Styrofoam
New member
Jumping in, just responding to the OP...
I think rape culture does exist, but there's a lot of confusion about what exactly is meant by rape culture so the discussion can get contentious. In listening to feminists talk about rape culture, it sounds like what they're talking about is a social cultures that encourages, or at least does not discourage, sexual assault cases like the Steubenville case. I'm bringing up that case specifically because the "culture" was pretty plain; the town elders and elites mostly rallied around the rapists and excused and minimized their actions. But isn't that more an instance of small town high school football culture, in which football comes first above all other concerns? Yes, it is. But feminists use that as evidence that rape culture teaches boys that rape is okay, and that their solution is to "teach boys to not rape."
As a male, that solution seems a bit insulting. Of course I know rape is wrong. Nobody ever told me that sexual assault is an okay thing to do. But, that's because when I (and I think most boys) hear the word "rape" my mind imagines the pervert jumping out of the bushes to grab the jogger. We all know that's a minority of rapes. So what is it that feminists want to teach boys, then? It's that at alcohol-rich frat (etc) parties, it's not acceptable to behave as a sexual predator. Modern party/hookup cultures does say it's acceptable to behave as a predator. There are even schools of "seduction" that use predation as the main strategy.
So that's the problem, drunken hookup culture which creates an atmosphere that leads to rape. That is rape culture.
I think what you have just described is exactly what feminists mean when they say rape culture. They should be calling it hookup culture. The atmospheres of the parties in this hookup culture lead to sexually predatory behavior by males, leading to sexual assault. And every participant, both male and female, in one of those parties is reinforcing the hookup culture. If feminists want to fight rape culture, they're going to have to fight booze-party culture. But that's difficult for them since they can't criticize the sexual choices of any individual woman, and women create these parties too. If a woman wants to get drunk and flirt with strangers that's her choice. But it's gonna reinforce the rape culture surrounding those parties.
Oh, and PS: I'm a feminist.
I think rape culture does exist, but there's a lot of confusion about what exactly is meant by rape culture so the discussion can get contentious. In listening to feminists talk about rape culture, it sounds like what they're talking about is a social cultures that encourages, or at least does not discourage, sexual assault cases like the Steubenville case. I'm bringing up that case specifically because the "culture" was pretty plain; the town elders and elites mostly rallied around the rapists and excused and minimized their actions. But isn't that more an instance of small town high school football culture, in which football comes first above all other concerns? Yes, it is. But feminists use that as evidence that rape culture teaches boys that rape is okay, and that their solution is to "teach boys to not rape."
As a male, that solution seems a bit insulting. Of course I know rape is wrong. Nobody ever told me that sexual assault is an okay thing to do. But, that's because when I (and I think most boys) hear the word "rape" my mind imagines the pervert jumping out of the bushes to grab the jogger. We all know that's a minority of rapes. So what is it that feminists want to teach boys, then? It's that at alcohol-rich frat (etc) parties, it's not acceptable to behave as a sexual predator. Modern party/hookup cultures does say it's acceptable to behave as a predator. There are even schools of "seduction" that use predation as the main strategy.
So that's the problem, drunken hookup culture which creates an atmosphere that leads to rape. That is rape culture.
From my experience in life I think this is BS. I was in one of the largest frat houses in the states largest school. If anything there was a get laid culture but not a rape culture. Lots of drunken sex was going on. But the sorority girls were equal players. Never was rape normalized, excused, tolerated, or even condoned.
I've read recent articles about sex on college campus and it is described as the hook up culture. Students don't want all the baggage that comes with a relationship, but they want to hook up on the weekends.
I think what you have just described is exactly what feminists mean when they say rape culture. They should be calling it hookup culture. The atmospheres of the parties in this hookup culture lead to sexually predatory behavior by males, leading to sexual assault. And every participant, both male and female, in one of those parties is reinforcing the hookup culture. If feminists want to fight rape culture, they're going to have to fight booze-party culture. But that's difficult for them since they can't criticize the sexual choices of any individual woman, and women create these parties too. If a woman wants to get drunk and flirt with strangers that's her choice. But it's gonna reinforce the rape culture surrounding those parties.
Oh, and PS: I'm a feminist.