Terror, Torture, and Resistance
by Andrea Dworkin
Copyright © 1991 by Andrea Dworkin.
All rights reserved.
[Andrea Dworkin delivered this keynote speech at
the Canadian Mental Health Association's "Women and Mental
Health Conference—Women In a Violent Society," held in Banff,
Alberta, May 1991.]
We're here because of an emergency. You all know that. We're
here wanting to speak about the progress we've made, but knowing
that women are not any safer from rape now than when we started
out. I'm glad that the Canadian Mental Health Association is
concerned with our health. Because I for one am sick to death. I
am sick from the numbers of women who are being brutalized and
raped and sodomized. Who are being killed, who are missing. Who
in a women's culture of non-violence don't hurt the people who
are hurting us. We do take our own lives. We do commit suicide.
So many women I have known have spent every day of their lives
fighting to stay alive, because of the despair they carry around
with them from the sexual abuse that they have experienced in
their lives. And these are brave women. And these are strong
women. And these are creative women. These are women who thought
that they had a right to dignity, to individuality, to freedom,
to creativity, and in fact, they couldn't even walk down a city
block in freedom. Many of them were raped as children in their
own homes, by relatives. By their fathers, by their uncles, by
their brothers, before they were, quote, women. Many of them
were beaten by the men who loved them. Their husbands, by
lovers. Many of them were tortured by those men and when you
look at what happened to these women, you say Amnesty
International where are you? Where are you? Because the prisons
for women are our homes. We live under martial law. We live in
places in which a rape culture exists. That is a women's home,
where she lives. Men have to be sent to prison, to live in a
culture that is as rapist as the normal home in North America.
We live under what amounts to a military curfew. Enforced by
rapists. And we say usually that we're free citizens in a free
society. We lie. We lie, we lie everyday about it.
We survive through amnesia. By not remembering what happened
to us. By being unable to remember the name of the woman who was
in the newspaper yesterday. Who was walking somewhere and was
missing. What was her name? I am sick to death of not being able
to remember the names. There are too many of them. I can't
remember them. There's one name especially I can never remember.
The woman who was raped, gang raped on the pool table in New
Bedford, Massachusetts. By four men while everyone in the bar
stood and watched and cheered and so on. That woman died in an
accident. The kind of accident the police will always call
suicide, within one year after the trial for rape. It wasn't
news to anyone. Three months before this woman was raped on that
pool table, Hustler ran a spread of a woman being gang
raped on a pool table. Everything that was done to the woman in
the pornography was done to that woman, in that bar, that night.
After the New Bedford gang rape, Hustler ran a
photograph of a woman in a pornographic pose, made like a
greeting card, sitting on a pool table, saying Welcome to New
Bedford. The rape trial was televised in the United States. The
ratings beat out the soap operas. In the United States, people
watched it as entertainment every day. The woman was driven out
of town. Even though the rapists were convicted. And within one
year she was dead and I can't remember her name, no matter how
hard I try. Hollywood made a movie, called "The Accused." A
brilliant movie, an incredible movie, in which Jodie Foster,
through her artistry and creativity, shows us that a woman is a
human being. And it takes two hours to establish for a main
stream audience that in fact, that's true, so that at the point,
when we reach the gang rape, we understand that someone,
someone, someone has been hurt in a way that goes beyond the sum
of the physical brutalities that were done to her. The Hollywood
version had a happy ending. The voyeurs were convicted of having
incited the rape. And the woman triumphed. And I sat in the
theatre thinking, "But she's dead. What's her name? Why can't I
remember her name?"
And the women whose name I do remember, for instance, a woman
in New York who was murdered in Central Park by a man who had
been her lover. Her name is Jennifer Levin. And the reason that
I know her name is that when she was killed, murdered by this
lover of hers, the New York press put her name on the front page
of every newspaper in tabloid headlines to say what a slut she
was. Now I didn't buy any of those papers. It's just that I
couldn't leave my house and not read the headlines. And so, the
boy goes to trial. A white boy. An upper class boy. A wealthy
boy. It becomes called the preppie murder case. And we hear in
the United States, for the first time, about something called
the rough sex defense, and it goes as follows, "She wanted to
have really rough, painful, humiliating sex." "She was an
aggressive bitch and she tried to tie him up. And she hurt him,
and he got so upset, that in trying to free himself, he
accidentally strangled her, with her bra." Alright. Now in this
scenario, women in New York, were terrorized by the media
exploitation where, the way women are treated when women are
raped, is suddenly the way women are treated when women are
murdered. She provoked it. She wanted it. She liked it and she
got what she deserved. When the head of our sex crimes unit,
Linda Fairstein, tried to get a conviction of this man for
murder, she had a problem. And her problem was that she couldn't
find a motive. She didn't think that she could convince the jury
that there was any reason for him to kill Jennifer Levin. And,
of course, there wasn't any reason for him to. Except that he
wanted to. And he could. He plea bargained, and so the jury
decision never came in. Most of us thought he was going to be
acquitted. After he plea bargained, videos were shown on
television, of Mr. Chambers at sex parties, making fun of
strangling the woman. Sitting naked, surrounded by women, and
reenacting the murder. And laughing about it. We live in a world
where men kill women and the motives are not personal at all. As
any woman in this room who has ever been beaten or raped knows.
