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Tristan Taormino Uninvited From Oregon State’s Modern Sex Conference


Tristan Taormino Uninvited From Oregon State's Modern Sex ConferenceSex educator extraordinaire Tristan Taormino has given more than 75 lectures at universities and colleges around the country. Next month, she was scheduled to give the keynote at Oregon State University's Modern Sex conference. Then she was uninvited.

Why, you ask? Apparently because of her "resume and website"—or, for those who have trouble reading between the lines, her involvement with the adult industry. From the press release we received:

On October 28, 2010, organizers of the OSU Modern Sex conference booked Taormino to give the keynote talk; they confirmed the date and agreed to fees, and Tristan's management received a first draft of the contract on November 1. That contract was incomplete and sent back to OSU for revisions. As with many negotiations, the contract was pending as all the paperwork got done, but in late December, OSU again confirmed Tristan's appearance and conference organizers told her manager to purchase airline tickets, for which OSU would be reimburse her.

On Tuesday, January 18, 2011, Steven Leider, Director of the Office of LGBT Outreach and Services contacted Colten Tognazzini, Tristan Taormino's manager, to say that the conference had come up short on funding. Tognazzini told him that since the travel was booked and the time reserved, they could work with whatever budget they did have. Leider said that would not be possible: "We have to cancel Ms. Taormino's appearance due to a lack of funding. It has been decided that OSU cannot pay Ms. Taormino with general fee dollars, because of the content of her resume and website." At OSU, ‘general fee dollars' include taxpayer dollars given to the University by the Oregon State Legislature to defray various costs. They differ from ‘student activity dollars,' which are part of every student's tuition and help fund student groups and activities.

Taormino's resume includes her seven books on sex and relationships, the 18 anthologies she has edited, numerous television appearances from CNN to The Discovery Channel, and her award-winning adult films.
She was a columnist for The Village Voice for nearly ten years and has given more than 75 lectures at top colleges and universities including Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Brown, NYU and Columbia. Her website, http://www.puckerup.com, includes sex education information, advice, and information about the films she directs for Vivid Entertainment, one of the largest adult companies in the country.

"In my ten years of booking Tristan at colleges and universities, of course there has been some controversy. But I have never had a university cancel like this last minute," says Colten Tognazzini, Taormino's manager. "It's not unusual for contract negotiations to drag on. Once they confirmed we should book her travel, I felt
comfortable the event was a done deal. I continued to work with them in good faith that a signed contract would be forthcoming. I believe that the conference organizers' hands are tied, and this decision came from much higher up. They have cancelled with less than a month's notice during Tristan's busiest season. She gave up other opportunities to go to Oregon. Without a signed contract, we may have no recourse, and were told we will not be reimbursed for her travel."

Tognazzini spoke to a source at OSU who speculated that the University feared that when it went before the legislature in regards to future funding, legislators would use OSU's funding of a "pornographer" on campus as ammunition to further cut budgets. This source, who wishes to remain anonymous, told Tognazzini, "I think they're uninviting Tristan because they don't want to have to defend her appearance to conservative legislators."

"I'm extremely disappointed that OSU has decided to cancel my appearance. I've been protested before, but never uninvited. I have never misrepresented who I am or what I do. I am proud of all the work I do, including the sex education films and feminist pornography I make," says Taormino. "The talk I planned to give at this conference, titled "Claiming Your Sexual Power" has nothing to do with porn, but the porn is such an easy target for anti-sex conservatives and censors. I find it ironic that one of the missions of the conference is to understand diverse perspectives of sexuality. Apparently, my perspective-one of educating and empowering people around their sexuality-isn't welcome at OSU."

If OSU students and others still want to hear Taormino speak, she will be teaching two workshops at She Bop (sheboptheshop.com) in Portland on February 13 and 14. "She Bop supports a healthy perspective on sex and sexuality and we are proud to have Tristan Taormino present two years in a row at our shop in Portland. Tristan is a leading educator paving the way for others to help break down the stigma around sex in this country. It is part of our mission as a female friendly adult shop to support sexual empowerment and growth," say co-owners Jeneen Doumitt and Evy Cowan.

It goes without saying that Fleshbot thinks the world of Tristan. And as someone who has seen her speak many times, both as an audience member and a co-panelist, I value her voice and positive message of sexual empowerment and freedom. I think it's truly a shame that the Modern Sex attendees will not get to hear Tristan's keynote, and I'm also quite disturbed by the implication that her affiliation with the adult industry makes her unfit to speak on a public university campus.

Universities are supposed to be halls of education, where young minds can be exposed to new ideas and varying viewpoints. But if certain viewpoints are shunned and censored, how can we be sure that students are really being exposed to the full story? And it's not just about sex, either. Sure, they may ban the pornographer today, but who will be banned tomorrow?


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