Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
I have eyeballs. I can see from this thread alone the reluctance to even dare question her behavior, motivations, character, or decision making. It's been primarily focused on AA.
I question all of those things.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
I have eyeballs. I can see from this thread alone the reluctance to even dare question her behavior, motivations, character, or decision making. It's been primarily focused on AA.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Here are some must reads on babe.net:
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainme ... et/551036/
EAllusion wrote:Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Here are some must reads on babe.net:
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainme ... et/551036/
This article is humning along fine criticizing Babe.com for being a rag. Like Natalie Graham points out, the way Flanagan goes after youth to demean is off-putting, but I can look past it. And while the author of the Aziz call-out piece made herself into an easy target, there's nothing wrong with taking a few easy shots for the writer being a clueless jerk.
However, once you're deep into the piece it draws a dubious connection. Babe apparently has Cosmo element to it and has published a variety of articles on women's sexual fantasies regarding rape. Rape fantasies are common and there's nothing wrong with that. We can give Flanagan the benefit of the doubt that she's not suggesting that because women can have forced-sex fantasies, that does not mean they cannot complain about actual forced sex. What she instead tries to argue is that the lurid, writerly details of accounts of sexual assault are meant to titillate as well as scandalize.
Now that's ugly. It's the high-brow version of complaining that if a woman didn't like it rough, then why is she dressed like a whore? It's baseless to argue that one type of article's motives impregnate the others'. Then as you read further, subtext just becomes text:
But the piece is the almost inevitable consequence of a lifestyle promoted on the website, which enjoins young women to fulfill men’s sexual desires and to— literally—behave whorishly.
I know Caitlin Flanagan has a reputation for carving out a niche as an anti-feminist writer, but I've never seen it as explicit as this.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
WTF weird ass world are we living in right now?
- Doc
We're living in a world where a man acts like an overbearing jerk and treats a woman like what she portrayed. Then the woman gives her account anonymously in order to embarrass him when what she actually does is embarrass herself in the process.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:It's the oddest thing to watch your brain work sometimes. You transition from calling a rape fantasy a "forced-sex" fantasy. Weird.
If I told you that I fantasize about raping women, like, I masturbate to that, you'd be cool with that? Or are you only cool with women fantasizing about being raped?
WTF weird ass world are we living in right now?
Jersey Girl wrote:Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
I have eyeballs. I can see from this thread alone the reluctance to even dare question her behavior, motivations, character, or decision making. It's been primarily focused on AA.
I question all of those things.
EAllusion wrote:You didn't answer the question. What consequences should she suffer?
Jersey Girl wrote:
I figured this thread could use at least one woman's perspective. When I wrote this:
That's exactly what happened. That's all that happened. There's no reason to over-analyze it. There's no reason to lay blame solely at the man's feet. They both played their part in this temporary relationship.
I could tick off a list of where she naïvely went wrong. Then, I'd be accused of victim blaming and shaming because that's how some folks roll around here.
She went wrong from the start. She sent out the signals and he caught them. She set the tone.
It's a damn shame that folks can't tell the straight up truth.