I owe a huge debt to feminism. When I was raped as a teenager, I emerged
in one piece largely because of the ground-work feminism had already created
for women like me. I knew I had the right to angry, not only at the man,
but also at the legal system that sheltered him and not me. And I knew
it was not my fault.
A disturbing change has taken place in feminism's approach to rape.
Rape has ceased to be an act of violence which criminals commit against
individual women. It has been placed at the service of a
larger political agenda, which accuses all men of raping all women.
It is disturbing in at
least two aspects: 1. Rape has been redefined; and 2. Rape has become a
gender crime. Rape used to be considered as an experience 'different' than
normal life: a crime, a violation of normal life.
In the '60s, feminists shredded the myth that only bad girls who walked
alone at night were raped. Research showed that every woman was vulnerable
to attack, even in her own home and from someone she knew. Feminists exploded
the myth that rapists were seedy men who lurked in alleys. Research revealed
that rapists could be apple-cheeked boys next door. Feminism replaced mythology
with facts and with practical aid for women in pain. The first U.S. rape
crisis line was established in 1971.
But in the 70's, a theoretical groundwork was laid that placed rape
at the very heart of our culture. Rape became an expression of how the
average man viewed the average woman. By the 1980's, rape had become thoroughly
politicized: it was now viewed as a major weapon (perhaps the major
weapon) by which patriarchy kept women in their place.
The opening paragraph of the New York Radical Feminists Manifesto reads:
"It is no accident that the New York Radical Feminists, through
the technique of consciousness-raising, discovered that rape is not a personal
misfortune but an experience shared by all women in one form or another.
When more than two people have suffered the same oppression the problem
is no longer personal but political -- and rape is a political matter."
The manifesto continues:
"...man is always uneasy and threatened by the possibility that
woman will one day claim her full right to human existence, so he has found
ways to enslave her. He has married her, and through the family, binds
her to him as wife and mother to his children. He has kept her helpless
and dependent, forcing her to work when he needed her labor, isolating
her (physically and psychologically), and as a final proof of his power
and her debasement as a possession, a thing, a chunk of meat, he has raped
her. The act of rape is the logical expression of the essential relationship
now existing between men and women." (as quoted in Rape: The
First Sourcebook for Feminists. Report
from the Workshop on Self-Defense
by Mary Ann Manhart.p. 215)
Rape was no longer a crime committed by individuals against individuals;
it had become part of class analysis. Rape had found its niche within a
political ideology with a revolutionary agenda.
In the conclusion to the book Rape: the First Sourcebook
for Feminists, Mary Ann Manhart remarked on this shift from
supporting individual rape victims to politicizing them:
"Earlier in the book we stated that the initial step in the feminist
process is consciousness-raising and the final step is political action...Consciousness-raising
is a political act, and in turn, political action becomes consciousness-raising...In
a sense, rape is not a reformist but a revolutionary issue because our
ultimate goal is to eliminate rape and that goal cannot be achieved without
a revolutionary transformation of our society. It means a transformation
of the family, the economic system and the psychology of men and women
so that sexual exploitation along with economic exploitation becomes impossible
and even unimaginable." p.249-250
Susan Griffin expresses the ideological underpinning of this shift in
rape theory in her book, Rape: The Power of
Consciousness. Here, she argues that the true rapist is
not the individual man, but the political system of patriarchy.
"From Marxism I had learned a habit of looking for social causes
and observing how human nature is shaped by external condition...But the
Left had an ideology, which, beyond and in addition to its prejudice against
women did not agree with the changes we experienced...We rejected the theory
that capitalism had raped us. If they said patriarchy was just a form of
capitalism, we said that capitalism was a form of patriarchy." p.26
Harper & Row, San Francisco, 1979
A key philosopher of radical feminism, Adrienne Rich offered insight
into the nature of this rapist -- patriarchy:
"Patriarchy is the power of the fathers: a familial -- social,
ideological, political system in which men -- by force, direct pressure
or through ritual, tradition, law, and language, customs, etiquette, education,
and the division of labor, determine what part women should or shall not
play, and in which the female is everywhere subsumed under the male."
p.21 Of Woman Born, London, Virago, 1977.
Rape became a political accident waiting to happen.
