Posts tagged: rape
This drawing is from a photo set making the rounds on Tumblr. As forgetpolitics wrote:
For anyone who only sees gender and sex in black and white, here’s proof by the lovely humon that nature is just as fluid with representations of gender and sex as we are.
The photo set includes stylized images of various different species, along with descriptions of their reproductive behaviors. For the most part, I really like them. However, this one about the Spotted Hyena angered me. It reads:
A lot of animals turn our ideas of gender roles upside-down, but the Spotted Hyenas take it to the extreme.
Females are larger and far more aggressive than males, and even the lowest female in the hierarchy is over the highest ranking male. This hierarchy is so strong that adult males are scared of female puppies, and for good reason. Adult daughters show kindness towards their fathers by being less violent to them than to other males.
And it doesn’t stop there. Female hyenas have pseudo-penises that can get erect and are bigger and longer than the males’ penises, and make it very difficult for males to mate with females, and rape impossible. An erect penis is however seen as a sign of weakness, so males will present their erections to females to show submission the same way other animals present their throats.
Did you spot the triggering comment? Check it out, emphasis added:
Female hyenas have pseudo-penises that can get erect and are bigger and longer than the males’ penises, and make it very difficult for males to mate with females, and rape impossible.
While I won’t claim to know very much at all about Spotted Hyena mating behaviors or their culture, this photo set is clearly trying to make a point about human diversity, not hyena culture, so I feel perfectly justified in calling bullshit on this phraseology.
In fact, there are so many things wrong with this statement I hardly know where to start. Should I start by calling bullshit on the absurdity of the implication that all rapists are men—and have penises? That all rape is penetrative—a falsehood still codified into United States law as recently as three months ago? That all survivors of rape are female? (Totally untrue.)
I understand that this detail about rape is not actually the author’s intent, but I am nonetheless infuriated at the blanket assumption that, as a man, I’m inherently a rapist. And while I do understand the underlying survival trait beneath that blanket assumption, it’s nevertheless not merely an inhumane way to talk about people—and I know we can do better than that—I think it’s actually an artifact of rape culture. An artifact that has been hurting me, very personally, for a very long time.
These are surely utterly obvious things…to anyone with a penis that hasn’t used it to rape. Even though, admittedly, that’s a terrifyingly small fraction of the human population. At least, I think these things are obvious. Aren’t they…?
Update: It’s terrifying for me to have written this. It’d mean a lot to me if you also read this interpretation of my post. Excerpted:
[T]he cultural myth that all rape is committed by people with penises, that all people with penises are rapists (or potential rapists), and that rape necessarily involves inserting a penis into an orifice […] reinforces rape culture in […] major ways.
[For instance, i]t encourages us to believe that what makes someone a potential rapist is *the fact that they have a penis* rather than their personal relationship to consent. This is dangerous for many reasons […] we rarely talk about: It encourages many young cisgender men (and others) to internalize the belief that having a penis makes them a rapist NO MATTER WHAT they do — thus, they might as well just give up (either on sexual relationships entirely or on consent) and not even try.
[…]
I can’t count the number of men in my life with whom I’ve had conversations in which they express hopelessness and despair about [that] point[…]. These are the men who are choosing NOT to pursue intimate relationships (or are pursuing them only with extreme trepidation), because they either don’t trust their own grasp of consent or because potential partners perceive their grasp of consent as a lack of interest.
This conversation is heartbreaking for me[…].
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While I was at Arisia 2012, I went to the Sexual Harassment and Assault in Fandom panel, at which I learned about the Back Up Project, an inter-convention initiative intended to create environments that are actively uncomfortable for abusers to exploit. This is particularly important in “geek” communities, where the Geek Social Fallacies are cultural enablers of assault. Here’s one of The Back Up Project’s handouts:
BACK UP
The Open Source Women Back Each Other Up Project
real world help for a real world problemThe Project aims to make help against harassment visibile and available, to create safer environments, to help women to support other women and men to challenge other men. We want sff, anime, comic, and other cons to be safer spaces for women.
- I will break through your Somebody Else’s Problem invisibility field and come over and ask if you’re okay.
- I will remember that you are in charge, and if you don’t want my help, I will go away. I will be there to help you in the future if you need it.
- I will help you contact help: your friends, the event organizers, or police/security officers, if that is what you would like.
- I will help you to the best of my ability if you’re being harassed or made to feel uncomfortable. Just let me know, even if you don’t know me.
