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Standing
Up To Be Counted:
Barbara Nitke Challenges John Ashcroft
on S/M And Internet Obscenity

Barbara Nitke, Fetish Photographer
By David Steinberg
David
Steinberg, editor of The Erotic Impulse, Erotic by Nature, and Photo
Sex, writes the Comes Naturally columns, which are published in San
Francisco’s Spectator magazine. If you’d like to receive Comes
Naturally and other writing by David Steinberg regularly via email (free
and confidential), send your name and email address to David at eronat@aol.com. Past columns are available at the Society for Human Sexuality’s
“David Steinberg Archives”: www.sexuality.org/davids.html. Three books edited by David -- “Erotic by Nature: A
Celebration of Life, of Love, and of Our Wonderful Bodies,” (
www.sexuality.org/l/davids/en.html
)”The Erotic Impulse: Honoring the Sensual Self,” (www.sexuality.org/l/davids/en.html)
and the just-released photo anthology, “Photo Sex: Fine Art Sexual
Photography comes of Age” ( www.sexuality.org/l/davids/ps.html
)-- are available from him by mail order.
See some of Barbara's Photography
Read
Sadie's Review of David Steinberg's new book of Erotic Photography: Photo
Sex
“No matter how we’re wired to express love, freedom is having the
courage to be who we are.”
- Photographer/plaintiff Barbara Nitke
On December 11, Barbara Nitke and the National Coalition for Sexual
Freedom brought suit in New York City’s Federal District Court,
seeking to have the last remaining censorship provision of the 1996
Communications Decency Act declared overbroad, vague, and therefore
unconstitutional under the First Amendment. The suit, which will be
heard this spring by a three-judge panel headed by Judge Richard Berman,
is a sequel to the 1997 action by the American Civil Liberties Union,
Reno v. ACLU, that resulted in the Supreme Court unanimously striking
down the provision of CDA that criminalized indecent, “patently
offensive” material broadcast over the Internet. The aim of Nitke v.
Ashcroft is to have the ruling extended to CDA’s criminalization of
obscene material as well.
The Communications Decency Ac was the first Federal statute attempting
to regulate sexual material broadcast over the Internet. CDA makes it a
Federal crime to transmit any obscene or indecent “comment, request,
suggestion, proposal, image, or other communication” over the
Internet, if such material can be viewed by people under 18. The
question of what is obscenity or indecency has always been a complex
one.
The current Federal definition of obscenity, the Miller test, stems from
a 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the case of Miller v.
California
.
Under the Miller test, material is legally
obscene only if it is sexually explicit, patently offensive according to
“local community standards,” and lacks any “serious literary,
artistic, social, educational, or scientific value. “Sexually explicit
material that does have serious social value, but is still offensive
according to local community standards, falls into the legal category of
indecency, even though it is not obscene. As a result, it can legally be
subjected to some degree of government regulation. The supreme Court has
ruled, for example, that the times when indecent material can be
broadcast on television can be limited to certain late night hours, when
it is presumably less likely to be seen by children.
The community standards provision of the Miller ruling allowed the
Supreme Court to acknowledge that material considered obscene or
indecent in a small town in rural
Kansas
may nonetheless be quite acceptable in
Manhattan
or
San Francisco
,
and to avoid imposing one standard on the
entire nation. Indeed, courts have ruled that the local community
standards that are applied to questions of obscenity and indecency can
vary not only city by city and state by state, but even from one city
neighborhood to another.
Under Miller, publishers and distributors of erotic and sexual books,
magazines, films, and videos have become accustomed to making
complicated decisions about where and how they want to market their
products. Many mail-order companies choose not to market products in
states like
Utah
and
Alabama
that they promote extensively in more
sexually progressive parts of the country. Other companies choose not to
process mail orders from certain states at all. By restricting their
marketing, companies are able to choose which local community standards
they want to subject themselves to with regard to potential obscenity or
indecency charges. Companies also insure themselves against selling to
minors by having potential customers certify that they are over 18 years
of age.
On the Internet, however, the possibility of all such geographical and
age verification vanishes. When a store, publisher, artist, or writer
puts erotic and sexual material up on their website, that material
immediately becomes available to people from the most progressive to the
most conservative communities in the country and, more broadly, in the
world. Furthermore, issues of obscenity and indecency on the Internet
extend beyond the sale of products to such simple acts as viewing an
artist’s work, or reading a writer’s short stories. Is there an
identifiable Internet community whose “local community values” can
be used to define which material is legally obscene and which is not?
What might that community be?
The Communications Decency Act says nothing about which community’s
standards of obscenity are to be applied to the Internet. Because it
limited itself to issues of indecency in
Reno
v. ACLU, the Supreme Court has so far been
silent on this issue as well.
