We explored the cultural and narrative “scripts” of sexual intercourse conveyed in user-produced Korean Internet pornographic stories from the early digital era. A total of one hundred stories were collected from Sora.net and analyzed using the framework of fantasy theme analysis. The analysis revealed six dominant themes: sexual drive as an irresistible force, male gaze, men as leaders of sexual interaction, gendered communication, female vulnerability, and goals of intercourse. Together, these themes construct a rhetorical vision of sexual conduct centered on male dominance and female passivity, occasionally disrupted by alternative accounts. We interpret these findings as reflecting the broader gender ideologies and cultural discourses of early online sexual storytelling in Korea. By examining how Internet users collectively imagined and narrated sexual relations, we highlight the historical, cultural, and interpretive significance of these early digital narratives as cultural precursors to later controversies surrounding the representation of sexuality, gender, and ideologies in digital communication.
목차
Abstract 1. INTRODUCTION 2. LITERATURE REVIEW 3. METHODS 4. RESULTS 4.1 Sexual Drive as The Ultimate, Natural force 4.2 Male Gaze: Reading Female Body to Find Sexual Cues 4.3 Man as the Leader: Telling Women What to Do and How 4.4 Gendered Communication Pattern: Men Talk, Women Moan 4.5 Female Vulnerability: When Are Women More “Available?” 4.6 Resolving Needs as the Goal of Intercourse 5. CONCLUSION REFERENCES
키워드
Fantasy theme analysisInternet pornographySexualityDigital communication
저자
Jin Seong Park [ Associate Professor, Department of Media Communication, Incheon National University, Korea ]
Corresponding Author