Edited by Katrien Jacobs, Marije Janssen, Matteo Pasquinelli
Editorial Assistance: Geert Lovink, Sabine Niederer
Copy Editing: Wietske Maas - Design: Kernow Craig
Publisher: Institute of Network Cultures
Supported by: Paradiso, Amsterdam
ISBN: 978-90-78146-03-2
Order a copy of this book by sending an email to:
info@networkcultures.org
A PDF of this publication can be downloaded for free at [NOT SAFE FOR
WORK!]
low-res, 2MB: http://www.networkcultures.org/_uploads/24.pdf
hi-res, 9MB: http://www.networkcultures.org/clickme/pdf/
clickmeReader_9MB.pdf
C'Lick Me: A Netporn Studies Reader is an anthology that collects the
best materials of two years debate: from The Art and Politics of
Netporn conference held in 2005 in Amsterdam to the 2007 C'Lick Me
festival in Paradiso, Amsterdam. C'Lick Me opens the field of
'Internet pornology'. Based on non-conventional approaches, mixing
academics, artists and activists, the C'Lick Me Reader reclaims a
critical post-enthusiastic, post-censorship perspective on netporn, a
dark field that has been dominated thus far by dodgy commerce and
filtering. The C'Lick Me reader covers the rise of the netporn
society from Usenet underground to the blogosphere, analyses economic
data and search engines traffic, compares sex work with the work of
fantasy, disability and accessibility. The C'Lick Me reader also
expands the no tion of digital desire, and smashes the predicatable
boundaries of porn debates, depicting a broader libidinal spectrum
from fetish subcultures to digital alienation, from code pornography
to war pornography. The reader concludes by re-contextualising the
queer discourse into a post-porn scenario.
Contributions by: Adam Arvidsson, Franco 'Bifo' Berardi, Manuel
Bonik, Mikita Brottman, Florian Cramer, Samantha Culp, Barbara
DeGenevieve, Mark Dery, Michael Goddard, Stewart Home, Katrien
Jacobs, Marije Janssen, Julie Levin Russo, Regina Lynn, Sergio
Messina, Mireille Miller-Young, Tim Noonan, Francesco Macarone
Palmieri aka Warbear, Matteo Pasquinelli, Audacia Ray, Andreas
Schaale, Nishant Shah, Tim Stuettgen, Matthew Zook.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
SECTION 1: THE RISE OF THE NETPORN SOCIETy
Regina Lynn
Sex Drive: Where Sex and Tech Come Together
Mark Dery
Naked Lunch: Talking Realcore with Sergio Messina
Nishant Shah
PlayBlog: Pornography, Performance and Cyberspace
Audacia Ray
Sex on the Open Market: Sex Workers Harness the Power of the Internet
Adam Arvidsson
Netporn: the Work of Fantasy in the Information Society
Manuel Bonik and Andreas Schaale
The Naked Truth: Internet Eroticism and the Search
Tim Noonan
Netporn, Sexuality and the Politics of Disability:
A Catalyst for Access, Inclusion and Acceptance?
Matthew Zook
Report on the Location of the Internet Adult Industry
SECTION 2: DIGITAL DESIRE BEYOND PORNOGRAPHY
Mark Dery
Paradise Lust: Pornotopia Meets the Culture Wars
Matteo Pasquinelli
Warporn! Warpunk: Autonomous Videopoiesis in Wartime
Florian Cramer and Stewart Home
Pornographic Coding
Florian Cramer
Sodom Blogging: Alternative Porn and Aesthetic Sensibility
Mikita Brottman
Nightmares in Cyberspace: Urban Legends, Moral Panics and the Dark
Side of the Net
Michael Goddard
BBW: Techno-archaism, Excessive Corporeality and Network Sexuality
Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi
The Obsession of the (Vanishing) Body
SECTION 3: NETPORN AFTER THE QUEER BOOM
Mireille Miller-young
Sexy and Smart: Black Women and the Politics of Self-Authorship in
Netporn
Katrien Jacobs
Porn Arousal and Gender Morphing in the Twilight Zone
Barbara DeGenevieve
Ssspread.com: The Hot Bods of Queer Porn
Julie Levin Russo
'The Real Thing': Reframing Queer Pornography for Virtual Spaces
Samantha Culp
First Porn Son: Asian-man.com and the Golden Porn Revolution
Francesco Macarone Palmieri aka Warbear
21st Century Schizoid Bear: Masculine transitions Through Net
Pornography
Tim Stuttgen
Ten Fragments on a Cartography of Post-Pornographic Politics
BIOGRAPHIES
WEBOGRAPHY
This publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution
Non Commercial Non Derivative Works 2.5 Netherlands License. No
article in this reader may be reproduced in any form by any
electronic or mechanical means without permission in writing from the
author.
We would like to thank all the participants of the conferences 'Art
and Politics of Netporn' (2005) and ‘C’Lick Me’ (2007). A special
thanks to our director, Emilie Randoe, School of Interactive Media,
Amsterdam Polytechnic, for supporting our netporn research programme;
to Pierre Ballings and Maarten van Boven, Paradiso, Amsterdam, for
hosting the C’Lick Me event and supporting the production of the
reader. Thanks to all the authors of the book for collaborating with
us over the years, as well as to all the photographers and image-
producers on the web whose works have been cited in the different
articles.