IN Swaziland, teenage girls are taught about sexually
transmitted diseases, condoms and HIV testing information handed out at will as
they learn that sex is dangerous
and mostly for men. In India, The Justice Verma Committee’s recommendation on
recognizing marital rape as an offence under criminal law was hastily swept
aside by the Standing Committee on Home, on the basis that 'marriage
presumes consent.' And a few weeks ago, in the HBO series Girls,
Adam raped his girlfriend Natalia onscreen. Or did he? It was, according to
Slate, at the very least, “uncomfortable.” Or maybe it
was a violation and “something she
didn’t like?"
All three of these situations highlight an unspoken
topic in the fight against rape and sexual abuse: the presumed notion of
consent.
As women, we’re told to say no when we feel
uncomfortable. No, when we don’t want to be touched. No, when the lines are
clearly drawn. That’s the way we like to read about rape too. We like
clear-cut, open and shut cases of rape. We want a victim and a criminal. We
want the victim to be decisive in her statements, preferably with no sexual
promiscuity, and who clearly resisted the abuse, tooth and nail.
We certainly did not like the Steubenville rape case.
We didn’t want to
report on it for a long time. When it finally went to trial,
just take a look at how the media fumbled their
way through being rape apologists over a drunken girl and high
school football stars.
What we especially don’t like are the situations like
the ones described in India, Swaziland and on Girls, where
pleasure, consent and that uncomfortable middle ground of sex arise and we
don’t quite know how to feel about it – or what to do.
The problem is twofold. First, gender power
imbalances remain present, whether in India or in New York, and accompany us
right into our bedrooms. Second, we don’t stress the importance of consent,
because it suggests a reformulation of traditional gender roles. We are so
concentrated on the ‘no’ that if it’s not heard, then it doesn’t matter. The
sex can go on.
Presumed consent removes all agency from the woman,
and subjects her to complete control by her companion. It is a selfish,
degrading and potentially harmful way to conduct a sexual relationship, one
that makes the female body a thing to be taken at will, with no importance
placed on her wants or wishes. It presumes that the man is the likely
perpetrator of sexual abuse – that there is a defined giver and a taker. And
that the taker will always win. These are, unfortunately, the very
definitions of traditional gender roles when it comes to sex.
I like that Girls showed this awful
and disconcerting sex scene. We often think
of girls being subjugated and without voice in other countries,
and think that sex must be a horrible activity for them. The
scene between Natalia and Adam brings it back home, to a place where we
mistakenly assume that women and men have an equal voice in an act where both
are supposed willing participants, back to the unequal power relations between
men and women that we are trying to correct.
Maybe it comes down to women not being taught to ask
for their pleasure, or ever to take it, the way men do. Maybe its men not being
taught to respect a woman’s body and value her pleasure in the sexual
experience. Maybe it comes down to the closed lines of communication where a
man’s ego suffers so greatly if his sexual acts are questioned and a woman’s
expected role is to give and give without refusal. Yes, people have bad,
awkward and angry sex for many different reasons. But unequal power relations
in the bedroom that aren’t explicitly consensual can lead to very harmful
situations.
The main criticism of John Locke’s theory of consent
is that without the power to refuse consent, we cannot give true consent. While
we may look to other cultures as places where that lack of power to refuse can
be clearly identified, we know all too well that imbalances in gendered power
dynamics can come to haunt our sexual activities – but because we’re supposed
to be free, outspoken and ‘born equal‘ – we don’t talk about this thing
we still know is very much alive, in our heads as well as in
our actions.
What if we based sex on the radical concept of consent instead? Not presumed, one-sided understood or “I
thought…” consent. There’s a big difference between not saying no and
enthusiastically saying yes. Of course I don’t think people should verbally
communicate their consent at every second of the act... But wouldn’t you want
to be in an experience that is mutually wanted instead of reluctantly accepted?
Aren’t you paying enough attention to your partner to read their non-verbal
cues? And if you put the entire onus on your partner to tell you ‘no’ – what
does that mean about your own skewed version of power and sex?
All around the world we teach young girls and women
about sexual health and encourage abstinence, the use of birth control and
protection. What we don’t talk about enough is the pleasure component. We don’t
teach enough about the importance of valuing your partner, respecting their
boundaries and wanting them to be pleasured as well. We don’t teach women and
men to love their bodies and love each other. We don’t knock down harmful
stereotypes about who does and gives or takes what in the bedroom and that
‘good girls’ don’t ask for things, while whores deserve anything. We don’t
redefine gender roles that bring about these stereotypes, and we continue to
view rape through a very gendered lens, one that places the onus solely on the
victim, as if power imbalances do not influence her actions.
Consent. This little notion that somehow works to rebalance the
inequalities present between partners in the bedroom should be an integral part
of our lives.
Here's to hoping for a balance of power, and the empowerment with which it comes.
1 comment:
The sex scene in the "Girls" episode that you mentioned was a sophisticated troll. It was purposely disturbing while leaving the issue of consent ambiguous. Consent is a hot button issue and this scene was tailor made to polarize opinions and create chatter from those who condemn at as well as those who defend it.
Unfortunately you took the bait and gave them exactly what they wanted. You're a smart person, you should know better than to fall for these obvious parlour tricks.
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