In her near-legendary essay, Rape: The All-American
Crime radical feminist Susan Griffin makes what no longer sounds
like such a radical claim:
"Indeed, the existence of rape in any form is beneficial to the
ruling class of white males. For rape is a kind of terrorism which severely
limits the freedom of women and makes women dependent on men...This oppressive
attitude towards women finds its institutionalization in the traditional
family." p.3 Rape Victimology, ed. by Leroy G. Schultz, Charles C.
Thomas, Springfield, Ill., 1975
There was a pivotal point in feminism's shift on the issue of rape.
In 1975, the book Against Our Will by Susan Brownmiller
appeared. In its pages, Brownmiller charts the history of rape from Neanderthal
times through to modern man, placing great emphasis on periods of war and
crisis. Against Our Will is a watershed book, which
was said to 'give rape its history.' It also presented new theory. Brownmiller
maintains that rape is the primary mechanism through which men, in general,
perpetuate their dominance over women in general. She claims that all men
benefit from the fact that some men rape.
I understand how compelling this view of rape can be. At times, I've
wanted to blame all men for the violence I experienced. Certainly, I was
angry at all men. But there are at least two problems with radical feminism's
theory of rape. It is wrong. And it is damaging to women. In the process
of politicizing and collectivizing the pain of women, radical feminism
is reversing the gains of the 60's -- when the myths about rape and the
barriers between men and women had a chance of being dissolved. Today,
new myths and new barriers are being erected.
Any examination of this new mythology should begin with Against
Our Will. There, Brownmiller makes three basic and interconnected
claims:
1. rape is a part of patriarchy;
2. men have created a 'mass psychology' of rape; and,
3. rape is a part of 'normal' life.
I dispute every one of these claims.
The first new myth that Brownmiller advances is that rape is a part
of patriarchy. This is perhaps the most basic radical feminist myth about
rape: namely, that the crime has one cause, and a political one at that:
the general oppression of women by men. Herein lies the extreme interpretation
of the slogan 'the personal is political'.
Against Our Will arrives at this conclusion more
as a result of ideological bias than empirical research. Although Brownmiller's
book is sometimes taken for a chronicle of historical fact, a strong political
slant underlies the presentation of those facts. Consider Brownmiller's
attitude toward private property:
"Concepts of hierarchy, slavery and private property flowed from,
and could only be predicated upon, the initial subjugation of woman"
(pg. 8)
And:
"Slavery, private property and the subjugation of women were facts
of life, and the earliest written law that has come down to us reflects
this stratified life." (pg.8)
To individualist feminists, slavery is not a companion concept for private
property. It is the abrogation of the most basic form of private property:
self-ownership. That is, the natural and inalienable claim that all people
have to their own bodies. In other words, slavery is the most extreme
example of the breakdown of private property. And the recognition of private
property is women's best defense against rape.
In her book Sexual Personae, the individualist Camille
Paglia offers a different perspective. Instead of viewing our culture as
the cause of rape, Paglia argues that it is the main protection women have
against attack. Thus, women can walk down a street unmolested not in spite
of society, but because of it. Paglia writes:
"Generation after generation, men must be educated, refined, and
ethically persuaded away from their tendency toward anarchy and brutishness.
Society is not the enemy, as feminism ignorantly claims. Society is woman's
protection against rape." p.51 Vintage Books, N.Y., 1992
Brownmiller's second myth is that men, in general, have created a mass
psychology of rape. Brownmiller claims that all men are rapists at heart
and all women their natural prey:
"Man's discovery that his genitalia could serve as a weapon to
generate fear must rank as one of the most important discoveries of prehistoric
times, along with the use of fire and the first crude stone axe. From prehistoric
times to the present, I believe, rape has played a critical function...it
is nothing more or less than a conscious process of intimidation by which
all men keep all women in a state of fear." p. 14. [Emphasis
in the original]
Although one might question how Brownmiller comes by her amazing information
about rape and male attitudes in prehistoric times, her message is clear.
Men are inherently rapists.
To back up this statement, Brownmiller plays fast and loose with anecdotal
accounts and passages of fiction. The selection of excerpts shows great
bias. At one point, Brownmiller notes:
"People often ask what the classic Greek myths reveal about rape.
Actually, they reveal very little..." pg.313
Yet these myths are widely held to be archetypes of human psychology.
