Cultural and legal accounts of rape

The present paper attempts to show how rape is represented in a variety of historical and contemporary discourses. Examples of rapes in Greek mythology, in the Bible, in medieval iconography, in literature, and in scientific theories, are compared and contrasted. Analysis suggests that such discours...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fernández Villanueva, Concepción, Koulianou-Manolopoulou, Panagiota
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2008-11-01
Series:Athenea Digital
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psicologiasocial.uab.es/athenea/index.php/atheneaDigital/article/view/470
Description
Summary:The present paper attempts to show how rape is represented in a variety of historical and contemporary discourses. Examples of rapes in Greek mythology, in the Bible, in medieval iconography, in literature, and in scientific theories, are compared and contrasted. Analysis suggests that such discourses tend to make sexual aggression (and specifically the rape of women) legitimate, be it by minimizing the harm done; by normalizing and naturalizing sexual violence; or by aesthetisizing rape as art. Finally, the paper argues that putting modern legal accounts of rape into their historical perspective brings into sharper focus the persistence of ancient myths and discourses
ISSN:1578-8946
1578-8946