Description

Book Synopsis
By examining the highly contested legal debate about the regulation of pornography through an epistemic lens, this book analyzes competing claims about the proper role of speech in our society, pornography's harm, the relationship between speech and equality, and whether law should regulate and, if so, upon what grounds. In maintaining that inegalitarian pornography generates discursive effects, the book contends that law cannot simply adopt a libertarian approach to free speech. While inegalitarian pornography may not be determinative of gender inequality, it does contribute, reinforce, reflect and help maintain such unfairness. As a result, we can place reasonable gender-based regulations on inegalitarian pornography while upholding our most treasured commitments to dissident speech just as other liberal democracies with strong free speech traditions have done.

Trade Review
An original and deeply insightful analysis of indirect strategies employed by American law to regulate pornography and the sex industry. Building on a wide range of feminist and critical race scholarship, Eckert’s book displays the historically and culturally biased systems of knowledge production that shape what counts as harms, and offers a new theory of discursive harm. By rejecting simplistic accounts of objectivity, evidence, and neutrality, Eckert challenges us to deepen the liberal and egalitarian aspirations that underlie our constitution. A terrific book! -- Stephen Macedo, Princeton University

Table of Contents
Part I - Sociology of Knowledge - “We Already Regulate Pornography for Gender-Based Reasons without Acknowledging It”

Chapter 1 - Regulating Pornography: Comparing the Zoning Approach and Nude Dancing Cases to Hudnut

Chapter 2 - Language Games and the Zoning and Nude Dancing Cases

Part II - The Legal Landscape that Acts to Exclude Knowledge Claims about Pornography

Chapter 3 - Categories and Epistemic Gatekeeping in Free Speech Jurisprudence

Chapter 4 - A Critique of the Content-Neutrality Principle

Chapter 5 - Proving Pornography’s Harms - Where Speech Act Theory, Causality, and the Performative Fall Short

Chapter 6 - Discursive Effects: A Different Framework to Understand the Harm from Speech

Part III - Liberal Law and a New Theory of Harm

Chapter 7 - Discursive Effects and Liberal Law

Chapter 8 - Reconsidering the tension between Liberty and Equality

Free Speech Law and the Pornography Debate

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Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Dec 2025.

A Paperback by Lynn Mills Eckert

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    View other formats and editions of Free Speech Law and the Pornography Debate by Lynn Mills Eckert

    Publisher: Lexington Books
    Publication Date: 1/15/2022 12:05:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781498572620, 978-1498572620
    ISBN10: 1498572626

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    By examining the highly contested legal debate about the regulation of pornography through an epistemic lens, this book analyzes competing claims about the proper role of speech in our society, pornography's harm, the relationship between speech and equality, and whether law should regulate and, if so, upon what grounds. In maintaining that inegalitarian pornography generates discursive effects, the book contends that law cannot simply adopt a libertarian approach to free speech. While inegalitarian pornography may not be determinative of gender inequality, it does contribute, reinforce, reflect and help maintain such unfairness. As a result, we can place reasonable gender-based regulations on inegalitarian pornography while upholding our most treasured commitments to dissident speech just as other liberal democracies with strong free speech traditions have done.

    Trade Review
    An original and deeply insightful analysis of indirect strategies employed by American law to regulate pornography and the sex industry. Building on a wide range of feminist and critical race scholarship, Eckert’s book displays the historically and culturally biased systems of knowledge production that shape what counts as harms, and offers a new theory of discursive harm. By rejecting simplistic accounts of objectivity, evidence, and neutrality, Eckert challenges us to deepen the liberal and egalitarian aspirations that underlie our constitution. A terrific book! -- Stephen Macedo, Princeton University

    Table of Contents
    Part I - Sociology of Knowledge - “We Already Regulate Pornography for Gender-Based Reasons without Acknowledging It”

    Chapter 1 - Regulating Pornography: Comparing the Zoning Approach and Nude Dancing Cases to Hudnut

    Chapter 2 - Language Games and the Zoning and Nude Dancing Cases

    Part II - The Legal Landscape that Acts to Exclude Knowledge Claims about Pornography

    Chapter 3 - Categories and Epistemic Gatekeeping in Free Speech Jurisprudence

    Chapter 4 - A Critique of the Content-Neutrality Principle

    Chapter 5 - Proving Pornography’s Harms - Where Speech Act Theory, Causality, and the Performative Fall Short

    Chapter 6 - Discursive Effects: A Different Framework to Understand the Harm from Speech

    Part III - Liberal Law and a New Theory of Harm

    Chapter 7 - Discursive Effects and Liberal Law

    Chapter 8 - Reconsidering the tension between Liberty and Equality

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