If Brownmiller wishes to maintain that there is a continuum of male oppression
-- that extends from man's first recognition of his genitalia as weapon
through to this moment -- she must, in honesty, credit Greek myths.
She cannot pick and chose only the statistics and anecdotal accounts that
support her position. Yet even dipping into history and fiction when and
where she chooses, Brownmiller's evidence does not support her conclusion:
namely, that all men are rapists.
To back this contention, radical feminists have produced truly horrifying
statistics. In the preface to their book Acquaintance Rape:
the Hidden Crime, editors Andrea Parrot & Laurie
Bechhofer offer a common statistic:
"Approximately one in four women in the United States will be the
victims of rape or attempted rape by the time they are in their mid-twenties,
and over three quarters of those assaults will occur between people who
know each other." p.ix John Wiley & Sons, N.Y. 1991
This is a stunning figure and one ostensibly supported by FBI records. In looking
at such terrifying statistics, women have a natural tendency to overlook
a vital aspect of what is being said: three out of four women will not
be raped. Even assuming that there is a one-to-one correlation between
victims and rapists -- a generous assumption since many rapists commit
serial crimes -- this means that 75% of all men will never commit this
brutal crime. Indeed, many men would come immediately to the defense of
woman being attacked.
This observation may seem obvious or facile. But in the face of astounding
and unsupported claims like 'all men are rapists', it becomes necessary
to state the obvious. If another group of radicals claimed that 'all whites/Protestants/bisexuals
are sadists', yet the statistics they provided indicated that 75% of the
accused group were nonsadists, no honest observer would accept their argument.
But because the radicals are sexually correct feminists, their incredible
statements are swallowed whole.
And lest a single man slip through the net of accusations by pleading
that he had never raped or even contemplated doing so, Brownmiller explains
how good intentions and good behavior do not excuse a man from the charge
of rape:
"Once we accept as basic truth that rape is not a crime of irrational,
impulsive, uncontrollable lust, but is a deliberate, hostile, violent act
of degradation and possession on the part of a would-be conqueror, designed
to intimidate and inspire fear, we must look toward those elements in our
culture that promote and propagandize these attitudes, which offer men...the
ideology and psychological encouragement to commit their acts of aggression
without awareness, for the most part, that they have committed a punishable
crime, let alone a moral wrong." [Italics in original] page
391.
Such a theory allows for no contradictory evidence. There is no possibility
-- through action, thought or word -- for a man to escape the charge of
rape. It becomes axiomatically true.
The third myth that Brownmiller propounds is that rape is part of normal
life. To reach this conclusion, Brownmiller makes great leaps of logic.
For example:
Against Our Will examines rape, primarily during
times of war and political crisis. Although this is valuable, Brownmiller
pushes her point one step farther. She concludes that -- because men rape
in times of war and social turbulence -- all men are normally rapists.
In essence, rape is the norm.
But the very circumstances Brownmiller highlights -- war, riots, pogroms
and revolutions -- are not so much expressions of society as they are evidence
of its breakdown. Yet, in chapter after chapter, Brownmiller uses horrifying
accounts of rape during societal breakdown in order to argue that this
is how the man-on-the-street reacts. Arguing from the extreme, Brownmiller
draws conclusions about the normal.
There is no doubt: in times of war and social upheaval, the frequency
of all violence increases. But this says nothing about the state of regular
life. Nor does it indicate whether the violence is caused by society or
by the forces destroying society. In essence, Brownmiller's book commits
the logical fallacy of generalizing from extreme cases to the norm. But
unless you are willing to make statements such as -- 'men kill in war,
therefore the accountant feeding his parking meter is, by definition, a
killer' -- you cannot make similar broad statements about rape.
Even when Against Our Will moves away from the
agonies of war and revolt, it focuses only on situations of polarization
and conflict. After the two chapters entitled 'War' and 'Riots, Pogroms
and Revolutions' comes 'Two Studies in American History'. These studies
involve the history of rape as applied to American Indians and slaves.
Again, Brownmiller's insights are valuable.
Again, a leap of logic occurs.
Over and over, Brownmiller uses horror stories about, for example, the
KKK's persecution of blacks to parallel man's treatment of woman. However
emotionally compelling these images might be, they are not arguments and
they do not justify the conclusions she presents.