- I will not tell you that you must have been imagining things.
- I will not say to you to go home, or go hide in your room, or just stay away from that guy.
- I will not make you feel like your right to control over your own body is not a big deal.
There are also large buttons that you can wear to signify that you are an “active bystander,” someone who is willing to take on this “back up” role.
Some useful tips to help prevent sexual assault from the panel:
Remember, as the panelists said, in order to address the issue of rape in society, we need to address the role of the rapists—the real rapists, not the storybook rapists. Most rapes (77 percent!) are perpetrated by people who the survivor knows. That means there are rapists at the large conventions you’re going to—no exceptions, no excuses.
Further, criminals deliberately perpetrate crimes at conventions because they know it can be more easily disguised. Think about it: how many people have you seen in masks and costumes at the last Sci-Fi/Fantasy convention you went to? Yeah…that.
See also
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I am disgusted but not surprised - I fucking hate the kink community’s manifestation of rape culture sometimes.
What Nix said. On the bright side, I am super proud of the people I know are in the right—and doggedly so—in this thread. Speaking up like this is heroic; good for all of you.
Context: this is a thread on FetLife in response to Kitty Stryker’s post, “I Never Called It Rape.”
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As promised, I wanted to jump back into this discussion—but, and I say this with some trepidation, relatively briefly because I am just too overwhelmed for much more than a dip back into these particular theoretical pools. Here’s the background:
So this conservation happened on Twitter:
@maymaym: Free #Porn Lowers #Rape Rates http://is.gd/aw1Bqp 15-19yo men largest contributor to fewer assaults when given ‘net access. /via @Broadsnark
@tiaramerchgirl @maymaym @Broadsnark doesn’t that reinforce the idea that rape has to do with sexual desire (Rather than power or control)?
@maymaym @tiaramerchgirl Can’t it be both? Dichotomizing #rape as “not about#sex” is inaccurate even if #power’s the salient factor.
@tiaramerchgirl How so? (then I RT @maymaym’s tweet)
@maymaym @tiaramerchgirl Um…what do you mean “how so”? #Rape is “not about #sex” in the same way anorexia is “not about food.” C’mon.
@tiaramerchgirl @maymaym Um. I feel you’re heading into MAJORLY problematic territory here (even if I’m too inarticulate to express it)
@maymaym @tiaramerchgirl That’s true, I am. :) I’m also thinking of some of @SocDocSN’s work. See p. 126 of “Playing on the Edge”http://ur1.ca/2fcpg
I don’t have a copy of the book he linked, so I can’t refer to what he’s pointing to. But I find huge issues with his statements and would like some help articulating them (or hell, if you agree with him, help explain why).
Some thoughts:
- Rape is about dehumanising - sex just happens to be a tool for dehumanising. It hits at intimacy, personal boundaries, trust, consent.
- It’s about treating the other person as property rather than a living human being (the person who raped me kept saying I was her “sex toy”)
- Does it even need to involve sexual activity to be rape? Which definition of “sex”? What about verbal, non-penetrative, other senses?
- Anorexia - control of body, dysphoria of body image: not just food control, but other issues too - again, food is just a tool
- Where do you go if you’ve been raped in a sex-positive environment then? (like me)
- Watching porn still doesn’t necessarily impart good consent skills
- Sexual frustration and desire - how to release?
Claiming fair use, I’ll transcribe the relevant portions of Newmahr’s text, Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk, and Intimacy. Page 126 offers some useful context to the remainder of the discussion, but feel free to skip to the quotes from page 174 if you’re already well-versed in feminist discourse regarding both rape and BDSM. And if you’re not, please do read this through, because it is actually important:
The Erotic-Violent Dualism
In her deconstruction of the feminist reconceptualization of rape as violence rather than sex, Catharine MacKinnon (1989) argues that this position maintains the ideological and conceptual distinction between sex and violence: “Whatever is sex, cannot be violent; whatever is violent, cannot be sex” (1989, 323). Her underlying objection in this argument, of course, is to the ideological preservation of “the ‘sex is good’ norm,” rather than to the implications of its corollary, “violence is bad.” Regardless of the moral position of her argument, MacKinnon’s point is important; violence and eroticism are positioned in a diametric opposition to one another. Where overlap is suspected or identified, it is pathologized, legislated, or reconceptualized as not “really” one or the other. A conscious and deliberate relationship between the erotic and the violent is ethically unacceptable. In the context of powerful feminist critiques of (hetero)sexuality over the past three decades, the conflation is especially problematic.
