
Linda Williams, who took a scholarly approach to pornography, dies at 78
Rich added: "She did not stay in her lane at a time when people were really guarding boundaries and really policing what others were doing. She was fearless about following her inquiries wherever they would lead. In any branch of academics or scholarship, that is really, really unusual."
Advertisement
A longtime professor of film and media at the University of California, Berkeley, Ms. Williams wrote and edited articles and books on subjects as diverse as surrealism, spectatorship, and the television series 'The Wire.'
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
She was keenly interested in how various film genres affected the body — for example, the way horror movies could induce shivers — and in her 2002 book, 'Playing the Race Card: Melodramas of Black and White From Uncle Tom to O.J. Simpson,' she explored how the tropes of melodrama figured in widening and narrowing America's racial divide.
But her most headline-grabbing work focused on pornographic films, which she saw as worthy of consideration as a discrete genre — and worthy of scholarly analysis and inquiry as well. She shrewdly compared pornography to another popular genre: the musical, with song-and-dance numbers swapped out for sexual acts, and with the often laughably flimsy narrative of porn exchanged for, well, the often laughably flimsy narrative of musicals.
Advertisement
Ms. Williams took up the study of pornography in the mid-1980s, when there were huge, noisy fights for and against it in the political sphere.
'But nobody recognized pornography as a genre until Linda came along,' Mary Ann Doane, a film scholar and a colleague of Ms. Williams' at Berkeley, said in an interview. 'She was one of the first to write seriously about it, and was met with some skepticism. But her work was so rigorous and so detailed that I think she won people over to the importance of studying porn.'
Ms. Williams was at some pains to point out — in print and in person — that she didn't set out to produce an entire book about pornographic films, let alone three such books: 'Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the 'Frenzy of the Visible'' (1989); 'Porn Studies' (2004), an essay collection that she edited; and 'Screening Sex' (2008).
"Hard Core," she said in a 1989 interview with the Los Angeles Times, grew out of a book she had planned to write about how the human body had been portrayed in film genres, pornography among them.
"I thought that I could do a quick-and-easy chapter in which all the self-evident truths would be dispensed with rather easily," she said. "I thought, like everyone, if you've seen one porn film, you've seen them all."
But what Ms. Williams encountered was a surprising complexity of motive in representing sex on screen, and a genre that was undergoing a sea change. She became fascinated by the possibilities.
Advertisement
"I discovered that there are so many arguments about pornography and hardly any analyses of it as a form," she said. "And so I decided I would fill that vacuum."
She added: "I began to get truly annoyed at the way people presume to pronounce upon pornography without having actually looked at it."
Linda Lorelle Williams was born Dec. 18, 1946, in San Francisco. She was the elder of two daughters of Lorelle (Miller) Williams, who managed the household and later became a licensed vocational nurse, and Kenneth Williams, a traveling salesperson who was on the road during the workweek. Young Linda and her mother took advantage of his absence, staying up late to watch old movies on television. That grounding in the cinema of the 1930s and '40s would serve her well.
She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in comparative literature from Berkeley in 1969 and a doctorate from the University of Colorado in 1977. Her thesis was on surrealism in film. Before returning to Berkeley in 1997 as a professor in the department of rhetoric and the film studies program (now the department of film and media), Ms. Williams taught at the University of Illinois Chicago and the University of California, Irvine.
Several years after the publication of "Hard Core," she taught her first pornography course at Irvine. Though cognizant of the risks of bringing such controversial subject matter into the academy, she told the University of California newsletter The Berkeleyan in 2004, "I wanted to integrate my scholarship and teaching."
Still, 'to label Linda Williams merely as the preeminent scholar of sexuality in cinema is to grossly understate her impact,' Steven Mintz, a professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin and an editor of the book 'Hollywood's America: Understanding History Through Film' (2016), said in an email message. 'While she wrote incisive analyses of pornography, her greatest contribution was unraveling the complex interplay between visual representation and human subjectivity.
Advertisement
"No one has written more perceptively about how viewers engage with film as active participants and forge their own identities in the process."
In addition to her husband, Ms. Williams is survived by their son, Quinn.
Early in her teaching career, Ms. Williams wrote out meticulous lectures to present to her classes. One day, she inadvertently left home without her carefully prepared script and had to stand and deliver from memory.
"It went really well, because she was able to engage with the students more directly in discussions of the material," a Berkeley colleague, Kristen Whissel, said in an email message. From that point on, Whissel said, "She would write up lecture notes, memorize them and leave them in her office."
This article originally appeared in
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

