Rape is STILL Not a Compliment

Actual headline in the New York Times: The Designer Who Liked Models.

Actual content: 33-year-old fashion designer Anand Jon has been charged with “32 counts of rape, sexual battery, lewd acts on a child and other ugly crimes, against a dozen women – all models – aged 14 to 23.”

I’ll second Sara, who notes, “rape is not an form of affection,” and Jeff, who concludes, “A fashion designer who rapes a dozen women between age 14 and 23 does not ‘like’ women. Indeed, I think one could fairly say he ‘hates’ them.” I’ll also just repeat myself, since, evidently, this oughtta-be-obvious shit still needs to be said.

[Richard implies that] rape is only something that happens to attractive women – a sentiment I’ve seen expressed before by other men who inform women they are not attractive enough by suggesting they’re not “rapable.” Appallingly, I’ve seen men go out of their way to physically intimidate a woman on the subway (or bus, or in a parking garage, etc.) only to scoff, “Don’t flatter yourself” if she reacts with the fright he desires. He’s pretending that rape is about sexual attraction, though he knows it’s about control and humiliation – his craving for which he has just satiated by terrorizing and insulting a woman he doesn’t know.

Fetishizing rape, regarding it as primarily about sexual attraction, recasts rapists as sexually frustrated men, or oversexed men, or men who simply can’t control themselves when they see an attractive woman. Rapists are not merely men with heightened libidos; they are men who seek to possess and control, and sex is the weapon they wield – not the ends, but the means. To think that rapists all rape for one universal reason is to think that murderers all murder for a single reason, and to think that rapists all rape because of sexual attraction is to think that murderers who use guns all murder because they like the smell of gun powder. People who like the smell of gun powder go to shooting ranges; murderers who like the smell of gun powder use guns instead of knives. The point isn’t the weapon; the point is someone’s getting dead, and no one really bothers to contemplate the “compliment” of Moe Murderer having used his favorite weapon to do the deed.

Rape as a fetish is packaged and marketed to men and women as a steady stream of images which blur the lines between rape and the kind of passionate sex we’re all meant to want. Movies show us a man and woman fighting, then suddenly fucking. Two bodies slamming against a wall, or a wrought-iron fence, or a car hood, walking the line between sex and violence. Her head, pulled back by his hand pulling her hair. She tries to run, but he pulls her to him and she collides with him, sobbing yet horny (of course). … These scenes are decidedly different in tone from those that seek only to represent the desperate yearn and clamor of a passionate fuck, as fight-fucking is infused with a sense of both force and yielding, and suggestive that both are necessary components of any “real” fuck. It is within these scenes, where an attractive woman is overwhelmed either physically or pheromonally (or both) by a powerful man, that we begin to understand the unsettling association between ravishing (beautiful) and ravish (rape).

And so there are women who have “rape fantasies,” which is extremely silly; as soon as you want it to happen, it isn’t really rape. Wanting someone to force themselves on you against your will is a practical impossibility, and reimagining rape as rough sex with a hot stranger, whom you’d coincidentally want to fuck if offered the chance to consent, is a ridiculous enterprise.* But being overcome in the bodice-ripping, shoulder-grabbing, shaken-and-tossed sexual encounter of films (and soap operas and romance novels, where female characters more often marry their rapists than report them) is yet regarded as the most coveted ovation a man can bestow on a woman, the purest expression of his raw desire and an irrefutable commentary on her irresistible desirability. Only driving a man to almost-rape you is definitive proof of your allure as a woman. (So we’re told.)

And so there are men who believe that sexual aggression is always flattering, which creates in many of them a weird sort of dichotomy of coexisting notions – that rape is immoral, but aggressive sexuality is flattering, so rape must be, too – and what results from it are men who don’t themselves rape, but tend to regard men who do as little more than overly aggressive lotharios. (Sex as the ends, not the means.) And thusly, rape becomes something that only happens to “pretty girls,” whose suffering ought to be mitigated by the knowledge that the crime was really a compliment.

If you are willing to spend a little time in some of the darker corners of cyberspace (which I don’t recommend), you’ll find message boards where men decide the guilt of accused rapists by how attractive their accusers are. “No way,” they’ll say, considering pictures of the two people involved. “He could do better than that.” This girl might be deemed a liar because she’s too ugly to rape “unless he put a bag over her head,” but that girl might be deemed honest because “she looks out of his league.” And he paid her the definitive compliment by raping her, you see.

