Mercy

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by Andrea Dworkin


  experience. It is absurd to suggest that slavery had no

  mitigating or redemptive or agentic dimension to it, that the

  oppression per se was merely oppressive. These tautologies

  demonstrate how the dogma o f victimization has supplanted

  the academic endeavor to valorize theory, which, in a sense,

  does not descend to the rather low level o f direct human

  experience, especially o f suffering or pain, which are too

  subjective and also, frankly, too depressing to consider as

  simple subjects in themselves or, frankly, as objects o f

  inquiry. We apply our principles on agency, ambiguity, and

  nuance exclusively to the experience o f women as women.

  There is no outrage in the academy when we develop an

  intellectually nuanced approach to rape as there would be, o f

  course, if we applied these principles to Jew ish or A fro-

  American experience. It is inappropriate for white women to

  approach those issues anyway and thus we are insulated from

  what I can only presume would be an intellectual backlash

  while we support the so-called victims in a political atmosphere that Ronald Reagan created and that is anathema to

  us— the cutbacks in civil rights and so on, funding for A fro-

  American groups and so on. Then, when we mount our fight

  for abortion, which rests firm ly in the affirmative context o f a

  w om an’s right to choose, we have the support o f other groups

  and so on. Outside w om en’s studies departments our theoretical principles are not used, not understood, and not paid attention to, for which we are, in fact, grateful. T o be held

  accountable outside the sphere o f w om en’s studies for the

  consequences o f our theoretical propositions would, o f

  course, be a stark abridgment o f the academic license we have

  w orked so hard to create for ourselves. Simple-minded

  feminists, o f course, object to a nuanced approach to rape but

  we can only presume that their response to the abduction o f

  Persephone would have been to picket Hell. T o understand a

  w om an’s life requires that we affirm the hidden or obscure

  dimensions o f pleasure, often in pain, and choice, often under

  duress. One must develop an eye for secret signs— the clothes

  that are more than clothes or decoration in the contemporary

  dialogue, for instance, or the rebellion hidden behind apparent

  conform ity. There is no victim. There is perhaps an insufficiency o f signs, an obdurate appearance o f conformity that sim ply masks the deeper level on which choice occurs. A real

  woman cannot be understood in terms either o f suffering or

  constriction (lack o f freedom). Her artifice, for instance, may

  appear to signal fear, as if the hidden dynamic is her

  recognition that she will be punished if she does not conform.

  But ask her. She uses the words o f agency: I want to. Artifice,

  in fact, is the flag that signals pride in her nation, the nation o f

  wom en, a chosen nationalism, a chosen role, a chosen

  femaleness, a chosen relationship to sexuality, or sexualities,

  per se; and the final configuration— the w ay she appears— is

  rooted neither in biological givens nor in a social reality o f

  oppression; she freely picks her signs creating a sexual-

  political discourse in which she is an active agent o f her own

  meaning. I do not feel— and I speak personally here— that we

  need dignify, or, more to the point, treat respectfully on any

  level those self-proclaimed rebels who in fact wallow in male

  domination, pointing it out at every turn, as if we should turn

  our attention to the very men they despise— and what? Do

  something. Good God, do what? I do not feel that the marginal

  types that use this overblown rhetoric are entitled to valorization. They are certainly not women in the same sense we

  are— free-willed women making free choices. If they present

  themselves as animals in cages, I am prepared to treat them as

  such. We are not, as they say, middle-class, protecting the

  status quo. It is not, as they maintain, middle-class to

  appreciate the middle way, the normal, the ordinary, while

  espousing a theoretically radical politics, left-wing and solidly

  socialist. It is not middle-class to engage in intellectual

  discourse that is not premised on the urgency o f destroying

  western civilization, though certainly we critique it, nor is it

  middle-class to have a job. It is not repugnance that tur^s me

  away from these marginal types, these loud, chanting,

  marching creatures who do not— and here I jest— footnote

  their picket signs, these really rather inarticulate creatures who

  fall o ff the edge o f the civilized world into a chaotic politics o f

  man-hating and recrimination. Indeed, the sick-unto-death

  are hard to placate, and I would not condescend to try.

