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Liveblogging WAM: Sunday Afternoon Session

I’m at “Pulling the Plug on Rape Culture One Word at a Time: Using Accuracy to Undermine Dangerous Attitudes and Injustice,” with Cara Kulwicki, Ashley Burczak, Marcella Chester, and Ashwini Hardikar. Below are some (largely paraphrased) thoughts from the presenters:

Cara: The words we use are important — words mean things. One of the most common is using “sex” instead of “rape.” Time and time again we see rape referred to as “sex” — even when the victim is a child who could not have consented. It’s even worse when it comes to adult women who are capable of consent. The kind of language we use has consequences — it sways public opinion about whether we believe rape survivors, which impacts a survivor’s ability to have support from her community.

The status of being unrapeable: A word that describes a certain rape apologist mindset, wherein a given person is construed by various means as living in a permanent state of consent, and therefore completely unable to be a victim. For example: A sex worker in Pennsylvania was raped at gunpoint, but a judge deemed the crime “theft of services” instead of rape.

“Grey rape”: A term created by virginity crusader Laura Sessions Step. Sessions Step: “[Grey rape] refers to sex that falls somewhere between consent and denial and is even more confusing than date rape because often both parties are unsure of who wanted want.” What becomes clear, though, is that in these “grey rape” cases, the women said no — making it actual rape.

Ashwini: “Rape Culture” in the US and South Asia: A Comparative Perspective

In both Hollywood and Bollywood, consensual sex is given a higher rating (R or NC-17) than depictions of violent sexual acts. In American media, violent sexual acts are normalized. For example, in “Boys Don’t Cry,” a consensual lesbian sex act had to be changed in order to prevent it from being rated NC-17; but horrific gang rape and murder scenes didn’t risk increasing the rating and stayed in the film. “The Last House on the Left” has “one of the most upsetting rape scenes committed to film,” but is still rated R. In India, there’s a similar pattern of consensual intimate behavior vs. violent sexual acts; a french kiss will cause riots on the street, but you can have all the rape scenes you want. Depictions of coercion and violence from to hero to woo the heroine are routine. One study found that 41% of sexual scenes in Bollywood movies contained some type of violence — and it wasn’t always depicted in a negative way.

Sexual violence amongst youth in India is widespread. There’s an epidemic of “eve-teasing,” which is street sexual harassment. The majority of harassers are youths (30% college students). In public space, consensual intimacy is targeted by police, while sexual harassment is ignored or condoned — often police are the culprits. The Blank Noise Project documents and confronts street harassment in India.

Youth and sexual violence in the U.S.: Sexual violence disproportionately affects youth. Youth have the highest levels of dating violence among all demographics; and there’s a normalization of violence in the family. The Chris Brown/Rihanna situation provides a good case study for how youth look at violence: In one study, 46% of teenagers said Rihanna was responsible for what happened; 52% said both bore responsibility. For young women of color, sexual violence within communities is often silenced for many reasons — historical racism, white supremacy — but the consequence of that is that women don’t speak out, and that we’re encouraged to “stand by our men.”

Marcella: Rape culture is the cumulative effect of toxic personal attitudes and toxic systems related to sex, consent and sexual violence. Because rape culture is rooted in each of us, we can each help to pull the blog. Rape culture keeps running by claiming to be objective, interested in protecting the innocent, and opposed to sex crimes.

My messages from rape culture: We don’t talk about consent; girls are responsible for enforcing limits; normal boys ignore limits; and rapists are strangers. So even though I was forcibly raped, I took the message that the rape was my fault.

My rapist’s messages from rape culture: Mixed signals can be ignored even when “no” is present; girls are responsible for enforcing limits; normal boys ignore limits; rapists are strangers. The result was that forcing me wasn’t rape.

Rapists need positive motives — that’s how they can rationalize what they do. That’s how a “nice guy” can justify committing an act of violence. They spin reality — they tell themselves that women want to be forced.

For years after I was raped, I took the blame. I was lectured on morality by my rapist, because acting out after I was raped did not meet his approval.

Rape culture was designed for those who feel entitled.

