Please don’t ask for examples thanks, the question is intended as general :)
Depends on the person. A person with sociopathic tendencies is gonna listen to a song glorifying violence or play a video game doing the same and see it as encouragement. But that’s also only the really stupid and violent, and those people were probably going to do those things anyway.
I think most people that find justification for violent actions from art would find other reasons to justify those things if they didn’t have the art to blame it on.
Identity3000@lemmy.world 9 months ago
So, while this is a “general” question, it seems likely that most people will gravitate towards themes of porn and sexual violence when thinking about it. Let me discuss from that perspective.
To be clear, I am not an expert, but it is something I have thought a lot about in the context of my field in technology (noting how generative AI can be used to create very graphic images depicting non-consensual activities).
The short answer: we don’t concretely know for certain. There is an argument that giving people an “outlet” means they can satisfy an urge without endangering themselves in real life. There is also an argument that repeated exposure can dilute/dull the sense of social caution and normalise the fetishised behaviour.
I am very sympathetic to the former argument where it applies to consensual acts. For example, a day person ina foreign country with anti-gay laws; being able to explore sexuality through ‘normal’ pornography seems entirely reasonable to me.
When it comes to non-consensual acts, I think there is a lot more room for speculation and concern. I would recommend reading this study as an example, which explored dangerous attitudes towards women that were shaped through pornography.
Some key takeaways:
And a final noteworthy line: