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- From: psp@cbnewsh.cb.att.com (P.S. Powledge)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: Dworkin (was Re: Liberty)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.225304.5907@cbnewsh.cb.att.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 22:53:04 GMT
- References: <1992Dec23.123033.4883@macc.wisc.edu> <1992Dec23.173528.25908@cbnewsh.cb.att.com> <1hadcfINN57a@mizar.usc.edu>
- Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories, Lincroft, NJ
- Lines: 27
-
- In article <1hadcfINN57a@mizar.usc.edu> adolphso@mizar.usc.edu (adolphson) writes:
- >By starting points, what do you mean? [...] That rape-murders are bad?
- >Sure, I go along with that too. But I have a problem once she goes
- >beyond that.
-
- I take her starting points to be questions like, "what are the cultural
- roots of sexual violence in our society?" Like you, I'm firmly opposed to
- rape-murders (hey! call me a liberal!). But there are several ways to
- analyze rape-murders.
-
- One way would be to look at each one separately, as a single individual's
- aberrant act, unrelated to any of the other rape-murders. Another way to
- look at it, though, would be to look on rape-murders not as a collection
- of horrible but unconnected incidents, but as the product of a society
- where sexual violence serves an awful purpose -- in the same way that
- lynching African-Americans served an awful social purpose in recent
- American history.
-
- While I don't subscribe to the concept of collective guilt, I do think it's
- ridiculous to believe that you can exist as a social and ethical being in
- a cultural vacuum. I was and am shaped by my culture's messages about gender,
- race, and sexual minorities, and it is a very valid exercise to think about
- how those messages play themselves out in the lives and acts of individuals.
- --
- ||| Polly Powledge
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