It is one of the most impersonal experiences you will ever have.
You are a married woman. You live with a man. You think that he
knows you and you know him. But in fact, when he begins to hurt
you he does it because you're a woman. Not because you're who
you are, whoever that is.
I want us to stop lying. I think that we tell a lot of lies to
get through everyday and I want us to stop lying. And one of the
lies that we tell is that this kind of woman hating is not as
pernicious, as lethal, as sadistic, as vicious as other kinds of
hatred that are directed against people because of a condition
of birth. We have recognized some, only some, of the historical
atrocities that have occurred. We say to ourselves, this isn't
the same. I'm Andrea. I'm Jane. I'm...I'm...I'm...I'm me. I'm
me. But everyone has said that. Every Jew pushed on to a train
said, "But... I'm me. Don't you...why are you doing this? I'm
me." And the Nazis didn't have a personal motive, that could be
understood in those terms. And what I am saying to you is that
we are in a situation of emergency. You know that. You know
that. Maybe in the States there is no longer the belief on any
woman's part whatever her politics, that she will be exempt.
Whatever her class. Whatever her race. Whatever her profession.
No one of us believes that we will get out this life not only
alive, but unraped, unbeaten, unused, unforced. Let alone having
actually experienced what we have a right to, which is freedom.
We have a right to freedom. What happens when you're walking
down that street? You can't get lost in thought can you? Because
you better know who's around you at every moment. We live in a
police state where every man is deputized. I want us to stop
smiling. I want us to stop saying we're fine. I want us to stop
saying that this can be fixed after it happens. It might be able
to be used. What we learn from being hurt, we may be able to use
but can it be fixed? No. It can't be fixed. So the question is
how do we stop it from happening to begin with?
We have had a brilliant movement that has saved many lives.
And I, especially, thank you and honor you, those of you who
work in rape crisis centres and in battered women shelters. I
wished to hell you had been there during some parts of my life.
And anyone my age, anyone in their forties, would not have
encountered any kind of help. Like the kind of help we provide.
But we have to change our focus now. We have to stop it from
happening. Because, otherwise, we accept that our condition is
one in which the rape of women is normal. Brutality towards
women is normal. And the question is how do we regulate it? How
do we reduce it? Maybe they could even go to more hockey games
than they go to now. You know, other outlets, diversions. I'm
here to say that the war against women is a real war. It's real.
There's nothing abstract about it. It's not ideological,
although it includes ideology. And people fight on the ground of
ideas, yes. But this is a war in which his fist is in your face.
And that's real. And that's true. And freedom means that that
doesn't happen. You see, we walk around saying it didn't happen
today or it hasn't happened yet. Or I've been lucky for the last
three months. Or, oh I found a good one now. Nice one, he won't
hurt me too much. He may insult me a lot, but he won't hurt me.
And maybe it's true and maybe it isn't. But we have to find out
how to stop men from hurting women, at all. Under any
circumstances.
You know that most women are hurt in their homes. You know
most women are murdered in their homes. A political movement, as
I understand it, exists to change the way social reality is
organized. And that means that we need to understand everything
about the way this system works. And that means that every woman
who has had experience with sexual violence of any kind has not
just pain, and not just hurt, but has knowledge. Knowledge of
male supremacy. Knowledge of what it is. Knowledge of what it
feels like. And can begin to think strategically about how to
stop it. We are living under a reign of terror. Now what I want
to say is that I want us to stop accepting that that's normal.
And the only way that we can stop accepting that that's normal
is if we refuse to have amnesia everyday of our lives. If we
remember what we know about the world we live in. And we get up
in the morning, determined that we are going to do something
about it.
We need to understand how male violence works. That's one of
the reasons that studying pornography and fighting the
pornography industry is so important. Because that's the
pentagon. That's the war room. They train the soldiers. Then the
soldiers go out and do the actions on us. We're the population
that the war is against. And this has been a terrible war.
