Blog entry by Moshe McMillan
The Evolution of Pornography
Humans have experienced more technological advances over the past 30 years than in the rest of our history combined. And despite our endless (mostly generational) complaints about our increasingly technology-driven world and https://elearning.ims-schulungen.de/ the occasional problems reflected within it, one can’t help but admire the visionary minds who created it. And like it or not, technology, especially digital technology, is the foundation upon which our modern world firmly rests.
Some say that the primary driver of new technologies is and has always been sex. Many people believe that streaming media, virtual reality, websites, live chats, and even apps were either heavily financed by or encouraged by the sex industry. This is probably at least partly true. After all, sex sells and it always has because nearly all of us want to have it. And one of the ways sex sells is through pornography. It doesn’t matter whether sex is crudely drawn on the walls of caves (our first porn) or brought to us via streaming media, our interest has been constant throughout history.
In recent years, however, we have experienced a sea change in the variety and accessibility of pornography—the impacts of which are, as yet, mostly unknown. What we do know is that sexual imagery has never been so anonymously and affordably accessed. It’s not like we haven’t used porn https://bouncebooob.com/ since the dawn of time. We have. But in the last few decades, digital technology has removed pretty much every barrier to the manufacture, dissemination, and viewing of it.
To further the conversation, let’s examine the evolution of pornography.
Porn—Prehistory to the 1860s: Early pornography was limited to cave art, artistic drawings, decorative pottery, and sculpture. Published pornography was invented in 1524 in Rome, when Marcantonio Raimondi published 16 sexually explicit engravings by Guilio Romano, collectively titled I Modi. Shortly thereafter, Pietro Aretino wrote his early pornographic works, Sonetti Iussuriosi (1527) and Ragionamenti (1534-36). Aretino utilized the printing press (invented in 1441) to help disseminate his work. For the most part, only the wealthy and educated were able to purchase and enjoy these printed pornographic works.Porn—1860s to 1977: Photography was invented in 1826 but was not commercially viable until the 1860s. That development, unsurprisingly, led to erotic photos. The advent of halftone printing, popularized in the 1890s, increased the quality of mass-reproduced images and greatly decreased the cost, eventually leading to the creation of pornographic magazines. Pornography was further revolutionized by the development of motion pictures. By the 1920s, "stag films" were commercially available for private viewing. And by the 1970s, feature-length pornographic films had supplanted the silent, single-reel stag films. Peepshow booths also evolved in the 1970s, generating millions of dollars in a constant stream of small change. That said, porn was still expensive, relatively hard to find, and embarrassing to access. (Woody Allen’s 1971 film,Internet Rule #34: If It Exists, There’s Porn of It
In today’s world, https://staging.arabunityschool.ae/why-do-women-prefer-watching-gay-porn/ porn can be found on websites, file-share services, social media, dating sites/apps, hookup sites/apps, and in countless other online venues. Even some video games offer digitized versions of sexual activity. If you have a favorite TV show or performer, you can assuredly find a pornographic version—usually photoshopped or animated, but occasionally the real thing. If you’ve got a kink or fetish, you can find that, too. Yes, even that super-weird thing you’ve never told anyone about because not another person on earth could possibly be turned on by it. In the digital universe, if you can think it, you can find it.