Rape Culture Stereotypes

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“Well, what were you wearing?” is a far too common response those who were raped have to hear. Pushing the blame onto the victim and hinting that what happened was preventable by the victim's measures. This is rape culture, a culture in which sexual violence is the norm. Rape culture is prevalent in our society, it can be seen in how we discuss rape, the laws surrounding it and in the media.
The majority of us can probably say that we don’t like rapists, but how true is that? It seems that people hate the idea of rapists, they are evil, horrendous, monsters that hide in the bushes at night, but actual rapists? People love them! These are men who are on the football team, so charming and smart, they can’t be rapists! They’re just boys who …show more content…

The majority of the people around who listened to music summer of 2013, probably knows the song, and the lyrics. “Blurred lines, I know you want it”, can easily be translated to “no doesn’t always mean no” and that non consensual sex is enjoyable. Although not as mainstream, but still very prevalent in our society is the consumption of pornography. Although there appears to be no correlation between men who watch porn and men who have assaulted women (probably due to the fact that most men consume porn), the fact there is a porn genre for rape is questionable to say the least. “18 percent and 10 percent respectively said they (college aged males and females) had viewed rape porn. While their bodies and minds are in key developmental stages, kids are viewing images that portray women as objects to be used in whatever way a male desires.” (TGC). And though studies tend to say that watching violent content isn't inherently negative as long as the viewer is able to still consciously understand that what they are viewing is something they shouldn’t do, it isn’t clear how it can affect people on a more subconscious level. No matter how much we want to say that we have control over how the media affects us, it is a difficult claim to make, especially in how it affects young people. “Just as we read specific books and show educational movies to our children in hopes that they learn lessons from the

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