Because our resistance has not been serious. It has not been
enough. The minute we think we might have a right to do
something about that pornography shop, we stop thinking. And I
mean legal or illegal. We don't believe we have legal right to
do much about it. Let alone any illegal right. Inside us, this
worthlessness that we carry around, which is the main
consequence of the fear that we live with, makes us subscribe in
terms of our behavior, to the system that says, the man who
wants to hurt us, his life is worth more than ours. We accept
it. And a lot of our ability to survive is based on forgetting
it as much as we can. I understand that I am talking to women
who spend more time than most women with the reality of sexual
abuse. If the premise that the freedom of women matters and that
the equality of women matters, then education, quote unquote,
education, education, education, education is not enough. You
know they're educated. Do you know that?
Do you know that the rapist still knows more about rape than
we do? Really. That he's keeping secrets from us. We're not
keeping secrets from him. Do you know that the pimps know how to
manipulate and sell women? They're not stupid men. I am going to
challenge the notion that rape and prostitution and other
vicious violations of women's rights are abnormal. And that the
regular male use of women, the sanctioned male use of women in
intercourse is normal and unrelated to the excesses that we seem
to be just falling over all of the time. We women who want to be
hurt so much. It's actually us that's provoking it all. When a
woman has been raped and goes into court, why is it that the
judges' premises are the same as pornographers'? Why is that?
Intercourse has been a material way of owning woman. This is
real, this is concrete. We know it, most of us have experienced
it. Now, I'm talking about history and I'm talking about
sexuality. Not as an idea in your head, but as what happens to a
woman when she is in bed with a man. And the reason that I'm
doing it is because, if we're not willing to look at intercourse
as a political institution, that is directly related to the ways
in which we are socialized to accept our inferior status, and
one of the ways in which we are controlled, we are not ever
going to get to the roots of the ways in which male dominance
works, in our lives. The fact of the matter is that the basic
premise about women is that we are born to be fucked. That is
it. Now that means a lot of things. For a lot of years it meant
that marriage was outright ownership of a woman's body and
intercourse was a right of marriage. That meant that intercourse
was, per se, an act of force. Because the power of the
state mandated that the woman accept intercourse. She belonged
to the man. The cultural remnants of this is that in our
society, men experience intercourse as possession of women. The
culture talks about intercourse as conquering women. Women
surrendering. Women being
taken. We are looking at a paradigm for rape. Not at a paradigm
for reciprocity, for equality, for mutuality or for freedom.
When the premise is that women exist on earth, in order to be
sexually available to men for intercourse, it means that our
very bodies are seen as having boundaries that have less
integrity than male bodies. Men have orifices. Men can be
penetrated. The point of homophobia is to direct men towards
women. To punish men for not using women. And that's an
acknowledgment of how aggressive and how dangerous men know male
sexuality can be for women. When a woman goes into court and she
says I've been raped, the judge, the defense lawyer, the press,
and many, many, many other people say: no, you had intercourse.
And she says no I was raped. And they say a little bit of force
is fine. You know that, you know it's still true. It hasn't
changed. When you look at male domination as a social system,
what you see is that it is organized to make certain that women
are sexually available for men. That is its basic premise. And
we have a choice. And the choice is not in the political science
books. The universities are not trying to work out this level of
choice for us. The question is what comes first, men's need to
get laid or women's dignity. And I am telling you that you
cannot separate the so-called abuses of women from the so-called
normal uses of women. The history of women in the world as
sexual chattel, makes it impossible to do that.
So, then, are there other implications of this? Yes there are.
Because, as sex is currently socialized and existing in our
society, men can't have sex with women who are their equals.
They're incapable of it. Right? That's what objectification is
about. When we're being good, we use the word objectification.