an hour ago
'The Wire' actor shares health update on son who was critically injured in tornado
"The Wire" actor Tray Chaney is sharing a health update on his teen son, who was hospitalized after being injured in a recent tornado outbreak in Georgia. Chaney, who is best known for his role as Malik "Poot" Carr in the drama series, says his son Malachi Chaney has been transferred out of a hospital intensive care unit after he was critically injured in a tornado that damaged the family's home in Locust Grove, Georgia, last week. In an Instagram post Wednesday, Chaney called his son a "warrior" and his "hero, explaining that Malachi had to be treated in the ICU for five days. "Did 5 days in ICU. NOW WE OUTTA ICU. Still gotta remain in the hospital for a whole other process (who knows how long) BUT You talking Progress….LIKE YOUR MY HERO!" the actor wrote in the caption. In the caption of an Instagram post the day prior, which featured a video message for Malachi from former basketball superstar Shaquille O'Neal, Chaney wrote, "Malachi 😎 smile just lit this entire room up & he's making progress. We got a long road to recovery but he is stable alert & just fighting to get 100 better! Going toe to toe with a tornado 🌪️ & making it out alive living & breathing ain't no joke. This is GOD ENERGY this is SUPERHERO ENERGY." Chaney previously revealed that Malachi was injured after being "thrown 300 feet from his room" when the tornado struck their home. "He's fighting hard still in ICU ... broken ribs, bone in his face is fractured," Chaney told ABC News previously. "I can't get myself together right now, I wish it were me who was in the ICU rather than him. I don't want him experiencing any pain." An EF-2 tornado, with extreme winds between 111-135 mph, tore threw Henry County in Georgia on May 29, Atlanta ABC affiliate WSB-TV reported.


USA Today
7 hours ago
- USA Today
Kansas City Chiefs FB Carson Steele reintroduces 'Crocky J' to the world
Kansas City Chiefs FB Carson Steele reintroduces 'Crocky J' to the world Chiefs Kingdom was reintroduced to Kansas City Chiefs fullback Carson Steele's pet and long-time friend, Crocky J, via social media. In a recent Instagram post, Steele is holding his pet alligator, which has grown considerably. "He (Crocky J) kind of represents me, especially a kid from the Midwest coming to L.A. with blond hair. (It) doesn't look like he should be from Indiana, you know?" Steele said during his interview with the Los Angeles Times last summer. "Might as well throw in an alligator." The former UCLA Bruins standout made the most of his invite opportunity to camp in 2024 after going undrafted and immediately leaving an impression on his teammates and coaching staff. Last season, Steele ran for 183 yards on 56 carries, splitting time as the lead running back and fullback. He had fumbling issues to start the year, and after the signing of veteran Kareem Hunt, he saw his snaps limited for the rest of the campaign. It's good to see Crocky J doing well as the Chiefs' OTAs continue this offseason.


American Military News
15 hours ago
- American Military News
Soap made with Sydney Sweeney's used bathwater exists and now we feel so dirty
OK, which focus group asked for soap made from Sydney Sweeney's dirty bathwater? Because y'all are in trouble. In announcing the limited-edition Sydney's Bathwater Bliss product Thursday, boutique soap company Dr. Squatch said on social media that it exists because 'y'all wouldn't stop asking' for Soap á la Sweeney after the actor did a viral ad for the company last October. 'And Sydney said, 'Let's do it.' ' So whoever 'y'all' is should have to stay up late writing apologies to the rest of us. In cursive. The soap is said to smell like Sweeney's childhood homeland, the Pacific Northwest, so anyone who has a warm and innocent association with that area's pine, Douglas fir and earthy moss essence is likely to have that completely ruined. Of course, if you associate those scents with the parfum de décolleté et de parties féminines— that's some kind of French for the 'scent of cleavage and lady parts' — this soap should make perfect sense. 'Nice humiliation ritual you've got going here,' X user @AzBeto1997 tweeted Friday about the soap, which the company swears includes bathwater that has actually touched Sweeney's naked body. 'Way to demean and diminish your customer base. If it were a joke it'd be funny.' 'Weird and gross. I've enjoyed the pine tar soap for several years now, but this is goodbye. Enjoy your bath water fetishist customers,' user @MarvinOMars wrote. 'I guarantee you most straight men find the Sydney Sweeney soap thing pretty gross,' @UnderstanderArt said. 'She's not appealing to all straight men with it, but a very particular group that I want nothing to do with.' Over on Instagram, comments about the limited run of 5,000 bars of soap, on sale next week, seemed more charitable. One poster said the Dr. Squatch marketing department and Sweeney 'need an award for this. Hilarious and awesome.' 'We're not going to heaven, but this is close enough,' another wrote. 'Never will I be in a greater state of absolute bliss than whilst I use this holy concoction, in the form of a bar of soap, to rub across my body,' wrote a third. Some comments invoked the infamous bathtub scene from 'Saltburn.' Many alluded to masturbation. A lot of them were seriously hilarious. All of them suggested in their own quiet ways that the fall of Western civilization was imminent. So buy the soap, don't buy the soap, we really don't care. Remember, this is the same company that insured Nick Cannon's testicles for $10 million. Irish Spring, here we come. ___ © 2025 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.