"Being male, I have the luxury of sexual safety by virtue of thousands of years of western conditioning and culture."
I happened upon this quote while trudging through innumerable links (some older) regarding PAX Australia, Dick-wolves, etc. It got me thinking about the true origins and causes of sexual power and dominance in most modern society.
I think, for the most part, this dominance arises from other bases of power - in particular, physical power. Another contributing factor: the fundamental biological differences between the actual sex organs and their roles in the literal act of intercourse.
Anyways, some bullet-point thoughts to keep things relatively short:
- if women were stronger than men, on average, would sexual assault exist with such prevalence?
- in a world where women were stronger than men, if men could participate in sexual acts while unconscious or under severe duress, would they become the targets of sexual assault? would the more "active" participation of men in the reproductive act (penetrative) make them poorer targets for sexual assault? (put aside notions of mutual pleasure here)
- does sexual assault exist in part because women "hold the keys"; by in large, sex is seen as valuable to men and given/enabled by women, so is sex viewed too much in the vein of currency or commodity (and subsequently vulnerable to "taking")?
- are efforts to defeat rape culture severely hampered not by logical or emotional failings but rather by biological/physiological imperatives and differences? is the casualization of rape language and imagery a social construct in truth or just a social framework laid over the physical differences between men and women?
Remember that moral and considerate people despise rape, rape language, and rape culture. I would never excuse this behavior, nor does attempting to discover reasons for it function as such dismissal. I'm just not sure I believe in rape culture as a purely social construct that can be easily abolished through objective measures of equality. I'm a little worried it might be biologically/physiologically derived, and that the only way to defeat it is through the creation of new social constructs - similar to the way we reduce/remove other primitive features of the species.
I happened upon this quote while trudging through innumerable links (some older) regarding PAX Australia, Dick-wolves, etc. It got me thinking about the true origins and causes of sexual power and dominance in most modern society.
I think, for the most part, this dominance arises from other bases of power - in particular, physical power. Another contributing factor: the fundamental biological differences between the actual sex organs and their roles in the literal act of intercourse.
Anyways, some bullet-point thoughts to keep things relatively short:
- if women were stronger than men, on average, would sexual assault exist with such prevalence?
- in a world where women were stronger than men, if men could participate in sexual acts while unconscious or under severe duress, would they become the targets of sexual assault? would the more "active" participation of men in the reproductive act (penetrative) make them poorer targets for sexual assault? (put aside notions of mutual pleasure here)
- does sexual assault exist in part because women "hold the keys"; by in large, sex is seen as valuable to men and given/enabled by women, so is sex viewed too much in the vein of currency or commodity (and subsequently vulnerable to "taking")?
- are efforts to defeat rape culture severely hampered not by logical or emotional failings but rather by biological/physiological imperatives and differences? is the casualization of rape language and imagery a social construct in truth or just a social framework laid over the physical differences between men and women?
Remember that moral and considerate people despise rape, rape language, and rape culture. I would never excuse this behavior, nor does attempting to discover reasons for it function as such dismissal. I'm just not sure I believe in rape culture as a purely social construct that can be easily abolished through objective measures of equality. I'm a little worried it might be biologically/physiologically derived, and that the only way to defeat it is through the creation of new social constructs - similar to the way we reduce/remove other primitive features of the species.