  W omen’s biography seeks to rescue from obscurity women

  who did not belong there in the first place, women o f

  achievement made invisible by an unjust, androcentric

  double standard. These are noble women, not in the class

  sense, because we do valorize the working class, though o f

  course often these women are upper-class, and not in the

  moralistic sense, although o f course they often are pure in the

  sense o f emblematic. But certainly one need not labor to describe

  the muck or the person indistinguishable from it. We affirm

  sexually active women, yes. We will not explicate either the

  condition or the lives o f sexually annihilated women— they

  achieved nothing that requires our attention. The crime o f rape is

  not an issue o f sex. It is an issue o f power. To recast it once again,

  in a revisionist frenzy, as an issue o f freedom is painfully and

  needlessly diversionary. O f course, there is a tradition in

  existentialist philosophy o f seeing rape as an expression o f

  freedom, a phenomenon o f freedom incarnate as it were, for the

  rapist o f course, presumed male, presumed the normative

  human. But certainly by now the psychological resonances o f

  rape for the raped can best be dealt with in a therapeutic forum so

  that the individual’s appreciation o f sex will not be distorted or

  diminished— a frequent consequence o f rape that is a real

  tragedy. The mechanics o f the two, rape and intercourse, have

  an apparent likeness, which is unfortunate and no doubt

  confusing for those insufficiently sex-positive. One is the other,

  exaggerated, although, o f course, we do not know —pace St.

  Augustine— which came first. St. Augustine contends that there

  was sexual intercourse in the Garden but without lust, which he

  saw as debilitating once he stopped indulging in it. O f course, we

  all get older. The philosophical problem is one o f will. Is will

  gendered? Clearly Nietzsche’s comprehension o f will never took

  into account that he could be raped. Sade postulated that a

  woman had a strong will— to be raped and otherwise hurt. It is

  the governing pornographic conceit, indistinguishable from a

  will to have sex. The problem o f female freedom is the problem

  o f female will. Can a woman have freedom o f will if her will />
  exists outside the whole rape system: if she will not be raped or

  potentially raped or, to cover Sade’s odd women, if she will not

  rape. Assuming that the rapist qua rapist imposes his will, can

  any woman be free abjuring rape, her will repudiating it, or is

  any such will vestigial, utterly useless on the plane o f human

  reality. Rape is, in that sense, more like housework than it is

  like intercourse. He wants the house clean. She does not want

  to clean it. Heterosexual imperatives demand that she bend her

  will to his. There is, o f course, a sociology to housework

  while there is only a pathology to rape. I am dignifying the

  opposition here considerably by discussing the question o f

  rape at all. Housework, as I showed above, has more to do

  with wom en’s daily, ordinary bending o f will to suit a man. I

  object to tying rape to wom en’s equality, in either theory or

  practice, as if rape defined wom en’s experience or determined

  w om en’s status. Rape is a momentary abrogation o f choice.

  At its worst, it is like being hit by a car. The politicizing o f it

  creates a false consciousness, one o f victimization, and a false

  complaint, as if rape is a socially sanctioned male behavior on a

  continuum o f socially expressed masculinity. We need to

  educate men while enhancing desire. For most men, rape is a

  game played with the consent o f a knowledgeable, sophisticated partner. As a game it is singularly effective in amplifying

  desire. A m plifying desire is a liberatory goal. We are stuck, in

  this epoch, with literalists: the female wallowers and the

  feminist Jacobins. It is, o f course, no surprise to see a schizoid

  discourse synthesized into a synthetic rhetoric: “ I” the raped

  becomes “ I” the Jacobin. As the Jacobins wanted to destroy all

  aristocrats, the feminist Jacobins want to destroy all rapists,

  which, if one considers the varieties o f heterosexual play,

  might well mean all men. They leave out o f their analysis

  precisely the sexual stimulation produced by rape as an idea in

  the same w ay they will not acknowledge the arousing and

  transformative dimensions o f prostitution. To their reductive

  minds prostitution is exploitation without more while those

  o f us who thrive on adventure and com plexity understand that

  prostitution is only an apparent oppression that permits some

  women to be sexually active without bourgeois restraints.