We use long words. We really try to get some dignity in using
big words. Well, I'm going to use the short words. The words
that they mean when they do what they're doing. Which is we're
things. And in order to get the response from men, one has to be
the right kind of thing. Now think about what that means. That
means that the woman polices herself. That means that she makes
decisions that make her freedom impossible. Because if she is
going to live, if she is going to make a living, she is going to
have to be the kind of object to which the man will respond, in
a way that is important to him. And what that means is, in a way
that is sexual. Sexual harassment on the job is not some kind of
accident. And the fact that women are migrants in the work place
is not an accident. When you enter into the agreement, the
sexual agreement to be a thing, you then narrow your own
possibilities for freedom. And you then accept, as a basic
premise of your life, that you will be available, that you will
not challenge his sexual hegemony. That you will not demand
equality in intimacy. Because after all you've already given up
your own body, whether it's been to the plastic surgeon or in
whatever way. The women, and it was women...it was women, the
women, the mothers, who bound their daughters' feet, so that
their daughters' feet were three inches long. The daughters were
crippled. Did it because that was the standard of beauty. And if
a woman wanted to eat, a man had to find her beautiful. And if
that meant she couldn't walk for the rest of her life, it was a
trade that had to be made. It was let's make a deal. And we
women are still playing let's make a deal. Instead of deciding
what we want, what we need. We have a second class standard for
our own freedom. We're afraid, not because we're cowards, god
dammit we are not cowards, we are brave people. But we use our
bravery to sustain ourselves when we make these deals. Instead
of fighting the system that forces us to make the deal. So that
when we make a choice it is a free choice. It is our choice. It
is a choice that is really rooted in equality and not in the
fact that every woman is still one man away from welfare.
In the United States, violence against women is a major
pastime. It is a sport. It is an amusement. It is a mainstream
cultural entertainment. And it is real. It is pervasive. It is
epidemic. It saturates the society. It's very hard to make
anyone notice it, because there is so much of it. We have had 30
years, basically, in the United States in particular, I will
talk about the United States, of the total saturation of the
society with pornography. In this 30 years, we have had many
people who have wanted us to study the problem. We have had many
people who have wanted us to debate the issues. We have studied,
we have debated, we have done it all. There has been the
development of a very major population of man in the United
States called serial killers. There are a lot of them. And
they're men who rape and kill mostly women, sometimes children.
They usually mutilate the bodies. Sometimes they have sex
before. Sometimes they have sex after. It's all sex to them. Now
we can say it's a power trip, but the fact of the matter is that
for them, that's the way they have sex. By mutilating and
hurting and killing us. We have, in the United States, an
incredible, continuing epidemic of murders of women. We have
huge missing pieces of our populations in cities. In Kansas
City, the midwest, since 1977 the police—the police the worst
source in the world—say that 60 women have been killed. Three
quarters of them have been black. They've been women in
prostitution. They have been mutilated, or left in what the
police and the media—the euphemisms are extraordinary—call
suggestive positions. One of the patterns of serial killers is
that they do the things they have seen in pornography to their
victims and they leave their victims posed as pornography. That
is part of what many of them do. Pornography is involved in the
biographies of all of them. Sometimes they use it to stalk their
victim, sometimes they use it to plan their crime. Sometimes,
they use it to rev themselves up to commit the acts. And yet,
people keep insisting that there must be something in the air.
It must be the water, it must...I mean, who knows what it is. We
can't figure out what it is. How is it that these guys get these
ideas to do these things? Where could it be? Let's go on an egg
hunt and try to find it. And the fact of the matter is, it's
being sold everywhere. It's in the pornography. It says go get
them. It says do this to them. It says it's fun. It says they'll
like it too. That's the truth and in terms of understanding male
dominance, what it means is that society has to stay organized
so that there are enough women to provide the raw material for
that pornography.
And the material conditions that provide the raw material, the
women, again, someone—not something, someone—are poverty,
usually incestuous child abuse and homelessness. It is not a
mystery. We didn't have the knowledge before; we have been
seeking it. All of us in this room have been seeking knowledge.
What happens to women? How does it happen? I am telling you we
know a lot now. It is time to begin to act on what we know. We
know that pornography causes sexual abuse. We know in the United
States that the average age of rapists is going down. I mean,
it's boys in their young teen age years now, who are committing
a preponderance of first assaults against young girls. I brought
specific cases but they don't matter really. I mean they're very
strange. They're young boys who stick things in...in...infants
and kill them. Because they say they've seen it in pornography,
when they're asked why did they do it that way. They're young
boys who take guns and try to put them in women's vaginas. Where
did they see it? Where did they learn it? Ask them. Ask the ones
who have been put in jail, in juvenile places for sex offenders.
They will tell you I learned how to do it. Now what makes
somebody want to do it, may be different than how they learn to
do it. But the fact of the matter is, that if you live in a
society that is saturated with this kind of woman hating, you
live in a society that has marked you as a target for rape, for
battery, for prostitution or for death. These are, in my view,
the facts.
Now there are some other facts. I want you to know what is in
the pornography, because I want you to know what kind of
entertainment this is. And I want you to talk about the violence
against women and you're here to talk about healing. I wish that
you could raise the dead. That is what I would like to see. This
is a political point. One of the reasons that the Right reaches
so many women is that the Right has a transcendent god that says
I will heal all your hurt and all your pain and all your wounds.
