Elizabeth Wood: Sex Blogging and the Creation of a Feminist Sex Commons

by Viviane on 10/21/2025

in sex,sex blogs,sexuality

Congratulations to Elizabeth Wood on the publication of her article about sex blogging and the need for a “sex commons”!!

Consciousness-raising 2.0: Sex Blogging and the Creation of a Feminist Sex Commons

Abstract: In this article, I develop the notion of a `sex commons’ on the internet as one way to help women build more satisfying sex lives. While women have not historically controlled their own sexuality, they have tended to control the dissemination of information about sexuality, first through oral traditions and traditional social networks, and later through media such as advice columns. Medicalization and the culture of expertise removed much of that control, but the consciousness-raising movement of the second wave of feminism used social networks to reclaim it. This article describes the ways that women’s internet sex blogs help develop vocabularies of desire, reduce shame, and build community, enabling women to continue this process of regaining control over information about sexuality. I argue that a commons model is useful for protecting access to that information, especially in the face of continuing medicalization of sexuality and corporate control of the internet, and conclude with suggestions for maintaining the sex commons and building feminist pathways to navigate it.

Citation: Feminism & Psychology, Vol. 18, No. 4, 480-487 (2008)

This was a paper first presented at the first Sex 2.0 in Atlanta (organized by Amber Rhea).

You can read more on what’s in the issue, on the article and how you can help her expand the article at Sex in the Public Square:

http://tinyurl.com/637xxt

  • http://sexinthepublicsquare.org Elizabeth

    Viviane, thank you for the mention. I have to say that Sex 2.0 was one of the best conferences I’ve attended. Its grassroots organizing and its bringing together of people from all kinds of backgrounds was so important! I’m glad it’ll happen again this year! And I’m glad of course that Leonore Tiefer of the New View Campaign saw that the sex commons idea was meaningful in terms of resisting the medicalizing and privatizing of info about sex. What we do as bloggers is important in so many ways, not the least of which is educating each other and building courage in each other so that we have more sexual freedom and less sexual shame.

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