Pornography, Indigeneity and Neocolonialism

dc.contributor.authorTim Gregory
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-19T22:53:44Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractPornography, Indigeneity and Neocolonialism examines how pornography operates as a representational system that authenticates settler colonies, focussing on American and Australian examples to reveal how pornography encodes whiteness, pleasure, colonisation and Indigeneity. This is the first text to use decolonial and queer theory to examine the role of pornography in America and Australia, as part of a network of neocolonial strategies that "naturalise" occupation. It is also the first study to focus on Indigenous people in pornography, providing a framework for understanding explicit representations of First Nations peoples. Pornography, Indigeneity and Neocolonialism defines the characteristics of heterosexual pornography in settler colonies, exposing how the landscape is presented as both exotic and domestic – a land of taboo pleasures that is tamed and occupied by and through white bodies. Examining the absence of Indigenous porn actors and arguing against the hypervisual fetishising of Black bodies that dominates racialised porn discourse, the book places this absence within the context of legal, political and military neocolonial Indigenous elimination strategies.
dc.identifier.isbn9780429201776
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9780429201776
dc.identifier.urihttps://rdigef.unam.mx/handle/rdigef/1052
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherRoutledge
dc.subjectGender Studies
dc.subjectSociology
dc.subjectCultural Studies
dc.subjectGender Studies XX21
dc.subjectCultural Studies XX21
dc.subjectSociology XX21
dc.titlePornography, Indigeneity and Neocolonialism
dc.typeBook

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