One of the casualties of the new dogma of rape has been research. It
is no longer 'sexually correct' to conduct studies on the causes of rape,
because -- as any right thinking person knows -- there is only one cause:
patriarchy. Decades ago, during the heyday of liberal feminism and sexual
curiosity, the approach to research was more sophisticated.
In his book from the '70s, Men who Rape: The
Psychology of the Offender, A. Nicholas Groth
offers a theory that sounds almost jarring to today's ears:
"One of the most basic observations one can make regarding men
who rape is that not all such offenders are alike." p.12 Plenum Press,
N.Y., 1979
In their book, The Crime and Consequences
of Rape, Charles W. Dean, Mary de Bruyn-Kops, Charles C.
Thomas, report:
"The Kinsey study, begun in the 1950s and completed after Kinsey's
death by Gebhard and associates, classified seven types of rapists: assaultive,
amoral, drunken, explosive, double-standard, mental defective and psychotic..."
p.41 Springfield, Ill. 1982
Such studies are no longer in fashion. It is no longer proper to suggest
that there can be as many motives for rape as there are for murder and
other violent crimes. People murder for money, for love, out of jealousy
or patriotism ...the rationalizations go on and on. Rape is every bit as
complex. Men rape because of sexual hunger, from a need to prove themselves,
from hatred of women, or a desire for revenge, as a political statement,
or from peer pressure (as in gang rapes). Men rape from a constellation
of complicated motives, which become further blurred when you introduce
drunkenness or drug use.
Perhaps the most truly political form of rape was that committed by
the black activist Eldridge Cleaver, who defined his rape activity as:
"...an insurrectionary act. It delighted me that I was defying
and trampling upon the white man's law upon his system of values and that
I was defiling his women...I felt I was getting revenge." p.28 Soul
on Ice.
Contrast this rape with one described in The Crime and
Consequences of Rape:
"In acquaintance rapes, the brutality and violence ...are usually
absent. Since sex is the primary motivation in these cases, any classification
of the motivation for rape would have to include sex in addition to power,
anger, and sadism as motivating factors." p.44 Springfield, Ill. 1982
Feminism needs a theory that reconciles Cleaver's form of rape with
that of a drunken frat brother. We need a theory that explores the complexity
of the issue, rather than one that oversimplifies it to fit into a political
agenda.
Instead, radical feminists offer book after book of anecdotal studies
that merge ideology with empirical questions. These studies make blanket
and unproven assertions that have acquired the status of truth through
sheer repetition.
For example, in their essay, The Psychology of
the Rapist and His Victim Lilia Melani
and Linda Fodaski virtually equate heterosexual sex with rape:
"Once we accept the relationship of aggression and submission;
once we recognize force or struggle as an integral component of the sexual
courtship (as in the battle of the sexes) it follows that the sex act itself
is only a less emphatic expression of all those elements that make up criminal
rape." Page 88. Rape: the First Sourcebook
for Feminists.
Armed with such ideological arrogance, radical feminists jettison all
scientific method from their research. As the pioneering Brownmiller explains:
"...does one need scientific methodology in order to conclude that
the anti-female propaganda that permeates our nation's cultural output
promotes a climate in which acts of sexual hostility directed against women
are not only tolerated but ideologically encouraged?" Against
Our Will p.395:
The answer is a clear and simple 'yes'. One needs scientific methodology
to verify any empirical claim. Without such methodology, all discussions
devolve into opinion. Or worse. They become a barrier to real research
conducted by those who are willing to reach conclusions based on data,
not on opinion. Brownmiller's attitude -- and that of most radical feminists
-- encourages bad research and false conclusions. Indeed, feminist theories
of rape include such large doses of emotionally-wrenching personal testimony
that the validity of any statements is obscured. The statistics provided
are drenched in ideology. And inconvenient facts -- like the one about
75% of men never raping -- are ignored.
Inconvenient issues -- like rape committed against men -- are also ignored,
or sidestepped. Often, the victim is considered, for all political purposes,
to be a woman. This is rather like a TV interview I once watched in which
Stokley Carmichael divided the world into the white oppressor and the black
oppressed. When asked about the huge global population of Orien- tals,
he replied, 'Consider them black.' Or like another interview program, years
ago, in which a Russian sociologist claimed there was no rape in Soviet
Russia. When pressed on the point, the woman explained: 'no word for rape
exists in the Russian language, therefore there is no rape'. I have no
idea if her linguistic claim is true, but the methodology is familiar.