  Freedom is implicit in prostitution because sex is. Stalinists on

  this issue, they see the women as degraded, because they believe

  that sex degrades. They will not consider that prostitution is

  freedom for women in exactly the same way existentialists

  postulated that rape was a phenomenon o f freedom for men—

  striking out against the authoritarian state by breaking laws and,

  in opposition to all the imperatives o f a repressive society, doing

  what one wants. They w on’t admit that a prostitute lives in

  every woman. They w on’t admit to the arousal. Instead, they

  strategically destroy desire by calling up scenarios o f childhood

  sexual abuse, dispossession, poverty, and homelessness. Even

  the phallic woman o f pornography has lost her erection by the

  end o f the list. Rape as idea and prostitution as idea are o f

  inestimable value in sexual communication. We don’t need the

  Jacobins censoring our sexual souls. Meanwhile, in the academy

  our influence grows while the Jacobins are on the streets,

  presumably where they belong if they are sincere. I will keep

  writing, applying the values o f agency, nuance, and ambiguity

  to the experiences o f women, with a special emphasis on rape

  and prostitution. I have no plans to write about the Holocaust

  soon, although, I admit, I am increasingly irritated by the

  simple-minded formulations o f Elie Wiesel and his ilk. Kvetch,

  kvetch. After I get tenure, I will perhaps write an article on the

  refusal o f Holocaust survivors to affirm the value o f the

  Holocaust itself in their own creative lives. Currently I want

  those who are dogmatic about rape and other bad things to keep

  their moralisms posing as politics o ff my back and out o f my

  bed. I don’t want them in my environment, my little pond. I

  w on’t have m y students reading them, respectfully no less, or

  m y colleagues inviting them here to speak, to read, to reproduce

  simplicities, though not many want to. I like tying up my lover

  and she likes it too. I will not be made to feel guilty as if I am

  doing something violative. I was that good girl, that obedient

  child. Feminism said let go. Y ou can do what a man does. I like

  tying her wrists to the bed, I like gagging her, I like dripping hot

  w ax on her breasts. It is not the same as when a man does it. She

  and I are equals, the same. There is no moral atrocity or political

  big deal. I like fantasizing. I like being a top and I like bringing

  her to orgasm although I rarely have one myself. I like the sex

  magazines, the very ones, o f course, that the Jacobins want to

  censor, except for the fact that these magazines keep printing

  pictures o f the Jacobins as if they are, in fact, Hieronymous

  Bosch pin-ups. One does get angrier with them. One does want

  to hurt them , if only to obliterate them from consciousness,

  submerge them finally in the deeper recesses o f a more muted

  discourse in which they are neither subjects nor objects. One

  would exile them to the margins, beyond seeing or sound, but

  strangely they are sexualized in the common culture as if they are

  the potent women. Everyone pays attention to them and I and

  others like me are ignored, except o f course when the publishers

  o f the sex magazines ask one or the other o f us to write essays

  denouncing them. But then, o f course, one must think about

  them. When I’m having sex I find that more and more I have one

  o f them under me in my fantasy, I hear her voice, accusing, I

  muffle the sound o f her voice with my fist, I push it into my

  lover’s mouth, slowly, purposefully, easy now. M y lover thinks

  m y intensity is for her. I can’t stand the voice saying I’m wrong. I

  really would wipe it out if I could. It makes for angry, passionate

  sex, a kind o f playful fury. The Jacobin despises me. I have more

  in common with the so-called rapist, the man who makes love

  by orchestrating pain, the subtle so-called rapist, the knowing

  so-called rapist, the educated so-called rapist, the one who

  seduces, at least a little, and uses force because it’s sexy; it is sexy;

  I like doing it and the men I know know I like doing it, to a

  woman; they are pro-gay. I’m an ally and I will get tenure. I’m

  their frontline defense. If I can do it, they can do it. The so-called

  rapists in my university are educated men. We like sex and to

  each his own. In my mind I have the Jacobin under me, and in

  m y nuanced world she likes it. I am not simple-minded. Rape

  so-called is her problem, not mine. I have been hurt but it was

  a long time ago. I’m not the same girl.

  Author
’s Note

  In a study o f 930 randomly selected adult women in San

  Francisco in 1978 funded by the National Institute for Mental

  Health, Diana Russell found that forty-four percent o f the

  wom en had experienced rape or attempted rape as defined by

  California state law at least once. The legal definition o f rape in

  California and most other states was: forced intercourse (i. e.

  penile-vaginal penetration), intercourse obtained by threat o f

  force, or intercourse completed when the woman was

  drugged, unconscious, asleep, or otherwise totally helpless

  and hence unable to consent. N o other form o f sexual assault

  was included in the definition; therefore, no other form o f

  sexual assault was included in the statistic. O f the forty-four

  percent, fully half had experienced more than one such attack,

  the number o f attacks ranging from two to nine. Pair and

  group rapes, regardless o f the number o f assailants, were

  counted as one attack. Multiple attacks by the same person

  were counted as one attack. See Diana E. H. Russell, Sexual

  Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, and Workplace

  Harassment, Sage Publications, 1984; see also Russell, Rape In

  Marriage, Macmillan Publishing C o ., Inc., 1982 and The Secret

  Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women, Basic Books,

  Inc., Publishers, 1986.

  Linda Marchiano, slave name Linda Lovelace, “ star” o f the

  pornographic film Deep Throat, was first hypnotized, then

  taught self-hypnosis by the man who pimped her, to suppress

  the gag response in her throat. She taught herself to relax all

  her throat muscles in order to minimize the pain o f deep

  thrusting to the bottom o f her throat. She was brought into

  prostitution and pornography through seduction and gang

  rape, a not uncommon combination. Her lover turned her

  over without warning to five men in a motel room to whom

  he had sold her without her knowledge. Neither her screams

  nor her begging stopped them. She was beaten on an almost

  daily basis, humiliated, threatened, including with guns, kept

  captive and sleep-deprived, and forced to do sex acts ranging

 

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