Archive for February, 2008

New sponsor: Inserection

We are happy to announce that Inserection, an Atlanta-based chain of adult stores, has signed on as a sponsor of Sex 2.0.

Inserection

From their web site:

Inserection Adult Fantasy Stores are the southeast’s leader in upscale adult retail stores. Inserection operates 16 stores in the states of Georgia, South Carolina and Florida.

Inserection has been delivering its upscale adult retail method to America since 1995 and has revolutionized the adult retail market by raising the standards through strong management, product knowledge training for their retail staff and more. We strive to create a well lit friendly shopping environment that appeals to men, women and couples alike. An approach which allows Inserection to provide its customers with an inviting, comfortable environment visiting our stores.

Inserection will be vending at the conference as well. Be sure to check them out!

Upcoming online forum on sex work, trafficking, and human rights

For Immediate Release

Contact:
Elizabeth Wood
Phone: provided upon request
Email: elizabeth (at) sexinthepublicsquare (dot) org
Co-founder, SexInThePublicSquare.org
Assistant Professor of Sociology, Nassau Community College

Sex In The Public Square Presents:
Sex Work, Trafficking, and Human Rights: A Public Forum

New York, February 20, 2008 — Ten prominent sex worker advocates, writers, researchers will be publicly discussing the issues of sex work and trafficking from a human rights and harm reduction perspective, February 25 - March 3, on SexInThePublicSquare.org. The week-long online conversation will conclude with a summary statement on March 3, International Sex Worker Rights Day.

Sex work and trafficking are two issues that must be discussed as distinct yet intersecting, and we’ve invited some of the smartest sex worker advocates we know to help sort out the complexities. “This forum is not about debating whether or not we should be using a harm reduction and human rights approach instead of the more mainstream abolitionist and prohibitionist approach to sex work,” explains Elizabeth Wood, co-founder of Sex In The Public Square and Assistant Professor of Sociology at Nassau Community College. “Instead our goal is to create a space for nuanced exploration of the human rights and harm reduction approach so that we can use it more persuasively.”

Wood explains: “The human rights and harm reduction approach seeks to reduce the dangers that sex workers face and to stop human rights abuses involved in the movement of labor across borders, a movement which occurs in the service of so many industries. We want people to be able to learn about this perspective, and to develop and refine it, without having to dilute that conversation by debating the legitimacy of sex work.”

Questions and themes include:

Defining our terms: Is the way that we define “porn” clear? “Prostitution”? “Sex work” in general? What happens when we say “porn” and mean all sexually explicit imagery made for the purpose of generating arousal and others hear “porn” as indicating just the “bad stuff” while reserving “erotica” for everything they find acceptable? When we say sex work is it clear what kinds of jobs we’re including?

Understanding our differences: How do inequalities of race, class and gender affect the sex worker rights movement? Are we effective in organizing across those differences?

Identifying common ground: What are the areas of agreement between the abolitionist/prohibitionist perspective and the human rights/harm reduction perspective? For example, we all agree that forced labor is wrong. We all agree that nonconsensual sex is wrong. Is it a helpful strategic move to by highlighting our areas of agreement and then demonstrating why a harm reduction/human rights perspective is better suited to addressing those shared concerns, or are we better served by distancing ourselves from the abolition/prohibition-oriented thinkers?

Evaluating research: What do we think of the actual research generated by prominent abolitionist/prohibitionist scholars like Melissa Farley, Gail Dines, and Robert Jensen? Can we comment on the methods they use to generate the data on which they base their analysis, and then can we comment on the logic of their conclusions based on the data they have?

Framing the issues: What are our biggest frustrations with the way that the human rights/harm reduction perspective is characterized by the abolitionist/prohibitionist folks? How can we effectively respond to or reframe this misrepresentations? What happens when “I oppose human trafficking” becomes a political shield that deflects focus away from issues of migration, labor and human rights?

Exploring broader economic questions: How does the demand for cheap labor undermine human rights-based solutions to exploitation in all industries, including the sex industry?