(A pertinent caveat is that the pretty girl can only be wholesomely so; if she’s sexy, she was obviously “asking for it.”)

Resultingly, we end up with classifications of rapists, as well. The “normal” rapist (whose crime is most likely to be dismissed with a “boys will be boys” sort of jocular apologia) is the man who forces himself on attractive women, women his age in fine health and form, whose crime is disturbingly understandable to his male defenders. The “real sickos” are the men who go after children, old ladies, the mentally retarded, the physically disabled, accident victims languishing in comas – the sort of people who can’t fight back, whose rape is difficult to imagine as titillating, unlike the rape of “pretty girls,” so easily cast in a fight-fuck fantasy of squealing and squirming and eventual relenting to this flattery; no harm, no foul, orgasms all around. It’s no fun, and there is no handy pop culture reframing mechanism, to imagine a granny being raped.

In pop culture and many minds informed by it, the plain, plump, dishwater-blond rape victim with frumpy frocks and a mousy personality doesn’t exist. But she is just as likely to be raped, by a stranger or a date, as any other woman – and if she carries herself without confidence, perhaps even more likely. And there is not the difference we assume between the man who rapes her, and the man who rapes a stunning girl, and the man who rapes a granny. Because rape is not primarily about sexual attraction, and the parts of it that are do not necessarily acknowledge the beauty standards most of us would recognize. When your goal is possession and dominion, “pretty” by any conventional definition may mean significantly less than, simply, “there.”

I am a woman who is not good at taking compliments, though I need them as much as anyone else. And I am quite content to remain free of the “compliment” of rape for the rest of my days – because rape is not a compliment. Period. Never. Never ever. It’s not flattering, and it’s not sexy. It’s about the worst thing you can imagine. That’s it, and that’s all.

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* [This was a point disputed in the original comments thread. I’ll just briefly reiterate my position, which is that rape is, by definition, something that happens to someone totally against her/his will, unwanted on any level, which makes me feel as though even the concept of “rape fantasy” undermines the reality of what rape is. My concerns about “rape fantasy” are, however, only applicable as regards public consumption, and I acknowledge that other people have different opinions on the matter. – MM]

19 Comments

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19 responses to “Rape is STILL Not a Compliment

  1. makes me queasy i’m so pissed.

  2. The intro to this article is quite telling as well:

    Of all the things that Anand Jon wanted, what he seemed to crave most was attention: the hot glare of the catwalk. The shout-outs of paparazzi. The stares of the idle rich as he poured out of a limousine in the Hamptons with girls, lots and lots of girls, always young and beautiful and easily replaced.

    Really? Attention, huh? That’s “what he seemed to crave most”?

    What he seemed to crave most was taking advantage of young women/girls, going as far as to rape them if they did not consent to his sexual advances.

    Then there’s this appalling paragraph:

    So who is Anand Jon? A rapist? Or a mark? To some he is a garden variety arriviste, an overeager cad, who crossed the line into criminal territory when his sense of entitlement overwhelmed his good sense. To others he is a struggling design talent, who played by the same elastic set of rules that govern everything else in the celebrity world and fashion industry – except he was caught.

    Hmm. “Elastic set of rules that govern everything else in the celebrity world and fashion industry…” Last I checked, rape is against the law in Hollywood and the fashion world too, as is murder, armed robbery, etc.

    Nice.

  3. WitchWay11

    Out-fucking-rageous.

    MediaBloodhound, that is that paragraph at which I stopped reading. I figured it was just downhill from there.

    Shakes, GREAT post. And your linked post, too. Thank you.

  4. I’m relatively new to your site, but I just wanted to tell you that I think you’re fabulous. I know you don’t take compliments well, but, as you noted, you need them just the same. And deserve them.

    Thank you for your voice.

  5. Allie

    Thank you Shakes.

  6. you’re fabulous

    Well, thanks.

    There should be a less horrified-looking blushy face, lol.

