias, V. Bullough, G. Brewer, J. Douglas & W. Jarvis (Eds.), Porn 101: Eroticism, Pornography and the First Amendment (207-210). New York: Prometheus Books.

Monk-Turner, E., Wren, K., et. al. (2008). Who is gazing at whom? A look at how sex is used in magazine advertisements. Journal of Gender Studies, 17(3), 201-209.

Penley, C. (2004). Crackers and whackers: The white trashing of porn. In L. Williams (Ed.), Porn Studies (309-331). London: Duke University Press.

Shugart, H. (2003). Reinventing privilege: The new (gay) man in contemporary popular media. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 20(1), 67-91.

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