Confirmed participants include:

  • Melissa Gira is a co-founder of the sex worker blog Bound, Not Gagged, the editor of Sexerati.com, and reports on sex for Gawker Media’s Valleywag.
  • Chris Hall is co-founder of Sex In The Public Square and also writes the blog Literate Perversions.
  • Kerwin Kay has written about the history and present of male street prostitution, and about the politics of sex trafficking. He has been active in the sex workers rights movement for some 10 years. He also edited the anthology Male Lust: Pleasure, Power and Transformation (Haworth Press, 2000) and is finishing a Ph.D. in American Studies at NYU.
  • Anthony Kennerson blogs on race, class, gender, politics and culture at SmackDog Chronicles, and is a regular contributor to the Blog for Pro-Porn Activism.
  • Antonia Levy co-chaired the international “Sex Work Matters: Beyond Divides” conference in 2006 and the 2nd Annual Feminist Pedagogy Conference in 2007. She teaches at Brooklyn College, Queens College, and is finishing her Ph.D. at the Graduate Center at CUNY.
  • Audacia Ray is the author of Naked on the Internet: Hookups, Downloads and Cashing In On Internet Sexploration (Seal Press, 2007), and the writer/producer/director of The Bi Apple. She blogs at WakingVixen.com hosts and edits Live Girl Review and was longtime executive editor of $pread Magazine.
  • Amber Rhea is a sex worker advocate, blogger, and organizer of the Sex 2.0 conference on feminism, sexuality and social media, and co-founder of the Georgia Podcast Network. Her blog is Being Amber Rhea.
  • Ren is a sex worker advocate, a stripper, Internet porn performer, swinger, gonzo fan, BDSM tourist, blogger, history buff, feminist expatriate who blogs at Renegade Evolution. She is a founder of the Blog for Pro-Porn Activism and a contributor to Bound, Not Gagged and Sex Workers Outreach Project - East.
  • Stacey Swimme has worked in the sex industry for 10 years. She is a vocal sex worker advocate and is a founding member of Desiree Alliance and Sex Workers Outreach Project USA.
  • Elizabeth Wood is co-founder of Sex In The Public Square, and Assistant Professor of Sociology at Nassau Community College. She has written about gender, power and interaction in strip clubs, about labor organization at the Lusty Lady Theater, and she blogs regularly about sex and society.

To read or participate in the forum log on to http://sexinthepublicsquare.org

For more information contact Elizabeth Wood at elizabeth (at) sexinthepublicsquare (dot) org.

The PEEQ Sex 2.0 video group is live!

Alright folks, get your webcams ready! The Sex 2.0 group over at the Peeq is ready to go, and you can find it here:

http://thepeeq.com/home/group?sectionid=501

Of course, you can upload anything you want, but the primary purpose of the group is for conference attendees to upload videos that address what Sex 2.0 means to them and why they’re “coming.” (I can NEVER resist bad jokes!) We’ll show all these videos during one presentation at the conference, so the more the merrier!

The group is public so no passwords are necessary AFAIK, but I’m pretty sure you’ve got to sign up for a Peeq account before you can upload anything there. I’m still familiarizing myself with the site’s format and functions.

April 12th Flesh and Fetish Ball: discounted admission for Sex 2.0 participants

For those of you who aren’t high-tailing it out of Atlanta at the crack of 5pm, consider coming to the Flesh and Fetish Ball at 1763 the night after Sex 2.0. Swinging Atlanta is offering discounted admission to Sex 2.0 participants: $35 for single guys, $25 for couples, and single ladies free as usual.

Check out this article to learn more about our new venue and the Flesh and Fetish Ball.

Deadline for early-bird registration tomorrow

If you want to come to Sex 2.0, register by tomorrow in order to take advantage of the $10 early bird rate. On Monday, registration goes up to $40.

For those who were wondering, there will be a few volunteer opportunities. If you’re interested in one of them and have already registered, I’ll refund your money when you commit to the spots. I just need to wait a couple weeks until some of the money situation (as in, do we have any) gets sorted out before I’ll know how many and what type of spots there are.

New Sex 2.0 podcast promos

We’ve updated the podcast promos to reflect the change of venue to 1763. They’re identical otherwise:

15-second meat-and-potatoes
http://sex20con.com/promos/sex-2.0-promo-2.0-15sec.mp3

30-second with-a-flourish
http://sex20con.com/promos/sex-2.0-promo-2.0-30sec.mp3

Thanks to everyone who has been using the promos in your podcasts! Please be sure to download these updates.

