Nine
men have been jailed in Rochdale for their part in the grooming and sexual
exploitation of five females aged between 13 and 15. One of these young women
was forced to have sex with twenty men in one night.
I
suspect that if these young women had been aged 18 to 20, the story would not
have made headlines.
Hannah
Arendt wrote about the banality of evil; how ordinary people could be involved in
committing atrocities because they accepted the premises of the state, and
assumed that their actions were, therefore, normal. There seems to be a greater likelihood that acts that could be considered evil are more likely to be committed when a group is involved, as in Rochdale or in Abu Ghraib. Perhaps peers encourage each other, and people who ordinarily would not commit evil feel able to, or pressured to do so. The peer group normalises such behaviour.
Pierre
Bourdieu wrote about the learned, fundamental, deep-founded, unconscious
beliefs, and values, taken as self-evident universals, that inform our
behaviour which he describes as 'Doxa', and suggests that this knowledge
emerges from and reinforces another concept, the 'Habitus'. Habitus could
broadly be taken to mean the internalised assumptions that arise from living in
a particular culture.
I
remember seeing Passolini’s film ‘Salò’
and being horrified by the increasing degradation and torture that was perpetrated
on the victims of the men of power.
The
film ended with two young soldiers, both
of whom had collaborated in all of the prior atrocities, dancing a waltz together.
The banality of evil captured.
Now
this film is pretty much freely available for anyone to see; yet when I saw Salò
in the late 1970’s it could only be shown with a Home Office licence. And this
leads to a wider point. The current ease
of access to a film like Salò is hardly surprising in the context of the massive
amount of pornography that is freely available.
Pornography
represents another dimension of the banality of evil. Much pornography involves
the degradation of women, be it anal penetration, double penetration, ‘air-tighting’
(where mouth, vagina and anus are simultaneously penetrated) or the insertion
of objects that painfully stretch the vagina or anus. Oral sex typically involves
deep, painful penetration, and the male usually ejaculates over the woman’s
face. Some porn (bukkake) involves multiple men ejaculating over a woman’s
face, another type of humiliation.
Imagery
of this type is creating a habitus not only for those who access it, but for
the partners of those who access it. Assumptions that this type of degradation
and violence is normal lead to men expecting that sex will be like this and
women internalising negative views of themselves as sexual objects. All the
while, billions of dollars are made (typically by men) who profit from the sex
industry.
We
need to change the way we think ; the way we think about relationships and gender,
and challenge this habitus that reinforces stereotypes and limits the
possibilities for intimacy.
References
Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A report on the banality of evil. New York: Penguin
Bourdieu, P. (1990). The logic of practice. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Further information:
www.antipornography.org/
http://www.object.org.uk/
References
Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A report on the banality of evil. New York: Penguin
Bourdieu, P. (1990). The logic of practice. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Further information:
www.antipornography.org/
http://www.object.org.uk/
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