andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2010-05-25 04:53 pm

Well that was interesting

It seems to me that part of the reason why discussions of sexual assault, get very heated very quickly is that some people view "assault" as a great big thing.  If someone was assaulted then _something very bad happened_.  This means that when something happens that they don't see as being that awful, then they object to the word "assault", because it doesn't emotionally resonate with them as feeling similar to the act that occurred.  What happened wasn't assault because it wasn't that bad (someone got kissed when they didn't want to be, it was just a hug, etc.).

At the extreme end you end up with things like Whoopi Goldberg's defence of Roman Polanski because what he did wasn't "rape rape" - because that would make Roman Polanski evil, which would make her a bad person for liking him.  At the milder end you have people arguing that kissing someone against their will isn't assault, because if it is then it means that people can be charged for drunkenly snogging someone they fancied in the pub without checking first.

In any case it means I end up with 70-odd comments while I'm away at a meeting on the other side of town, which I wasn't really expecting.

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2010-05-26 12:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I largely agree with this. I thought that the scene was quite clearly intended to be non-consensual, though relatively mild in the scheme of things; and that Moffatt was trying to say something important and serious about Amy. I *also* thought it was funny.

And although I have sympathy with the reading of this as sexual assault, I also pause. Because by the strict definition (it's sexual assault if you continue contact once the person has made clear their non-consent) then every time either my husband or I fancies a frolic, and the other person says 'no, sorry, too tired/busy/whatever' and we press the point, we're committing sexual assault. Which is clearly nonsense. So I think there has to be some sort of threshold here.

Even so, Amy probably passed that threshold, or certainly would have done if the plot hadn't overtaken her.

[identity profile] marrog.livejournal.com 2010-05-26 01:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I think that you make a good point, and appreciate that it can become hard to feel good about being sexually assertive at all when your definitions get that sensitive. Which is why I'd like to see the argument move away from the words used and think more about the feelings caused.

[identity profile] broin.livejournal.com 2010-05-26 01:36 pm (UTC)(link)
When you want to initiate, you're in the mood. How do you back off from someone else's initiation while staying perky and positive?

That's a tricky one.

[identity profile] broin.livejournal.com 2010-05-26 01:50 pm (UTC)(link)
How do you avoid the initiator feeling let down?