Rape and "Realism"

Mar 18, 2013 22:10

Via giandujakiss, here is an excellent blog post about the (over)use of rape/sexual assault in fiction, and the complete logical fallacy that is the argument "but it's realistic!"

The Rape of James Bond

[Excerpt - cut for triggers]Excerpt:

You can have the victims and potential victims refer to [rape]. Not necessarily at great length or in much detail - if it’s such a huge presence
Read more... )

fandom: asoiaf, gender, fandom: game of thrones (tv), feminism, writing, trigger warning, meta

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megs0226 March 19 2013, 16:28:05 UTC
Perfect. I tried to write something about this on tumblr (just musings) and I got a lot of responses (from women) like, "well GRRM ~has to use it to show the true threat that women live under!" OK, I get that, to a point. It'd be terrible to pretend like the threat of rape was non-existent. But... at some point, we get it. We fucking get it. I don't need it every other chapter. And I don't feel like I need to be grateful or thankful to someone with as much privilege as GRRM for tellin' it like it is ( ... )

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the_moonmoth March 20 2013, 22:22:57 UTC
It'd be terrible to pretend like the threat of rape was non-existent. But... at some point, we get it. We fucking get it. I don't need it every other chapter. And I don't feel like I need to be grateful or thankful to someone with as much privilege as GRRM for tellin' it like it is.

This a thousand times. It's one thing to be gritty and "realistic" (which in fact the article very neatly debunks anyway), but it's another thing altogether to have rape referenced, implied, threatened, joked about and actually committed so often that it becomes normalising. That is something seriously bad and wrong, and I will never admire GRRM as much as part of me would like to because he just cannot apply a critical eye to this aspect of his work, refuses to even acknowledge that there could be a problem, and worse, insults the intelligence and reading ability of those who argue there is.

And I'd like to talk about her strengths and personality rather than her history of abuse, which happens A LOT.Yes, exactly this (again). A victim is more than the ( ... )

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