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Pornography

Does Pornography Promote Sexism?

Critics say porn spurs sexism. A rigorous new study disagrees.

Key points

  • Many porn critics charge that pornography promotes sexism and hatred of women among its viewers.
  • A recent Canadian study shows that, to the contrary, men who view porn hold surprisingly egalitarian views.
  • Compared with countries that restrict porn, women in countries with easy access to it have more rights, opportunities, and power.

Since the late-1990s, when pornography began flooding the Internet, critics have asserted that it fosters sexism—a set of beliefs that women are inherently inferior to men, should be subordinate to men, and belong in the home, not out in the working world and especially not in positions of power.

A few small, non-representative studies have lent modest support to this view. (See below.) But most of the research—including the most rigorous studies—have concluded that porn does not promote sexism. Recently, Canadian investigators explored this issue using the largest, most representative sample yet. They concluded that, far from encouraging sexism, porn viewing is actually associated with men holding more egalitarian views of women.

The New Study

The recent Canadian study used data from the General Social Survey, the oldest, largest, most in-depth nationally representative examination of the beliefs and actions of residents of the United States. Funded by the National Science Foundation and conducted by the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center, GSS surveys have been conducted almost annually since 1972, and have involved more than 60,000 participants. Social scientists consider it highly credible.

The GSS researchers asked several thousand men about their porn viewing during the previous year and how they felt about the following four statements:

  • Most men are better suited emotionally for politics than most women. Compared with participants who said they’d watched little or no porn during the previous year, men who admitted watching the most were no more likely to endorse this statement. In other words, viewing pornography did not boost their sexism in this area.
  • Preschool children are likely to suffer if their mothers work outside the home. As porn viewing increased, men’s agreement with this statement decreased.
  • Some say that because of past discrimination, women should be given preference in hiring and promotion (affirmative action). Others say affirmative action is wrong because it discriminates against men. Pornography viewing had no significant effect on men’s agreement with these statements.
  • It’s better for families if the man is the breadwinner and the woman takes care of the home and family. As men’s porn watching increased, there was a small— but statistically insignificant—increase in endorsement of this statement. In other words, the small increase might well have been a fluke.

The researchers concluded: “Viewing pornography was associated with less sexism, not more.”

Porn Viewers Hold More Egalitarian Views of Women

The recent Canadian report is far from the only study showing that porn viewing does not promote sexism:

  • Using nationally representative U.S. data, other Canadian scientists found that, compared with men who viewed little porn, those who watched more were less sexist. Those who watched porn frequently expressed more support for abortion rights, women working outside the home, and women occupying positions of political and economic power.
  • An international team of researchers compared sexism among 863 men surveyed by the GSS and 294 porn “super-fans,” men who attended the Adult Entertainment Expo, a convention of porn producers, actors, and consumers. “We found that porn super-fans are no more sexist or misogynistic than the general U.S. population, and often held more progressive gender-role attitudes than the general public.”
  • Researchers at Texas Tech University found that as porn viewing increases, sexism decreases, except for “benevolent sexism,” the belief that women need men’s protection.

A Few Studies Suggest Porn Promotes Sexism

Occasionally, a study appears suggesting that porn boosts sexism. For example, one Indiana University study suggests that porn viewing may contribute to opposition to affirmative action for women.

Critics counter that the studies linking porn viewing to sexism usually involve small numbers of men from non-representative subject samples. They are less credible than the studies discussed above, which were all based on large, nationally representative samples—with the new study involving the largest representative sample yet assembled to explore porn’s impact on sexism.

Where Do Women Have More Rights and Opportunities?

Porn is fantasy, a cartoon version of sex, and the large majority of men know it. After watching the Roadrunner hit Wile E. Coyote over the head with a sledgehammer, men do not pick up hammers and assault real live people. Similarly, only a tiny fraction of men imitate what they see in other cartoons, action movies, video games—or porn.

Compared with countries where porn is illegal or difficult to view (Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia), in countries where porn is legal and easily available (the U.S., Canada, Western Europe), women have more social, economic, and political rights, opportunities, and power. In other words, as porn availability, increases, sexism appears to decrease. I hasten to add that this is an association, not cause and effect. Nonetheless, it shows that as access to porn increases, cultures don't appear to become significantly more sexist.

The new study shows that pornography does not promote sexism. On the contrary, as viewing increased, sexist attitudes decreased.

For more myth-busting, see Sizzling Sex for Life. To comment, click here.

References

Garos, S., Beggan, J. K., Kluck, A., & Easton, A. (2004). Sexism and Pornography Use: Toward Explaining Past (Null) Results. Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 16(1), 69–96. https://doi.org/10.1300/J056v16n01_05

Jackson, CA et al. “Exposing Men’s Gender Role Attitudes as Porn Superfans,” Sociological Forum (2019) 34:483. https://doi.org/10.1111/socf.12506

Kohut T. et al. “Is Pornography Really About ‘Making Hate’ to Women? Pornography Users Hold More Gender Egalitarian Attitudes then Nonusers in a Representative American Sample,” Journal of Sex Research (2015) 53:1. https://doi:10.1080/00224499.2015.1023427

Rostad, WL et al. “The Association Between Exposure to Violent Pornography and Teen Dating Violence in Grade 10 High School Students,” Archives of Sexual Behavior (2019) 48:2137. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-019-1435-4.

Skorska, M. et al. “Experimental Effects of Degrading Versus Erotic Pornography Exposure in Men on Reactions Toward Women (Objectification, Sexism, Discrimination),” Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality (2018) 27:1. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjhs.2018-0001

Speed, D. et al. “Pornography Consumption and Attitudes Towards Pornography Legality Predict Attitudes of Sexual Equality,” Journal of Sex Research (2021) 58:396. https://doi:.org/10.1080/00224499.2020.1864263

Wright, PJ and M. Funk. “Pornography Consumption and Opposition to Affirmative Action for Women: A Prospective Study,” Psychology of Women Quarterly (2013) https://doi.org/10.1177/0361684313498853

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