At this point in the book, Newmahr seems to be trying to do several things at once:
This is really difficult because in order to succeed at any one of these goals, you need to hold multiple perspectives in your head at once. You need “both/and” thinking. The fact of the matter is that SM thoroughly problematizes traditional notions of both “feminist” and ”gender” theory from all kinds of angles, and perhaps intersectionally so most of all.
To the third point, Newmahr continues, writing, “While the conceptualization of SM as an alternative kind of sex is reductionist, SM is, for most people in Caeden, sexualized, at least to some extent.” Then she gives examples of why this is, such as people’s self-labeling of SM as part of their “sexual identity,” that much attention is paid to one’s genitals, breasts, buttocks, and other erogenous zones in play/scenes, and so on. This exposition continues for a while, focusing on how “the relationship between sex and SM is problematic for participants” because “[t]he eroticism of SM is not quite the same experience as the eroticism of sexual arousal.” More examples are cited in the following pages, including interview transcripts in which one participant, “explained that for him, SM and sex ‘are separated, for the most part, and were, early on, separated.’”
But in the middle of all this, Newmahr notes that while SM and sex are wholly “separated” for some participants, “it is sexually relevant [and] is also linked to power and to violence.” On this most important thread, she writes:
In their illumination of the important relationships between heteronormative sexuality and ideologies of domination and violence, feminist analyses have helped to transform an ideological objection to the conflation of the erotic with the violent into a theoretical and conceptual limitation. As Pat Califia pointed out, “Anybody who questioned [the anti-pornography activists’] definition of porn or violence was accused of having bad consciousness about violence against women” (1981, 256-57). Violence, then, could not be problematized; conflated with violent crime, “violence” is intrinsically morally problematic.
This, then, is the more palatable side of the coin to my assertion that “rape is ‘not about sex’” in the same way that “anorexia is ‘not about food.’” Since rape is an abhorrent (violent) crime, and since the anti-SM feminist viewpoint has so thoroughly monopolized discourse regarding social values in all their myriad applications, accepting “violence” as being a potential part of “sex,” much less a potentially desirable and valuable facet of some consensual sexual activity, is believed even in pro-BDSM circles simply to be unconscionable. It is rejected out of hand, uncritically, without nary a shred of self-reflection; we who tout ourselves non-judgmental cowardly judge that which we value.
Newmahr recognizes this, writing:
Most [SM participants] would, understandably, vociferously object to [SM’s] categorization as violence, as Carol Truscott did: “Consensual sadomasochism has nothing to do with violence. Consensual sadomasochism is about safely enacting sexual fantasies with a consenting partner. Violence is the epitome of nonconsensuality, an act perpetrated by a predator on a victim. Consensual sadomasochism neither perpetuates violence nor serves as catharsis of the violent in the human spirit” (Truscott 1991, 30). Yet tansgressions of the boundary between eroticism and violence are fundamental in SM play. […] SM play is profoundly and significantly different from nonconsensual interactions in nonconsensual contexts, but it is nonetheless a performance of violence.
Anyone familiar with SM play knows, of course, that Newmahr is correct. I certainly do. “And what do we make of circumstances in which people orgasm from blows to the back or being kept in a cage? While psychological perspectives, and psychoanalytical approaches in particular, offer entry points into exploring these conflations, they do so in the wake and shadow of essentialist models that themselves pathologize intersections of eroticism and violence,” Newmahr says. And I agree.
The point, in case it wasn’t clear, is that SM is both violent and sexual, but not merely sex. With an understanding of BDSM and freed from the constraints of the “violence is bad” trope, we can now complicate things further by discussing nonconsensual sexual violence. It is from here that I remarked, “Dichotomizing rape as ‘not about sex’ is inaccurate even if power’s the salient factor.”
At this point in the book, Newmahr spends a number of pages discussing the sociological literature on violence. I’ll encourage you to go through it on your own. Then she returns to her own ethnography.
Newmahr discusses various “strategies of resolution” with which people tackle this “conceptual quagmire.” The most obvious is “disavowal and detachment,” which is MacKinnon’s apparent strategy and the strategy of most BDSM’ers who consider consent to be the be-all-end-all factor in segregating (nonconsensual) violence from (consensual, if “kinky”) sex. Regardless of whether it’s employed by anti-SM crusaders or BDSM’ers, this strategy is fundamentally dishonest. It is, again, the flip side of the coin to discussing rape as purely about violence and not in any way about sex—because it so clearly is about sex, but not merely about sex, as you and many others have correctly pointed out.
