Discussion “The real sexual revolution is going to be holding abusers accountable.” —KS Prior
Discussion “The real sexual revolution is going to be holding abusers accountable.” —KS Prior
Karen Swallow Prior From innumerable screens and stages, posters and pages, it flashes the larger-than-life-sized images of sex. From countless racks and shelves, it pushes the books which a few years ago were considered pornography. From myriad loudspeakers, it broadcasts the words and rhythms of pop-music erotica. And constantly, over the intellectual Muzak, comes the message that sex will save you and libido make you free.
“The real sexual revolution is going to be holding abusers accountable.” —KS Prior
I saw this on my Tumblr feed today. I thought it was a great quote. Who is this KS Prior? I want to know more about them. I look up the quote. The author's full name is supposedly Karen Swallow Prior. I try to find the source.
As I try to find the source, I come across other articles. One written by Prior herself called Don’t Believe in Systemic Racism? Let’s Talk About the Sexual Revolution seemed promising, upon an initial skim. It appeared this article was directed towards a white audience that didn't believe in systemic racism, and she was attempting to get them to see how it is indeed real. But I didn't fully read it, because another article in the search results caught my eye.
The pro-life witness of Karen Swallow Prior was a piece by Jonathon Van Maren about an editorial Prior wrote which was published in The New York Times much to the dismay of the Times' largely liberal and pro-choice demographic. The article paints Prior as the victim of unjustified Internet backlash, because she is such a noble pro-life "pre-born"-baby-saving Christian woman who "had been arrested in front of abortion clinics (five times)", Jonathon laments, and people being upset at her pro-forced birth romanization of Texas' harsh abortion ban laws are clearly liberal idiots because they "did not engage with Prior’s arguments." (What arguments, anyway? Her entire editorial was just praising Texas' brutal laws and blatantly ignoring any actual issues that stem from said laws with whataboutisms, flowery language, and minimization of the serious harms it causes women.)
I now go back to her systemic racism article with a new perspective. I see things like: "But one need not embrace critical race theory—I certainly don’t—in order to recognize that systemic racism exists and has ongoing ripple effects that can’t always be identified or contained." The "I certainly don't" gave weird vibes. Then I see how she refers to the "sexual revolution" -- it is written from the perspective of only the "sexual revolution of the liberal male", which to be fair, is indeed what the sexual revolution of the 60's did become. Dworkin writes about the history and downfalls of the "sexual revolution" in Right-Wing Women from a feminist perspective. How does Prior write about it?
Karen Swallow Prior From innumerable screens and stages, posters and pages, it flashes the larger-than-life-sized images of sex. From countless racks and shelves, it pushes the books which a few years ago were considered pornography. From myriad loudspeakers, it broadcasts the words and rhythms of pop-music erotica. And constantly, over the intellectual Muzak, comes the message that sex will save you and libido make you free.