Ashley: Now that we’ve discussed what some of the problems are, I want to discuss some of the ways we can make change. People are indoctrinated into rape culture; we aren’t born that way. The narratives of rape culture are repeated to us through authority figures until we internalize them. The media is a primary source here, but it’s not the only one — it’s your daycare center, your church group, your peer group, your college, your parents. If we want to stop this process of indoctrination, we need to stop the institutions from repeating the narratives of rape culture, and pull the resources away from those institutions in order to spread our counter-narrative.

One of the counternarratives that we use comes in the form of sexual assault prevention programs. There are good and bad programs out there. Effective sexual assault prevention programs focus on the behavior of the perpetrator and the bystanders and not the victim. What the victim does is irrelevant; the person who can prevent rape is the rapist. Effective programs focus on the rapist and on the people who can intervene. Those programs work to break down all forms of oppression, because those oppressions are the root causes of sexual violence.

Probably what a lot of you have gotten if you’ve ever gone to a prevention program, it was something like, “All right guys, lock your doors, lock your windows, watch out for vans, watch your drink, use the buddy system… basically, if you lock yourself in your room and don’t go out, you’ll be safe.” All victim-focused.

If men are supposed to be dominant, and if they aren’t supposed to be empathetic or sensitive, and if they are empathetic or sensitive they’ll be considered feminine — which is the worst thing a man can be — it’s a pretty clear line into rape culture.

Prevention programs are most effective when they’re long-termed and sustained, as opposed to a one-shot deal. Awareness-raising doesn’t challenge anything, and is not effective when it comes to prevention.

So how do we get these programs incorporated into the various structures of indoctrination that we have in our culture? Basically, we have to convince those in power to remove the elements of rape culture, and to institute programs that challenge rape culture. Power structures change because they are forced to. So if we want to make power-holders make changes to the structures they control, we need to create a situation where it’s easier for them to give us what we want than to keep doing what they’re doing. First, you figure out a concrete, measurable structural change that would challenge rape culture — maybe getting the MPAA to label any films that contain sexual violence, or getting your Sunday school to bring in a rape prevention program. It needs to be a specific goal that someone can give you. Once you have that concrete goal, you figure out who can give you what you want.

We’ve heard some bad news today: It’s that rape culture exists. The good news is that rape culture will end. And the best news is that we’re all going to be part of that.

Cara: For me, it’s not primarily about convictions. I’m pissed off about convictions and I’m pissed off at low rates of reporting and I’m pissed off about low sentences, but I don’t think that’s going to be what solves rape culture. It’s about education and prevention. I think victims services are amazing and they need more funding and support, but people need to not be raped in the first place.

Ashley: One thing I always thought would be a great prevention program for a college campus would be a group of male college students to mentor boys in the community, so that you’re extending the circle of people you’re working with — you work with men, and men work with boys.

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10 thoughts on Liveblogging WAM: Sunday Afternoon Session

  1. I don’t follow this:

    “Grey rape”: A term created by virginity crusader Laura Sessions Step. Sessions Step: “[Grey rape] refers to sex that falls somewhere between consent and denial and is even more confusing than date rape because often both parties are unsure of who wanted want.” What becomes clear, though, is that in these “grey rape” cases, the women said no — making it actual rape.

    If both parties are unsure of who wanted what, how can we—as third parties—be so certain?

    If a woman flatly says no, then it is rape of course, but that doesn’t seem to fit the definition of Grey rape presented here. That definition implies that determining consent is in fact complicated, which doesn’t square with a flat no.

    An alternate theory would be that Cara wasn’t talking about a flat no, but rather suggesting that if a woman has uttered the word no, it’s not necessary to take seriously her other words or actions that may complicate the matter. In other words, the idea would be that a woman who has said the word no is thereafter incapable of consent. But I’ve read enough of Cara’s writing to make me doubt that’s what she means.

    It’s hard to say more without getting down to cases, but color me confused.

  2. Southpaw, the reason the definition of gray rape sounds contradictory and confusing is because Laura Sessions Stepp was, whether she realized it or not, trying to pin at least some of the blame on the survivor for being sexually active in the first place. The quote is from a book she wrote on hook-up culture, and the book is full of slut-shaming.