By not naming a problem or by reclassifying it, the problem goes away.
A similar sleight of hand seems to be at work on the issue of rape.
Through a semantic shell game, the crime is being so redefined that it
is becoming unrecognizable. The issue of date rape is a prime example of
this.
No one can condone rape in the guise of dating. But 'date rape' -- as
a concept -- is much more than a stand against drunken frat brothers assaulting
female students. Date rape has an underlying ideology. In their essay,
The Case of the Legitimate Victim,
Kurt Weis and Sandra S. Borges present a sense of this underpinning:
"The dating system is a mutually exploitative arrangement of sex-role
expectations which limit and direct behavior of both parties and determine
the character of the relationship. Built into the concept of dating is
the notion that the woman is an object which may be purchased." p.112
Rape Victimology ed. by Leroy G. Schultz, Charles C. Thomas Springfield,
Ill., 1975 In other words, dating -- in and of itself -- is a form of exploitation
and rape. In their book The Female Fear, Margaret
T. Gordon and Stephanie Riger virtually eliminate the possibility of consent
within dating:
"The American dating system, which constitutes a primary source
of heterosexual contacts, legitimizes the consensual 'purchase' of women
as sexual objects and obliterates the crucial distinction between consent
and nonconsent." p.60 The Free Press, N.Y., 1989
By expanding the definition of rape with such wild abandon, radical
feminists have blurred all clear lines on this issue. Rape used to be forced
sex -- a form of assault. Today, the focus has shifted from assault to
'abuse'. A recent survey by two Carleton University sociologists -- financed
by a $236,000 government grant -- revealed that 81% of female students
at Canadian universities and colleges had suffered sexual abuse. Their
survey descended into a maelstrom of controversy when it became known that
the researchers included taunts and insults during quarrels within their
definition of abuse.
The definition of sexual violence has been expanded to include what
used to be called bad manners.
In his book, Men Who Rape: The Psychology
of the Offender, A. Nicholas Groth provides the essential
distinction between rape and sex that occurs under pressure or persuasion:
"The defining characteristic of forced assault is the risk of bodily
harm to the woman should she refuse to participate in sexual activity.
All nonconsenting sex is assault. In the pressured assault, the victim
is sexually harassed or exploited. In forced assaults, she is a victim
of rape." p.3 Plenum Press, N.Y., 1979
By eliminating the distinction between force and persuasion (whether
economic or emotional), important sexual lines are erased, such as the
line between rape and seduction.
The pivotal difference between individualist feminists and radical feminists
lies in the concepts of coercion and consent. For individualist feminists,
these concepts rest on the principle of self-ownership: that is, every
woman's inalienable right to her own body. If a woman says 'yes' -- or
if her behavior clearly implies 'yes' -- then consent is present. If a
woman says 'no' -- or clearly implies it -- then coercion is present.
It is difficult to tell what constitutes consent or coercion for radical
feminists. Consider a recent definition of sexual violence Liz Kelly offers
in her book Surviving Sexual Violence:
"Sexual violence includes any physical, visual, verbal or sexual
act that is experienced by the woman or girl, at the time or later, as
a threat, invasion or assault, that has the effect of hurting her or degrading
her and/or takes away her ability to control intimate contact." p.41
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1988
In one form or another, this is becoming a common guideline for identifying
sexual violence.
The first problem with this guideline is that it is totally subjective.
For example, the woman need not have felt threatened during the sex act
itself. As Kelly observed 'Sexual violence includes any...sexual act that
is experienced by the woman or girl, at the time or later' as violent.
In retrospect and in light of other experiences, the woman might decide
that she had been coerced. But who hasn't regretted something in retrospect?
There are many mistakes in which every one of us has been a consenting
participant. Regret is not a benchmark of consent.
A second problem with the radical feminist view of rape is that it is
disastrously subjective. It says that anything 'experienced by the
woman or girl' as violent is de facto 'violence'. The coercion need not
involve any physical contact: it can be simply verbal or visual. The crucial
link between coercion and the use (or threat) of force has been broken.
