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Is there any reason to ask this question, except to declare one to be superior to the other?
Then what do you do?
They're not quite the same, as pornography is more explicit.1. Pornography and erotica are essentially the same. However, the term 'pornography' is pejorative, while 'erotica' is either neutral or celebratory.
I'm not that much an artist, so I absolutely don't know if art can fail anyway. How will I know if an art is failed ?2. Pornography is failed sex art, while erotica is successful sex art. (Of course, I'm using 'art' in a very general sense here, so it would include writing.)
OK, if you like it, it's pop. If you hate it, it's heavy metal. Not scientific, but useful.3. It's all a matter of taste - one person's porn is another person's erotica. If you liked it, it was erotica. If you hated it, it was porn.
4. It depends on how you feel afterwards. If you felt good or uplifted after reading, looking at or watching it, it was erotica. If you felt bad, it was porn.
I don't know if I should care as a writer. Henry Miller was clear pornography. Anyway, enjoying to read.5. There's a spectrum between the two poles: clear cases of erotica are at one end; obvious pornography is at the other. However, it's difficult to tell the difference near the middle.
Porn can be an art form, I'm convinced. The acceptability is different from country to country, so you can use that word for smattering cataloging.6. There's an absolute difference between the two. Porn crosses a line of acceptability and damns itself as a result. (This is a counter-position to 5, above, of course. )
Well, I think, erotica is kind of covered porn. That's why it's easier to accept. The main focus of erotica is the attraction, while the focus of porn is to have sex.7. There's no difference at all. It's just a pseudo-distinction made by people who can't bring themselves to admit that they really, really like porn.
There are enough examples to call this simply "Bullshit". Because there's absolutely no difference in these cases by both of them.8. Pornography is unrealistic, impossible fantasy; erotica is somehow (however tenuously) rooted in the real world.
9. Pornography is erotica without feeling.
No, but I know where it's come from.10. Pornography is always, in some sense, sadistic; erotica is always about love.
11. This century's erotica was last century's pornography. That is, standards and attitudes change continually.
Hi bronzeage. Actually, I asked the question to try to find out why other people make a distinction between pornography and erotica. On the whole I don't - so I certainly wouldn't argue for the superiority of one over the other myself - not at the moment, anyway.
If the two terms are placed in opposition - and they often are, as can be seen from this discussion so far - then it's clear that some people at least feel a need to make the distinction. I'm curious as to why.
I think it's very interesting that it's so difficult to define a clear difference between the two when that difference is invoked so often. For example, on TV last Saturday, the British novelist Martin Amis deplored the ubiquity of pornography in modern life because, he said (if I'm paraphrasing him accurately), it swamped and devalued genuine, legitimate erotica. I have a lot of respect for Amis - he's a good writer - but I would have liked some clarification from him on this - and particularly some clear definitions.
My point is simple: a significant section of liberal western society discriminates between the erotic and the pornographic - between erotica and pornography - but leaves the actual difference fuzzy. And it is true - as you may be implying - that the distinction is almost always made in favour of the superiority of erotica. Interestingly, Amis said that pornographers defend their right to produce and disseminate pornography on the - to him - specious grounds of 'free speech'. (I wonder if he visits Literotica at all? If you do, Martin, perhaps you could put in your own two penn'orth to this discussion.)
I think there's going to be a significant backlash against pornography in Anglo-American culture over the next few years, with an assumed distinction between what's seen as legitimate sex art and what's deemed illegitimate. I'll be very suspicious of that if it happens, but I think it's important to at least get our terminology straight before we begin the argument. I don't like empty buzz words. I like to know what people are talking about.
(And, incidentally, although I don't think I've arrived at a clear understanding yet, I do think this discussion so far has clarified things for me to some extent - so many thanks to everybody who's contributed so far.)
- polynices.
As much as I've no use for "erotica" as some kind of snobbishly elusive term, I understand how one would use it to draw a contrast and express that one isn't interested in banishing sex and sexuality from art and entertainment but is having reservations about the ubiquity of the most vacuous, exploitative forms.
Have any of you saying Erotica and porn aren't the same thing read a lot of the stories here? LMAO.
Erotica sometimes gets an "E."
Porn doesn't.
I won't comment on which one gets the "H."![]()
I can think of a nice definition of erotica.
The AV used by Lisa.
As I recall, the scenes I read weren't graphic enough.I think there is, possibly, a distinction between stories that have some sexual content in them as opposed to ones that are about sex.
A lot of mainstream fiction will have a sexual incident or two in them, some of them may be rather explicit. Has anyone else read Gravity's Rainbow? It is a complex novel with a lot of raunch.
I wrote the Eden series primarily as science fiction -- but with a lot of erotic content. My daughter just sort of skimmed over the sex scenes -- they weren't that interesting to her (I suppose reading sex written by your father can be a little unsettling). Before anyone asks -- she is married and in her twenties. When she got to Goddess, the plot and sex were so intertwined that she really didn't care for it. But anyway, even though the sex is rather graphic (enough to offend Stella) I would call these erotica.
The Descent, on the other hand, is more purely a vehicle for sex, as are most of the stories I post here. So are they "porn"? Does literary quality count?
They are both the same and if you read, write or rub either one of them all over your body, sweating copiously in the process, you are going to HELL.
That's a bit strong!!
I don't understand why it's such a difficult distinction. Pornography has little to zero artistic merit while erotica has more than a little artistic merit. ... Erotica is literature dealing with sexual love, without the 'love' you just have pornography. Intimacy vs. mechanics.
I admit I write pornography..
And I admit, I write erotica....following your definition.