    I hope this isn’t too much of a self-plug, but I wrote about the idea that “both parties are unsure of who wanted what” in issue 4 of make/shift. In my own experience, and in the stories I’ve read about other “gray” rapes, the rapist’s mistaken belief that his/her partner wanted to have sex is usually either an act – “If I pretend I didn’t hear her or pick up on her cues, she’ll let me do what I want” – or denial rooted in rape culture – “I have reason to believe that she doesn’t want me to do this, but as long as she doesn’t explicitly say ‘no,’ I have a right to do it and I can assume she doesn’t mind, even if she doesn’t enjoy it.” This is where the issue of explicit consent comes in. You can’t assume your partner likes it just because they’re not struggling.

  3. I see; I had thought Cara was quoting the definition approvingly. And it was clear from context that she was not; my apologies.

  4. Just found this.I have been fallowing a horrible case covering;Mass.,N.H.,and Maine.Rapes and murders and rapes and attempted murders where all the victims have thier profiles dragged throuph the mud.And the person named as the suspect keeps getting extremely light sentences.Over and over and over.The same guy.It would appear that all these states think all the victims are all out to get this one man……over a ten year time span.I will keep checking in to this page and fallowing this case in New England.

  5. Sorry for the lack of clarity — I was typing as people were talking, and it was difficult to go back and edit without missing important points. Cara was definitely NOT quoting Sessions Stepp approvingly. She pointed out that definition, and then said that when you actually read the examples Stepp gives of “gray rape,” what becomes clear is that all the women in question actually said no — making it not gray at all. In other words, Stepp — and many other media-makers who write about rape — are perpetuating rape culture.

  6. It’s so true about rape being called sex. When I was giving evidence against my attacker the defendents barrister kept calling the attack ‘sex’. I eventually got so angry I shouted “I didnt have sex, he raped me”. This was used as evidence against me. I had lost it because, of course, I was lying about the ‘sex’.

  7. I have a hard time understanding “rape culture”. I am a celibate, ultra orthodox
    I have been working a case for 4 years. Serial rapist, in the workplace.
    As far as I can tell, he rapes in accordance with the Violence Against Womens Act and the workplace sex harassment proceedings.

    I can not find a case where the Federal government has held a corporation liable.

    The Violence Against Womens act, rule 412 states the evidence of the rape should be sealed to protect the victim.

    so, he rapes you, viedo tapes it and gives it to the State Police.

    You either go to court and look at the video tape of yourself being raped,
    if you don’t want to do that, the court seals the evidence.

    I have a letter from the DA telling me that their is insufficient evidence to prosecute. Go to the Crime Victims Center for counseling.

    All of that is funded by a 3.9 billion dollar act of Congress, the VAWA

    The rapist and the same cop have been processing rape cases through the court for years, more than a dozen before me.

    He rapes women in public, in the workplace, and people ask you stupid questions, like “why didn’t you quit your job”?

    And I did try to leave, but I never could make it out the door past him
    I just lost concious, memory loss of the events, I remember being drugged once.

    I have an order on a Federal Court in Philadelphia, “no crime alledged, under Federal law.”

    Felony rape, attempted murder.

    Basically, from what I have been through in the last four years,
    It is government policy that Corporations are not sued for sex harassment.
    Key Bush appointees

    so that is why he rapes in the workplace.

    I have been very sick on an off for 4 years

    Is there someone out there that is concerned about all the women he raped,
    the year before me, he nearly killed a woman, she was later found gang raped, and the DA gave her a job at the Crime Victims center

    The guy is still in business, and he raped me on and off for about 4 months,
    His corporate lawyer made some paper work, and he was signing my name saying he had my power of attorney. He did demand that I sign papers,
    when I refused, he assaulted me until I did sign the paper

    Then I got fired.

    I didn’t know the Government was letting them do THAT now.

    I am BEGGING for someone to help me bust this guy

    BEFORE he kills someone

    The State Police just laughed at me about all of this,
    everytime I report it somewhere, they just tell me I’m crazy
    or try to humiliate me.

    I AM BEGGING
    someone knows how to bust this guy

    It’s just that the more women he rapes, the more money the Crime Victim Center gets.

    He pays about five grand, they seal the evidence, and they send you to the Crime Victims center for counseling.

    Counseling consists of ” YOU HAVE TO GET OVER IT AND GET ON WITH YOUR LIFE”

    I AM BEGGING

    please, the government is subsidizing rape in the workplace

    and I need this guy in prison.

    SOMEONE HELP ME GET HIM IN PRISON

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