Tangible evidence of violence -- such as bruises, witnesses, explicit threats,
etc -- is no longer necessary for a man to be considered guilty of sexual
violence. All that is necessary is for a woman to have felt threatened,
invaded or assaulted by him.
Any subjectivity in the definition of sexual violence has always acted
against the interests of women. The issue of rape has been legally skewed
in favor of the accused for so long that women have reacted by swinging
the balance too far in the other direction.
Radical feminists are attempting to create a virtual utopia of safety
for women. Camille Paglia comments:
"The point is, these white, upper-middle-class feminists believe
that a pain-free world is achievable. I'm saying that a pain-free world
will be achievable only under totalitarianism." p.64 Sex, Art,
and American Culture, Vintage Books, N.Y., 1992
Camille Paglia offers a sense of reality to the obfuscations that are
being woven around the crucial issue of rape:
"...feminism, which has waged a crusade for rape to be taken more
seriously, has put young women in danger by hiding the truth about sex
from them.
"In dramatizing the pervasiveness of rape, radical feminists have
told young women that before they have sex with a man, they must give consent
as explicit as a legal contract's. In this way, young women have been convinced
that they have been the victims of rape." p.49 Sex, Art, and American
Culture, Vintage Books, N.Y., 1992
It is commonplace to note that the crime of rape is on the rise. Part
of the perceived increase may be that more women are reporting the crime.
Part of it is certainly that the definition of rape has been expanded to
include, for example, date rape. Yet, even accounting for these factors,
violence against women does seem to be increasing dramatically. Ironically,
several researchers suggest that women's demand for autonomy and equality
may have spurred on sexual violence because men are attempting to reassert
their dominance. This reaction is called 'backlash'.
In her book The Politics of Rape, sociologist
Diana E.H. Russell suggests:
"There is some male backlash caused by women's growing desire to
be more independent of men. This painful period of transition is a time
of tremendous misunderstanding and hostility between the sexes. Rape is
the way some men express their hostility to women. More threatened male
egos may mean more rapes. In the short run, the more women who break out
of traditional female roles and assert themselves in new ways, the more
threatened male egos are." as quoted in Forcible Rape: The Crime,
the Victim and the Offender ed. Duncan Chappell, Robley Geis, and Gilbert
Geis, Columbia University Press, N.Y., 1977
Some responsibility must be shouldered by those who tell women that
they can have it all. This may be true in the-best-of-all-possible worlds,
but it is not true in the inner city, on the university campus or even
in the crime-heavy suburbs. In her book, The Trouble with
Rape, Carolyn J. Hursch notes:
"While on the one hand, through current literature women are imbued
with independence, equality, and power, on the other hand, no credence
is ever given to the very real fact that women are, and always will be,
physically unequal to men and therefore physically vulnerable...the fact
is that even after being granted all the rights which she so richly deserves,
a woman still has a woman's anatomy." p.131-132 Nelson-Hall, Chicago,
1977
The fact that women are vulnerable to attack means we cannot have it
all. We cannot walk at night across an unlit campus or down a back alley,
without incurring real danger. These are things every woman should
be able to do, but 'shoulds' belong in a utopian world. They belong in
a world where you drop your wallet in a crowd and have it returned, complete
with credit cards and cash. A world in which unlocked Porsches are parked
in the inner city. And children can be left unattended in the park. This
is not the reality that confronts and confines us.
Camille Paglia introduces a bit more reality into the discussion of
rape. In her book, Sex, Art, and American
Culture, she exclaims:
"Feminism keeps saying the sexes are the same. It keeps telling
women they can do anything, go anywhere, say anything, wear anything. No,
they can't. Women will always be in sexual danger...feminism, with its
pie-in-the-sky fantasies about the perfect world, keeps young women from
seeing life as it is." pg.50 Vintage Books, N.Y., 1992
Radical feminism paints a schizophrenic picture of women. They are free
and complete sexual beings, who live in a state of siege. They are empowered
persons, who are terrified to open their doors at night.
Their picture of men is no less confusing: even the most loving and
gentle husband, father, and son is a beneficiary of the rape of women they
love. No ideology that makes such vicious accusations against men as a
class can heal any wounds. It can only provoke hostility in return.
