Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

 “If sexuality is central to women’s definition and forced sex is central to sexuality, rape is indiginous, not exceptional, to women’s social condition.”

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: " “If sexuality is central to women’s definition and forced sex is central to sexuality, rape is indiginous, not exceptional, to women’s social condition.”"— Presentation transcript:

1

2  “If sexuality is central to women’s definition and forced sex is central to sexuality, rape is indiginous, not exceptional, to women’s social condition.”

3  “Women’s sexuality is, socially, a thing to be stolen, sold, bought, bartered, or exchanged by others. But women never own or possess it, and men never treat it, in law or in life, with the solicitude with which they treat property.... The minute women ‘have’ it— ’have sex’ in the dual gender/sexuality sense—it is lost as theirs. To have it is to have it taken away.”

4  “Perhaps the wrong of rape has proved so difficult to define because the unquestionable starting point has been that rape is defined as distinct from intercourse, while for women it is difficult to distinguish the two under conditions of male domination.”

5  “Which category of presumed consent a woman is in depends upon who she is relative to a man who wants her, not what she says or does. These categories tell men whom they can legally fuck, who is open season, and who is off limits, not how to listen to women.”

6  “The paradigm categories are the virginal daughter and other young girls, with whom all sex is proscribed, and the whorelike wives and prostitutes, with whom no sex is proscribed. Daughters may not consent; wives and prostitutes are assumed to, and cannot but. Actual consent or nonconsent, far less actual desire, is comparatively irrelevant.”

7

8  “Being in this intimate relationship with my young body, I grew to understand and confirm three things: My body belongs exclusively to me, my soul is not at rest when my body is detached, and we (body and soul) must take good care of each other.”

9  “What I did not realize then as a woman-child and what I know now is that the body-soul connection I derived from my physical activity built a strong sense of self that I now exude.”

10  “Those women [in the bar] epitomized the mark of female oppression: They entered into a conspiracy with the white patriarchy in exchange for a false sense of security.”

11  “What if we girls in junior high and high school had believed that we deserved respect rather than verbal and sexual abuse from our male classmates?... What if we females believed ourselves and each other to be as important and deserving of our selfhood as we believe males to be? Just imagine....”

12  “Envision a time when we women are connected to ourselves and each other, when we no longer feel the need and desire to conspire with men against each other in order to survive in a misogynist, violent culture. We must alter our destructive thinking about being female so that we can begin to accept, love, and cherish our femaleness. It is the essence of our lives.”

13


Download ppt " “If sexuality is central to women’s definition and forced sex is central to sexuality, rape is indiginous, not exceptional, to women’s social condition.”"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google