| 63. Soble, Pornography, Marxism, Feminism , 186. For discussions of how the context affects the content of pornography, see Ellen Willis, "Feminism, Moralism, and Pornography," in Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality , ed. Ann Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1983), 463; also see English, "The Politics of Porn"; Webster, "Pornography and Pleasure"; Mariana Valverde, Sex, Power and Pleasure (Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1987), 12145; Vance, "Negotiating Sex and Gender;" 4245; Linda Williams, "Pornographies On/scene, or Diff'rent Strokes for Diff'rent Folks," Carol Smart, "Unquestionably a Moral Issue: Rhetorical Devices and Regulatory Imperatives," and Harriet Gilbert, "So Long as It's Not Sex and Violence: Andrea Dworkin's Mercy ," in Segal and McIntosh, Sex Exposed , 18499, 21629, 23365; Theodore A. Gracyk, "Pornography as Representation: Aesthetic Considerations," in Baird and Rosenbaum, Pornography , 11737; Berger, "Pornography, Feminism, and Censorship," 33638; Ann Garry, "Pornography and Respect for Women," in Baker and Elliston, Philosophy and Sex , 325, n. 21; English et al., "Talking Sex," 57; Tong, Women, Sex, and the Law , 20; B. Ruby Rich, "AntiPorn: Soft Issue, Hard World," Village Voice 20 (July 1982).
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| 64. Longino; "Pornography, Oppression and Freedom," 8587.
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| 65. Judith M. Hill, "Pornography and Degradation," in Baird and Rosenbaum, Pornography , 6465.
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| 66. See Burstyn, "Who the Hell Is 'We'?," 16872; Barbara Dority, "Feminist Moralism, 'Pornography,' and Censorship," in Baird and Rosenbaum, Pornography , 113; also see Ann Barr Snitow, "Mass Market Romance: Pornography for Women Is Different," in Snitow et al., Powers of Desire , 24563; Rosalind Coward, "Sexual Violence and Sexuality," in Sexuality: A Reader , ed. Feminist Review (London: Virago, 1987), 30725; Alisa L. Carse, "Pornography:
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