For radical feminists, this antagonism may serve a purpose...after all,
radical feminism is a cry for revolution, not for reform, and revolutions
are not built on conciliation. Radical feminists allow for no solution
to sexual violence short of accepting their social, economic and political
agenda. They allow for no other bridge of understanding or trust to be
built between men and women.
Nor does radical feminism seek to heal women on an individual basis.
Even the supposedly definitive work on rape, Against Our
Will, gives only a cursory nod to the idea of individual women healing
or learning to defend themselves. Instead, individual women who have been
raped are told that they will never recover from the experience...that
rape is the worst thing that can happen to a woman. Paglia observes:
"The whole system now is designed to make you feel that you are
maimed and mutilated forever if something like that happens. It's absolutely
American -- it is not European -- and the whole system is filled with these
cliches about sex." p.63 Sex, Art, and American
Culture, Vintage Books, N.Y., 1992
As a woman who has been raped, I will never downplay the trauma it brings.
But being raped was not the worst thing that ever happened to me and I
have recovered from it. Feminists who say otherwise are paying me a disrespect.
The issue of rape has been diverted into a political tangle of class
theory and ideology. It is time to return to the basics: consent and coercion.
Regarding consent the crucial question is, of course, 'has a woman agreed
to have sex?' It is not: has she been talked into it, bribed, manipulated,
filled with regret, drunk too much or ingested drugs. And, in an act that
rarely has an explicit 'yes' attached to it, the touchstone of consent
in sex has to be the presence or absence of physical force.
On the question of force, I think feminists desperately need to change
their focus from the man to the woman. They should crying out for every
woman to learn how to say 'no' as effectively as possible...and with deadly
force if necessary. The true way to empower a woman and make her the equal
of any man who would attack is to teach her how to use a gun and other
methods of defending herself.
There is no argument: women should be able to walk down streets alone
at night and be safe. Just as they should be able leave their apartments
and car doors unlocked. Yet women who bolt their doors every night often
refuse to learn self-defense because they don't believe they should have
to. Because they should be able to feel safe, they refuse to take steps
that would so dramatically acknowledge how unsafe they truly are.
Women have the absolute right to live without being attacked. But no
right can be enjoyed for long if it is not defended, and vigorously. Ladies
Home Journal recently ran an ad from a gun manufacturer,
which read: 'Self-protection is more than your right -- it is your responsibility.'
(July, 1992)
There is no safety for women on the streets, on the campus, or in their
own homes. Violence has become so epidemic that the world seems to be going
slowly crazy and no one can rely on other people for protection. Feminism
needs more women like Paxton Quigley -- author of Armed and
Female. After a friend of hers was brutally raped, Quigley changed
her perspective: she went from agitating for gun control to teaching women
how to use a handgun.
Quigley uses an effective technique to break through the women's tendency
to shy away from guns. Her beginner's course includes a tape of a 911 emergency
call that was made by a Kansas rape victim as her attacker was breaking
into her home. As he appears at her bedroom door, she screams:
"Who are you? Why are you here? Why are you here? WHY?"
After hearing the tape, women are more willing to learn such techniques
as how to shoot lying down and to aim for the head. One of the women who
took Quigley's course commented:
"Girls grow up believing that they're going to taken care of, but
it just ain't so." (Wall Street Journal, Feb.4, 1993)
Self defense is the last frontier of feminism. And it is the
solution -- if one truly exists -- to rape and other forms of violence
against women. Politicizing women's pain has been a costly diversion from
the hard work that is necessary to make women safe.
The fact is:
Rape is a crime committed against individual women, and the remedy must
be an individualist one as well. Women who are raped deserve one-on-one
compassion and respect for the unique suffering they experience. Too
much emphasis has been placed on the commonality of reactions among raped
women: it is equally important to treat these women as distinct human beings
and respect their differences.
Equally, women who are in fear deserve one-on-one training in how to
defend themselves against attack. Theories of how Neanderthal man was sexist
do not offer women safety in their own homes. Rhetoric regarding patriarchy
cannot protect one single woman who is dragged into the bushes. Women deserve
to be empowered -- not by having their pain and fear attached to a political
agenda, but by learning how to use force to their advantage.
Self-defense is feminism's last frontier.