New Sex 2.0 press release ready for prime-time!

Many thanks to Bitch | Lab for writing this press release and Kristi Kane for making edits! Please spread it far and wide, on your own blogs and to any media pals you may have.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:

Amber Rhea
Main organizer, Sex 2.0
678-389-9441
Email: sex20con@gmail.com
Web site: www.sex20con.com


Sex 2.0 will explore sexuality, feminism and social media

ATLANTA — What happens when technology, sex, knowledge, and power enable women to meet up, act up, and hook up like never before? These questions and more are the focus of the Sex 2.0 unconference in Atlanta, Georgia on April 12th, 2008. Held at 1763, a 10,000-square-foot, fully equipped dungeon located 10 miles north of downtown Atlanta, the unconference will feature conversations among activists, social networking pioneers, bloggers, swingers, cruisers, sex futurists and kinksters who have been sexing up Web 2.0 from the beginning — whether in Bangalore or Bangor, Maine.

Maybe you’ve heard of Web sites like Facebook, Craigslist, or Flickr. They’re all social networking sites, the heart of a revolution in the way people produce and share knowledge, make friends, reach out for support, and create professional and personal networks.

When women need help with health, sexual, or personal problems, where do they turn? In a recent Pew Poll, researchers found that women were more likely to turn to the Web for knowledge and support. (Reference: Pew Internet & American Life Project, “How Women and Men Use the Internet,” online at http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Women_and_Men_online.pdf).

It’s that heady combination of technology, sex, and knowledge in the hands of women (and men) that fascinates well-known Atlanta-area tech/sex blogger Amber Rhea and inspired her to organize the event. She’s not alone. The grassroots unconference will explore these issues with notable and notorious Web-based activists. On April 12, Sex 2.0 participants will:

  • Hear keynote speaker Audacia Ray — blogger, video podcaster, award-winning porn director and author of Naked on the Internet - Hookups, Downloads, and Cashing in on Internet Sexploration.
  • Stimulate your “Sex Drive” with Regina Lynn, Wired magazine’s sex-tech columnist and author of Sexier Sex: Lessons from the Brave New Sexual Frontier. In her session “How Love/Sex Happens Online,” Lynn will explore the powerful and unexpected experiences people have with online lovers and what it all means inside the hearts of geekdom. Because sex is the first use for any new technology, Lynn will demonstrate how to get the most out of your phone, webcam or laptop and how to use your everyday gadgets to enhance intimacy, pleasure and fun.
  • Explore sexual relationships that spring from online meeting places like blogs and forums in sessions with sex futurist Melissa Gira, who runs the award-winning sex blog Sexerati, and contributes to $pread, WHORE!, Best Sex Writing 2008, and Dirty Girls.
  • Make history with T.A. Hines’ session, “A Brief History of Sex.” Hines is the irreverent, popular podcaster and Nerve magazine columnist who chronicles her funky brown chick take on sex and New York City in her weekly Internet radio show Dating Roadkill.
  • Tempt your inner erotic writer with sex bloggers and writers like Rachel Kramer Bussel, who keeps things tingling at her Lusty Lady blog, and Viviane, who heats up the Web with her blog Viviane’s Sex Carnival.
  • Mix it up with j. brotherlove, Joseph G., Minx and Ren, who’ll host rollicking sessions about online dating, cruising, hooking up, BDSM, and swinging whether for kinksters, sexual, ethnic and racial minorities, straight, curious, and in-between

Rhea says she wants the interactive sessions to be a place where people create the experience they need. “This is not your father’s sex conference,” she said. “An unconference belongs to the people who come — double entendre intended.”

People are often puzzled by an unconference, said Rhea, but it’s almost always an experience that makes you never want to attend an ordinary conference again. “You won’t be in a room, sitting on your hands, waiting for a one-way presentation. It’s just like sex, really: a powerful interaction between people that makes the experience more than the people involved.”

Registration for the event is $10 by February 17, $40 until March 28, and $50 after March 28, with the rest of the cost underwritten by volunteers and sponsors. There are still opportunities for sponsors who want to reach their audience — people at the center of a new media that’s changing the way we live.

Rhea thinks that the approach will attract a wide audience: “Everyone will be there to both raise and answer questions, teach and learn — you can do both in one session. It’s up to you.”