En savoir plus 
Pete Sigal is Professor of History and Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies at Duke University.
 Zeb Tortorici is Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures at New York University.
 Neil L. Whitehead (1956–2012) was Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
Table des matières
Acknowledgments  ix
 Introduction: Ethnopornography as Methodology and Critique / Pete Sigal, Zeb Tortorici, and Neil L. Whitehead  1
 Part I. Visualizing Race
 1. Exotic/Erotic/Ethnopornographic: Black Women, Desire, and Labor in the Photographic Archive / Mireille Miller-Young  41
 2. "Hung, Hot, and Shameless in Bed": Blackness, Desire, and Politics in a Brazilian Gay Porn Magazine, 1997–2008 / Bryan Pitts  67
 3. The Ghosts of Gaytanamo / Beatrix McBride  97
 4. Under White Men's Eyes: Racialized Eroticism, Ethnographic Encounters, and the Maintenance of the Colonial Order / Sidra Lawrence  118
 Part II. Ethnopornography as Colonial History
 5. Franciscan Voyeurism in Sixteenth-Century New Spain / Pete Sigal  139
 6. European Travelogues and Ottoman Sexuality: Sodomitical Crossings Abroad, 1550–1850 / Joseph Allen Boone  169
 7. Sexualizing the Other: From Ethnopornography to Interracial Pornography in European Travel Writing about West African Women / Pernille Ipsen  205
 8. "Men Like Us": The Invention of Ethnopornography / Helen Pringle  225
 Conclusion: Ethnopornography Coda / Neil L. Whitehead  245
 Contributors  253
 Index  257
A propos de l'auteur
Pete Sigal, Zeb Tortorici, and Neil L. Whitehead, editors
Résumé
With topics that span the sixteenth century to the present in Latin America, the United States, Australia, the Middle East, and West Africa, the contributors show how ethnopornography—the eroticized observation of the Other for supposedly scientific or academic purposes—is fundamental to the creation of race, colonialism, and archival and ethnographic knowledge.