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NMS25
NMS25
Year2025Publication typeJournal ArticleJournalNew Media and SocietyVolume27Issue5Article URLjournals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/14…DOI10.1177/14614448251333730LanguageEnglishShare

Abstract

The evolving technological and social landscape offers adolescents new avenues for engaging with digital content, particularly in the realm of intimate activities. Public discourse often oversimplifies the intricate relationship between adolescents and online pornography. The prevailing narrative tends to portray pornography as detrimental to health and well-being, relying on a limited exposure and effects model that fails to grasp its nuanced significance in young lives. Online pornography, easily accessible to young individuals, is criticised for potentially replacing informative sex education with representations of violent and risky relationships. Employing media and cultural studies tools, this research positions porn consumption within the broader context of new mediated intimacies. The study aims to unravel how young Italians (15- to 18-year-olds) perceive and interpret harms in relation to online pornography. Findings reveal that despite a critical perspective, many participants maintain stereotypical views on gender and age dynamics, reflecting broader societal discourses about effects and addiction.

Authors

Cosimo Marco Scarcelli

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About Me
Cosimo Marco Scarcelli is Associate Professor at the Department of Philosophy, Sociology, Education and Applied Psychology (FISPPA), University of Padua. His research focuses on digital media, gender, sexuality and youth.
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Università di Padova
Dipartimento FISPPA
Via Cesarotti 10/12, 35123 Padova, Italy

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