Nitke v. Ashcroft seeks to change all that. The complaint claims that,
in the absence of a clear definition of which community standards apply
to the Internet, CDA has the effect of chilling all Internet expression
since questions of the legal obscenity of Internet material might well
be judged by the values of the most restrictive communities in the
country. This, says John Wirenius, attorney for Nitke and NCSF, makes
the obscenity provision of CDA so far-reaching as to be
unconstitutional. His hope is that Nitke v. Ashcroft will prompt the
Supreme Court to overturn the CAD’s obscenity provision, perhaps
overturn the CDA entirely, and hopefully define for the first time which
community standards are to be used in judging the potential obscenity of
online sexual material.
Barbara Nitke is a brilliant, well-known, and widely respected
New York
fine art photographer. Much of her work
comprises powerful, emotionally complex, visually evocative images that
depict couples engaged in a wide variety of sexual activities. Many of
her images show couples engaged in various forms of consensual
sadomasochism. Her photographs are noteworthy both for their exceptional
visual beauty and for the depth of the emotional connections she
captures in her subjects.
Her website (http://www.barbaranitke.com)
is the antithesis of the generically garish porn website. It is visually
subdued, attractively designed, geared less to selling products (though
Nitke’s prints are offered for sale) than to providing a showcase for
her work.
One image shows a woman looking down tenderly into the eyes of her
lover, who lies bound and gagged in her arms. Another shows a woman
smilingly listening to instructions from the director on a porn film
set, while a man’s mouth is hard at work between her thighs. Another
shows a woman staring wistfully off into the distance while her woman
lover lies helplessly bound and gagged in front of her on the kitchen
table. Yet another shows a man concentrating intently as he whips the
back of his male lover, who cries out at the pain of the lash.
Other sections of her website provide Nitke with an opportunity to talk
about both her work and her personal background. “For many years I
shot stills on hardcore porn shoots,” she recounts. “I thought it
was the most exciting, stomach-turning, heart-warming subject I could
ever hope to photograph. I know that sounds crazy. But for me there was
a certain feeling of freedom that went with shooting porn which, most of
the time, made up for all the other things. [There were moments] when
I’d look through the lens into someone’s shell-shocked eyes and see
a forgotten part of me staring back. That was the shot I wanted for
me.”
Speaking of her s/m photography, Nitke notes that her goal there is
“to capture the bond between [the lovers], and also the intense energy
of ritual, passionate s/m. I [want] to photograph deep intimacy and
trust, the two main concepts which underlie most s/m practices.”
When John Wirenius approached her about being the plaintiff in this
lawsuit, Nitke says she knew immediately that she wanted to be part of
the effort. “I told John I wanted to sleep on it, but I knew right
away that I would do it, which was what I told him the next day.”
Although she has supported various freedom of expression issues in the
past and has been a member of NCSF since the organization was founded,
Nitke has never thought of herself as a political activist, not even
with regard to free speech issues.
“But you end up being an activist even if you don’t want to be,”
she says pointedly. “If artists as a group don’t stand up and do
something, the censors are just going to keep going further and further.
Most artists don’t want to deal with this sort of thing, but we have
to.”
She recalls a time of showing her work to a gathering of curators and
gallery owners in Portland, Oregon, all of whom told her that her
photography was excellent, but also said there was no way they could
show it, given the current political climate regarding sexual imagery.
It was experiences like these, Nitke says, that made her conscious of
how impossible it was becoming to show important, sexually controversial
work throughout the country.
It wasn’t until Nitke decided to put together her own website that she
fully realized how heavily the prevailing political climate was weighing
on her. Nervous about recent legislation like the Community Decency Act,
she called other photographers who were doing erotic and sexual work
like hers -- images that were controversial, sometimes sexually
explicit, but distinctly artful in intent and style, and distinctly
outside the realm of commercial pornography. She also spoke with
publishers of erotic magazines equally distant from the production and
distribution networks of the porn world. Were these people worried about
Ashcroft and how he would apply the laws that Congress was passing
related to supposedly obscene material? Did she need to be concerned
about being a target for prosecution herself? What kinds of images could
she put on her website without risking embroiling herself in legal
defenses that could eat up tens of thousands of dollars, not to mention
months of time and heartache? And wasn’t it horrible that, as a
serious artist interested in sexual issues, she had to be distracted by
these sorts of issues at all?
“That’s why this suit is so important to me,” she summarizes.
“It’s both a practical matter and a matter or principle.”