I died for you. I will heal you. Feminists do not have a
transcendent god who can heal that way. We have ideas about
fairness and justice and equality. And we have to find ways to
make them real. We don't have magic. We don't have supernatural
powers. And we can't keep sticking women together who have been
broken up into little pieces. So what I think is that fighting
back is as close to healing as we are going to come. And I think
that it is important to understand that we will live with a fair
amount of pain for most of our lives. And I think that if your
first priority is to live a painless life, you will not be able
to help yourself or other women. And I think that what matters
is to be a warrior. And I think that having a sense of honor
about political struggle is healing. And I think that discipline
is necessary. And I think that actions against men who hurt
women, must be real. We need to win...to win. We are in a war.
We have not been fighting back. We need to win this war. We need
a political resistance. We need it above ground. We need it with
our lawmakers, with our government officials. We need it with
our professional women. We need it above ground. We need it
underground too.
Everything that didn't happen to you—I apply this to myself as
part of the way that I survive—everything that didn't happen to
you is a little slack in your leash. You weren't raped when you
were three, or you weren't raped when you were 10. Or you
weren't battered, or you weren't in prostitution, whatever it is
that you managed to miss is the measure of your freedom. And the
measure of your strength. And what you owe to other women. I'm
not asking you to be martyrs. I'm not asking you to give up your
lives. I'm asking you to live your lives, honorably and with
dignity. I'm asking you to fight. I'm asking you to do things
for women that women do all the time in political struggle for
men. Right? Women put our bodies on the line in political
struggles in which both sexes are involved. But we do not do it
for women. I'm not asking you to get caught. I'm asking you to
escape. I'm asking you to run for your life. If you need to run
through a brick wall, run through it. If you get some bruises on
your arms, it's better than having him give the bruises to you
because you were standing still. None of us has the right to
stand still.
I'm going to ask you to consider doing these things. One is
addressing the pornography issue in social policy terms, which I
believe means passing some version of the civil rights law that
we developed in Minneapolis. There are many reasons for this and
I won't go into all of them, but I will tell you this. That
obscenity laws say that women's bodies are dirty. That's what
they're based on. And that criminal laws do not—do not—do not
stop the pornography industry. The business can go on. Somebody
else can manage the business: it is a business. But to make men
accountable for the ways in which women are exploited in
pornography, to recognize it as a form of sex discrimination. To
understand that it destroys women's chances in life and to say
you are going to pay a penalty. We're going to take your money
away from you. We're going to find a way to hurt you back. We
are. You're going to pay a price now. No more free ride for you,
Mr. Pimp.
I think it's very important that rape and battery and
prostitution be recognized legally as violations of the civil
rights of women. That we construct a legal system that
acknowledges our dignity by acknowledging our wholeness as human
beings. And these as human rights violations of the deepest
importance and magnitude. I am asking you to retaliate against
rapists. To organize against rapists. We know who the rapists
are. We know 'cause they do it to us. They did it to our best
friend. We know who he is. We know that it happened. I'm asking
you to take it seriously. I'm saying if the law won't do
anything you must do something.
I'm asking you to close down the pornography outlets wherever
you can and to stop the distribution wherever you can, in
whatever way you can. I am asking you to stop passing: stop
passing and having feminism be part of a secret life. I am
asking you not to apologize to anyone for doing it. I am asking
you to organize political support for women who kill men who
have been hurting them. They have been isolated and alone. This
is a political issue. They're being punished, because at some
moment in their lives, they resisted a domination that they were
expected to accept. They stand there in jail for us, for
everyone of us who got away without having to pull the trigger,
for everyone of us who lived to tell about getting away without
having the trigger on us. I'm asking you to stop men who beat
women. Get them jailed or get them killed. But stop them. I am
not asking you to be martyrs. I am saying that we have been
talking for 20 years. And I am saying that men who rape make a
choice to rape. And men who beat women make a choice to beat
women. And we women now have choices that we have to make to
fight back. And I am asking you to look at every single
political possibility for fighting back. Instead of saying I
asked him, I told him, but he just wouldn't stop. All right? We
need to do it together. We need to find ways to do it together.
But we need to do it.
Copyright © 1991 by Andrea Dworkin. All rights reserved.
First published as "Terror, Torture and Resistance" in
Canadian Woman Studies/Les Cahiers de la Femme, fall
1991, Volume 12, Number 1.
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