  7. Incidentally, Liss, ditto on the kudos for your post. Great piece of work! Spot on.

  8. It seems that there is a burning desire among the press (and society at large) to excuse the criminal behavior of the rich and famous. I suspect the constant fantasizing about becoming either rich or famous makes people want to believe, that along with the hedonism, comes a get out of jail free card. Its no fun to imagine that you are a big movie star … snorting coke off of some nameless conquest … if you have to imagine the possible consequences. I further suspect, that this fantastical social construct, might explain the bizarre fascination that people have for royalty.

    I’ve never felt … nor understood such things … I’m just trying to finger it out … is there even a name for such a thing?

  9. The overall tone of the article sets my teeth on edge. It seems we’re supposed to feel sympathy for the poor guy. Puhleaze. Whether he used physical coercion or his perceived power (or a combination) to get what he wanted, he’s still a scumbag. His lawyer is almost as disgusting as he is. And the reporter who wrote this piece of swill isn’t much farther up the food chain.

  10. lucizoe

    The whole article totally squicked me out. Especially the quotes from the accused’s lawyer saying that one of the alleged victims didn’t have any physical marks of a struggle on her, and since his client is such a “Gandhi-like guy”, she must have wanted it.

    And the title of the story. THE TITLE!!! I was raging all day about this, in between deciding whether or not I should dig that hole under that rock and crawl in permanently.

  11. QuietStorm

    Gah. I feel dirty now, just from reading the quotes from that article. Violating unwilling women (and children! 14?!) is something to be written up sympathetically now?

    If paedophiles and rapists are portrayed in such a flattering light by the New York Times, then who the hell do they consider worthy of unfavourable treatment?

    lucizoe: that’s always the argument that infuriates me the most whenever I hear about a rape case. How hard does a woman have to fight back before it’s considered “hard enough” by those cretins? To the point of injury? Broken bones? Enough to incapacitate their attacker? There’s an entire comprehension of the dynamics of sexual assault that seems to elude the average apologist like this reporter.

    Every time I hear/read the Lothario defense, I’m reminded of the brilliant I Am Not My Cock post by Ross over at The Talent Show. In his words, “Far as I know, most men have never raped anyone. I assume this means that rapists are a minority of men, and in a normal world you’d think that not being an evil, violent monster would make one more sympathetic to the victims of rape, who are also not evil violent monsters.”

  12. TheCunningRunt

    I suggest that the “reporter,” Ms. Waxman, be publicly pilloried for her painting of poor Mr. Jon as the weak, subverted “mark” and the young girls as the irresistible temptresses who “wanted it.” I’ll cop to being a quivering, jelly-kneed sucker for beauty, but never in my wildest dreams would I consider forcing myself on a woman.

    And Jesus, FOURTEEN???

    The Don Imus debacle has a lot of people thinking about societal attitudes and the words we use to propagate them; perhaps the time is right to impress our outrage on The New York Times.

  13. He’s pretending that rape is about sexual attraction, though he knows it’s about control and humiliation – his craving for which he has just satiated by terrorizing and insulting a woman he doesn’t know.

    Recommend this book.

  14. fer feck’s sake. shame this had to be written, but since it did, thank you for doing so clearly.

  15. Gah. Good analysis. Horrible headline, and disturbing article. I wonder, though – the headline is probably the editor’s fault, since they normally choose them, not the author.

    I also don’t believe there’s such a thing as a rape fantasy. There are seduction fantasies. Very, very different. Rape is about control, not sex. There’s a reason why it’s called sexual assault. Sadly, I’ve seen quite a few films glamorize it, and only a handful try to depict the brutality.

  16. Hilary Greenleaf

    Yeah, come on people. “Rape Fantasy” is an oxymoron. I think more accurate would be “domination fantasy.”

  17. Hilary Greenleaf

    Yeah, come on people. “Rape Fantasy” is an oxymoron. I think more accurate would be “domination fantasy.”

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  19. funky

    i fear writing this, as i fear not being believed, but i was sexually assaulted by at least 9 different men between the ages of 13 and 17 and it too was framed in the “i’m too attractive” category; i remember being called “jail bait” at age 14 and it was considered a compliment… thanku so much for yr crystal clear comments, they’re so validating and i know i need to hear them and i imagine others do too… i desperately wish i’d had the opportunity to hear this back then, to have it reframed and to made clear that it was not my fault; maybe i wouldn’t be the mess i am today 😦 pls don’t stop the outspokenness… with heartfelt thanx, funky

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