Unlike Barbara Nitke, the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (http://www.ncsfreedom.org)
came to Nitke v. Ashcroft directly from an interest in political
advocacy of the sexual civil rights of people who find themselves
outside the American sexual mainstream. Founded in 1997 “to help
change antiquated and unfair sex laws, and to protect free speech and
advance privacy rights,” NCSF has drawn its primary support from a
broad group of S/M activists, initially in
New York
,
but later from other parts of the country as
well. It’s 21 voting member groups now span the country from
New York
to
Las Vegas
,
from
Greensboro
,
North Carolina
to
Blue Island
,
Illinois
.
The groups range from long-standing s/m
advocacy and support groups, like the Eulenspeigel Society of
New York
,
to newer groups like
St. Louis
’s Leather and Lace, and
Cincinnati
’s Masters and slaves Together. Member
groups like the Lesbian Sex Mafia and Gay Male S/M Activists reflect the
broad diversity of sexual orientation that is very much a part of the
national s/m-leather-fetish subculture.
NCSF has been increasingly effective in speaking up for the basic civil
rights and freedom of speech of people involved in safe, sane,
consensual s/m. It has successfully fought selective enforcement of
zoning and public indecency laws in
San Diego
,
Baltimore
,
Attleboro
(
Massachusetts
), and
Washington
,
D.C.
Its Law Enforcement Outreach Program strives
both to educate law enforcement officials about s/m communities, and to
educate members of the s/m community about how to minimize their risk as
potential targets of selective enforcement of zoning, public indecency,
and aggravated assault laws.
NCSF spokesperson Susan Wright notes that the organization has very much
wanted to take the initiative in challenging antisexual legislation like
the Communications Decency Act, rather than waiting to respond to what
it saw as inevitable upcoming attacks on sexual expression from the
Bush-Ashcroft Administration.
NCSF is sure that new attacks on sexually-oriented materials and
entertainment, particularly material available on the Internet, has been
high on the priority list of the Ashcroft Justice Department, even if
that agenda has been somewhat delayed by the focus on terrorism that
followed the events of September 11. They note that on November 14,
Ashcroft appointed Andrew G. Osterbaan to head the Justice
Department’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. Earlier this
year, Ashcroft assured various conservative organizations that he
intended to vigorously pursue prosecutions under the CDA. On June 9 he
also told the House Judiciary Committee that the Justice Department
intended to be “especially accommodating to local law enforcement”
with regard to helping them put operators of Internet sex sites behind
bars.
“Our goal [with the Nitke suit],” says Wright, “is to overturn
this unconstitutional provision [of the CDA] before this Administration
tries to score political points by attempting to enforce it.” Attorney
John Wirenius adds that there is much to be gained from seizing the
initiative in legal matters, rather than waiting to mount defenses to
prosecutions initiated by the Justice Department. “This way we get to
choose the test case, not Ashcroft,” he emphasizes. “I’d much
rather have the obscenity provision of the CDA be decided on the basis
of Barbara Nitke’s work than on the basis of something like http://www.bestiality.com“
Wirenius is optimistic about Nitke v. Ashcroft at the
Federal District Court
level. He notes that Judge Richard Berman,
who will preside over the case in
Federal District Court
this spring, wrote what Wirenius calls a
“terrific decision,” Swedenburg v. Kelly, in which he ruled that
material on the Internet cannot be subjected to geographical community
standards in the same way that books or films can. “Judge Berman,”
says Wirenius, “is a fair-minded judge who understands the posed by
the Internet.”
Wirenius is also optimistic of the fate of Nitke v. Ashcroft before the
U.S. Supreme Court, where the case will ultimately be decided. He sees
this case as a logical extension of
Reno
v. ACLU from issues of indecency to those of
obscenity and notes that, despite its general conservative bent, the
current Supreme Court has been fairly vigilant on free speech issues.
Whether or not Nitke v. Ashcroft is ultimately successful in overturning
the obscenity provision of CDA, the fact that the issue is being raised
by NCSF represents a significant new political and legal posture for the
s/m community which, until recently, has been more closeted and less
inclined to take aggressive political and legal action than more
long-standing and well-known sexual minority groups. As NCSF notes,
“in the past decade, alternative sexual expression [particularly s/m]
has become much more visible to the general public,” and people who
engage in s/m have therefore become subject to “an increasing number
of attacks against our right to freedom of sexual expression.” Actions
like Nitke v. Ashcroft demonstrate that s/m practitioners have begun to
join the ranks of lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgendered people in
insisting that non-traditional sexual and gender expression not subject
them to anything less than full and equal treatment under the law.
David Steinberg
P.O. Box 2992
Santa Cruz
,
CA 95063
(831) 426-7082
(831) 425-8825 (FAX)
eronat@aol.com
Copyright
© 2003 David Steinberg

David Steinberg
Read
the SCENEprofiles interview with Barbara
Nitke
Read
Sadie's Review of Barbara's New book Kiss
of Fire
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