Fragments of Evolving Manhood: from “Unlearning the Equation”

April 10th, 2012 § 0 comments

Trig­ger warn­ing for descrip­tions of sex­ual abuse.

Some time ago, an essay I wrote called “Why I Am a Fem­i­nist Man” was pub­lished at The Scav­enger. The essay was a first pass at illu­mi­nat­ing the con­nec­tion in my life between the sex­ual abuse I sur­vived when I was a teenager and my embrace of fem­i­nism. Well, I have been revis­ing the essay, first because it needed it and, sec­ond, because I am hop­ing to sub­mit for pub­li­ca­tion in a dif­fer­ent venue. “Unlearn­ing the Equa­tion,” the new title of the piece, para­phrases some­thing Adri­enne Rich wrote thirty some odd years ago in an essay, “Cary­atid: Two Columns,” which was orig­i­nally pub­lished in On Lies, Secrets and Silence:

The equa­tion of man­hood — potency — with the objec­ti­fi­ca­tion of another’s per­son and the dom­i­na­tion of another’s body, is the vene­real dis­ease that lives alike in the crimes of Viet­nam and the lies of sex­ual lib­er­a­tion (another cre­ation of the sixties) — as it lives in the imag­i­na­tions of pornog­ra­phers, in the fan­tasies of poets and pres­i­dents, pro­fes­sors and police­men, sur­geons and salesmen.

Here are a cou­ple of excerpts from “Unlearn­ing the Equation:”

The obvi­ous but also very dif­fi­cult answer [to the ques­tion of why I responded to a woman’s belit­tling and emas­cu­lat­ing rejec­tion of me with a fan­tasy in which I raped her] is that the struc­ture of rape was already part of what I con­sid­ered nor­mal behav­ior between men and women, was in fact the frame­work through which I under­stood the mean­ing of that behavior.… Statements like this one, because of the way they can be read to sug­gest that men are all inher­ently and irrev­o­ca­bly rapists, are one source of many men’s dis­com­fort with fem­i­nism. Yet women also inter­nal­ize the struc­ture of rape as part of their sex­u­al­ity. They live in this cul­ture no dif­fer­ently than we do, so how could they not? Still, no one tries seri­ously to deduce from this fact, at least not any­more, that women are all there­fore inher­ently and irrev­o­ca­bly vic­tims of rape. Indeed, one of the things con­tem­po­rary fem­i­nism has done for women — and, frankly, for men as well — is to expose just how fully and insid­i­ously the ide­ol­ogy of rape has been a struc­tur­ing force in female sex­u­al­ity, mak­ing it pos­si­ble for women to free them­selves from that struc­ture. Why would it be any dif­fer­ent for men? Why would free­dom from the way rape struc­tures how we see the world not be a wel­come change for us?

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I received when I was grow­ing up two very dif­fer­ent kinds of instruc­tion in the ide­ol­ogy of rape. First and fore­most, the model of mas­culin­ity to which I was taught to aspire…insists on the dominant-submissive, active-passive dichotomy that rape embod­ies as the nat­ural order of all things sex­ual. Before the old man in my build­ing put his hands on me and forced his penis into my mouth, I knew with absolute cer­tainty which posi­tion in that dichotomy I was sup­posed to occupy. More­over, I knew at the uncon­scious level of know­ing that is the result of proper social­iza­tion that I could take this posi­tion more or less for granted. By the time I walked out of the old man’s apart­ment, how­ever, I knew with a sim­i­lar level of cer­tainty how wrong I’d been. This real­iza­tion may not have been con­scious at the time, but it has shaped my under­stand­ing of the world ever since: when the old man in my build­ing forced his penis into my mouth — because I am cer­tain that what I can­not fully remem­ber did indeed hap­pen — he demon­strated beyond any doubt that every­thing I’d been taught about the mean­ing of my gen­der and my dom­i­nant place in the sex­ual hier­ar­chy of my cul­ture had been a lie.

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[F]eminism is the only pol­i­tics I know that explic­itly com­mits itself to…build[ing] a world in which the inhu­man­ity of sex­ual exploita­tion, along with every other inhu­man­ity that devolves from it, is no longer acceptable.

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