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Rape without Women:
Print Culture and the Politicization of Rape, 17651815
Sharon Block
| In 1815 a legal
manual added a commentary to its recital of the proper treatment
of rape. The author noted that "the material facts requisite to
be given" in a trial for rape "are highly improper to be publicly
discussed, except only in a court of justice." This sentence unintentionally
pointed to a central paradox of rape: while the classification of
a given sexual interaction as a criminal and morally reprehensible
act of rape depended on specific details, those details were not
fit for public exposition. Yet Americans regularly published remarks
on rape in virtually every form of print: newspapers and almanacs,
broadsides and pamphlets, novels and plays. We are accustomed to
historians' viewing rape within its legal setting, but there was
a print world of rape outside court proceedings and their accompanying
publications. That print world transformed rape from an intimate
sexual act into a public symbol that could define national and social
boundaries.1 |
1 |
| Whether
figuring in wartime propaganda, an adventure tale, novel, newspaper
story, or broadside, rape appeared in a consistent narrative pattern.2
For early Americans, rape was exclusively a male-female act; though
men might be forced into sexual relations by other men, such sexual
acts were considered sodomy, not rape. Yet the dominant trend in
the public presentation of rape was the displacement of women from
the narrative, making rape an occasion for men to speak to other
men about a range of male prerogatives. The first section of this
article shows how Americans made the very personal sexual interaction
of rape publicly palatable by removing women from its retelling.
Stories of rape, then, could accomplish what the newly popularized
stories of seduction could not: by emphasizing men's interactions
with one another, rape stories could provide an unequivocal assignment
of right and wrong, unencumbered by concern over women's sexual
desires and acts. Focusing attention on men's protection of women's
virtue allowed authors to minimize the thorny issue of women's role
in promoting their own morality. The absence of women allowed narratives
of rape to categorize competing visions of masculinity. |
2 |
| Through
this masculinized transformation, rape could be deployed in political
battles. In the second section, I examine the politicization of
rape in revolutionary rhetoric. Rather than invoking rape as a symbol
of general savagery or as simply the marker dividing honorable from
dishonorable masculinities, revolutionary-era narratives increasingly
presented rape as an explicitly political trope. By replacing women's
experiences of their own bodies with men's experiences of witnessing
the victimization of women, rape-related stories opposed upstanding
American male citizenry to corrupt British rule. In the revolutionary
and early national eras, rape could convince readers of the need
for American independence and allow Americans to see themselves
as a community and a nation. The association of war and rape was
not new. But the American Revolution focused the rhetorical power
of rape on that political crisis to a degree completely unparalleled
in early American history. Rape resonated as a means to disgrace
and dismiss the British imperial system by transforming attacks
on individual bodies into attacks on the American body politic.
As American soldiers fought for their own rights as independent
men, rape stories rallied supporters around the moral and political
condemnation of the British Empire. The enemy of America was now
the dominant villain in politicized stories of rape. |
. . . |
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