In discussions of sex-that’s-not-merely-about-sex, everyone, but perhaps mostly the sex-positive community and academia, does a huge disservice to one another by not examining intimacy as separate from sexuality. This is why I am so often so loudly supportive of asexuality; they examine the liminal space of the non-erotically sexual. It is within this space that plenty of consensual SM and nonconsensual sexual crimes inhabit.
Although Newmahr did not research, discuss, or even hint at asexuality in her work, she’s circling some of the same things I’ve been observing the asexuality community discuss for years. Namely, the relationship of intimacy with other areas of life.
Fast forward to page 174 in Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk, and Intimacy where, after setting the theoretical stage for this, Newmahr returns to examinations of the intersection of sex and violence by examining the nature of intimacy:
The challenges in understanding intimacy parallel the problems in conceptualizing violence, pain, and eroticism. Trapped in moral frameworks and tethered to political agendas, these ideas are rarely deconstructed. SM forces us to confront the apparent inconsistencies and paradoxes contained within them. In doing so, we can trace conceptual links between intimacy, eroticism, and violence that move beyond psychological models of innate drives and pathologies.
Newmahr independently theorizes intimacy not as only lovey-dovey, good feelings of “connection” and “energy,” which are words most members of the BDSM Scene use instead of intimacy, but rather as “access to otherwise unknown parts of people.” (And that, I’ll note, is a remarkably similar articulation to the powerful articulations by asexual activists.) With this amoral, apolitical framework of intimacy, society can be reexamined in a more constructive way. In this sense, perhaps the single most understated consequence of the “sexual revolution” was that, to use Newmahr’s words, “As regulatory (and thereby disciplinary) forces regarding sexuality are challenged and sexual practices and identities change, other aspects of self acquire the potential to supplant sexuality as a highly protected aspect of self.”
In other words, in a world where cultural doctrines of virginity or monogamy no longer hold sway, what would intimacy, or “connection,” look like? As a sex-positive movement, we are leading the way there, but after we dismantle the sexist tropes of sexual purity and the world’s homophobic heteronormativity, what will we offer in their place? Is “sex for everybody!” really the best we can come up with? That’s not only horribly inarticulate, it’s resoundingly dull, reminiscent of Syndrome’s stupid plan to turn everyone “super.” We need better understandings of intimacy, and of sex, and of violence, or our generation’s sexual revolution—the one about sexual information—will, for all intents and purposes, fail as spectacularly as the first.
But I digress. Newmahr did so far less than I. In any event, she continues:
Understanding intimacy as the experience of achieving access to protected aspects of others’ selves provides a theoretical framework for understanding the intimacy of interpersonal violence. Nonconsensual violence (what most people mean when they say “real violence”) transgresses physical, social, emotional, and ethical boundaries between actors. Perpetrators of interpersonal violence gain access to experiences of others that most do not. The “sneaky thrills” that Jack Katz finds among thieves are intimate thrills (1988). The sexual metaphor he uncovers in the narratives of the thieves follows, for the thrill in both heteronormative eroticism and theft lies in gaining access. To violate, and to be violated, are intimate experiences. If we cease to reserve the word “intimate” for situations that are desirable or healthy, we can see, for example, the intimacy of violent crime. Rape, which many of us would shudder to consider “intimacy,” is so heinous precisely because it is so intimate.
And so, in much the same way as rape is so heinous precisely because it is so intimate, it is also so “violent” precisely because it is sexual. In a world where access to sexual experience were not so closely guarded and equated with social closeness, rape might be less sexually violating (which is what most people say when they mean, “nonconsensual intimacy”) but I doubt it would be any less sexual.
I hope this helps deconstruct a few things for you, as it did for me. Consider picking up a copy of Playing on the Edge—it’s an awesome book. And while you’re waiting for it to ship or whatever, consider listening to Kink On Tap episode 70, in which Newmahr discuses the book with me—it was grand.
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So. This is worth reblogging. I think you should do that. It’s, y’know, at least minutely pro-active.
So rape culture’s kind of unsettling, hey?
I wish every guy would do this. Fuck.
The sad part is that pretty much any guy could say “I promise not to rape you.” and I’d still be wary of them in certain situations. :/ It is a nice sentiment though. Just. Bah, stupid world we live in where trusting someone isn’t the obvious choice.
This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!
This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!