Publications grouped by theme

Erotic art

  • Maes, Hans (2014) “Erotic Art,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2016 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.).
  • Maes, Hans (2011) Preface, Transgression: Sexuality, Gender, and Censorship, Beers.Lambert.

Feminism and sex

  • Jenkins Katharine (2017) ‘Who’s Afraid of Andrea Dworkin? Feminism and the Analytic Philosophy of Sex’, in The Bloomsbury Companion to Analytic Philosophy, ed. Pieranna Garavaso

Objectification

Pornography

  • Jenkins, Katharine (2017) ‘Pornography and Social Ontology’, in Beyond Speech, ed. Mari Mikkola. Oxford University Press.
  • Maes, Hans (2014) “Pornography,” M. Kelly, The Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, Oxford University Press.
  • Maes, Hans and Deprez, Eleen (2013) “Kunst of Porno?”, Kunsttijdschrift Vlaanderen, 62, pp. 175
  • Maes, Hans (2013) Pornographic Art and the Aesthetics of Pornography, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.-77.
  • Maes, Hans and Levinson, Jerrold (2012) Art and Pornography, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
  • Maes, Hans (2012) “Who Says Pornography Can’t Be Art,” H. Maes & J. Levinson, Art and Pornography, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 17-47.
  • Maes, Hans (2011) “Quién dice que la pornografia no puede ser arte?” La Balsa de la Medusa, 2:4, pp. 5-24
  • Maes, Hans (2011)“Art or Porn: Clear Division or False Dilemma?” Philosophy and Literature, 35:1, pp. 51-64.
  • Maes, Hans (2010) “Kunst of Pornografie?” Karakter, 32, pp. 15-16.
  • Maes, Hans (2009) “Art and Pornography. Essay Review of Jerrold Levinson’s Contemplating Art,” Journal of Aesthetic Education, 43:1, pp. 107-116.
  • Stock, Kathleen (2012) Pornography and imagining about oneself. In: Maes, Hans and Levinson, Jerrold (eds.) Art and Pornography. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 116-136. ISBN 9780199609581

Rape Myths

  • Jenkins, Katharine (2016) Rape Myths and Domestic Abuse Myths as Hermeneutical Injustices. Journal of Applied Philosophy 10.1111/japp.12174
  • Robson, James (2015) ‘Fantastic Sex: Fantasies of Sexual Assault in Aristophanes’, in M. Masterson, N. S. Rabinowitz and J. Robson (eds), Sex in Antiquity: Reconsidering Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World, Routledge, 315-31

Representations of sex and sexuality

  • M. Masterson, N. S. Rabinowitz and J. Robson (eds). (2015) Sex in Antiquity: Reconsidering Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World, Routledge
  • Robson, James (2016). ‘Aristophanes, Gender and Sexuality’, in P. Walsh (ed.), Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Aristophanes, Brill, 44-66
  • Robson, James (2015) ‘Fantastic Sex: Fantasies of Sexual Assault in Aristophanes’, in M. Masterson, N. S. Rabinowitz and J. Robson (eds), Sex in Antiquity: Reconsidering Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World, Routledge, 315-31
  • Robson, James (2013) Sex and Sexuality in Classical Athens, Debates and Documents in Ancient History, Edinburgh University Press
  • Wright, Ellen (2016). Having Her Cheesecake and Eating It: Performance, Professionalism, and the Politics of the Gaze in the Pinup Self-Portraiture of Bunny Yeager. Feminist Media Histories. 2 (4), p116-142.
  • Wright, Ellen (2016). ‘‘A Travesty on Sex”: Hawks, Gender and Performance in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. In: Brookes, I Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. London: BFI. 125-142.

Sexiness and sex appeal

  •  Maes, Hans (2017) “Falling in Lust: Sexiness, Feminism, and Pornography,” M. Mikkola, Beyond Speech, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017.
  • Robson, James (2013) ‘Beauty and Sex Appeal in Aristophanes’, EuGeStA (Journal on Gender Studies in Antiquity) 3: 43-66