Argumentative Essay On Rape Culture

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Females from a young age are told that men are strong and women are weak and should just submit to their needs. Men are praised if they abuse and exploit women. The stereotypical female and male is something men strive for and women easily fall into. Women are influenced to be submissive and just to feel what the guy tells them to feel. Rape and sexual assault are deemed “cool” and the media influences women to be a submissive sex object. A woman 's body, the one thing she possesses in the most intimate form, is collateral damage (Katie J). Tristan Bridges, a writer for the Society Reflections, states “It 's not a new argument to suggest that many elements of what feminist scholars refer to as “rape culture” are embedded in seemingly pleasurable elements of pop …show more content…

37% of country music and 41% of Pop music involve violence against women and date rape. These statistics don’t surprise me at all and honestly why should I expect anything different. I go throughout my day hearing mixed information from pop music saying that I should succumb to a males need, and then at the same time I am told that rape is illegal and affects my college campus. Existing in a society where violence against women is glorified in popular music, is terrifying (Katie J). Knowing that I sing along to songs that are about rape and objectification of women is disgusting, but I bet I do it every day and don’t think twice about it. The objectification of women is so common, we see it everywhere. In movies, magazines, TV show, billboard ads, and literally everywhere we go. We are constantly told that sex is good, promoted and should be at the discretion of the man. One song can’t change this, and stopping all pop music won 't change this. This is a societal shift to normalize rape and reinforce dominant/submissive stereotypes that is derived in the music industry and it needs to be shifted

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