Rape in Society

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A cause of rape culture is the objectification and domination of woman. Men are taught to assert their dominance and superiority, and some will do that with or without consent. Men see women as objects waiting to be used and conquered whether it is at home, the work place, or in the media. A woman’s body is not her own, but merely used for the pleasure of a man. A solution to this problem would not be, telling women what to wear, how to act and what they can or cannot do; but it is teaching males at a young age to not rape women by discussing it with them, telling them how that affects people, the consequences of it, and telling them that it is never okay.
Men are allowed to get away with objectifying and dominating women in this society because it is what we as a culture have gotten used to. It is always in the news, it is not odd to know someone who has been raped or sexually assaulted; and it could happen anywhere from a job, walking to the car, or even in one’s own home. To some men, sex is a game and a woman telling them “no,” is only going to make them be more persistent in getting it. As long as women are getting blamed for their own attacks, men possess all of the power and control; and are not taught that raping and hurting women is not okay nor acceptable, rape culture is not going anywhere.
In the article "Offensive Feminism: The Conservative Gender Norms That Perpetuate Rape Culture, and How Feminists Can Fight Back," Filipovic explains that some conservative extremists and even some regular folks want to maintain a culture that enables and promote rape because women pose a threat to power structures, and the constant threat of rape keeps both men and women in line (23). She says that, sexual assault is routinely dep...

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...ure, and How Feminists Can Fight Back." Yes Means Yes!: Visions of Female Sexual Power & a World without Rape. By Jaclyn Friedman and Jessica Valenti. Berkeley, CA: Seal, 2008. 13-27. Print.
Miedzian, Myriam. "How Rape Is Encouraged in American Boys and What We Can Do to
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Mukhopadhyay, Samhita. "Trial by Media: Black Female Lasciviousness and the
Question of Consent." Yes Means Yes!: Visions of Female Sexual Power & a World without Rape. By Jaclyn Friedman and Jessica Valenti. Berkeley, CA: Seal, 2008. 151-161. Print.
Shaw, Susan M., and Janet Lee. "Chapter 10: Resisting Violence Against Women / Rape."
Women's Voices, Feminist Visions: Classic and Contemporary Readings. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2012. 511-514. Print.

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