Male Rape and the Careful Construction of the Male Victim

Citation:

Graham, Ruth. 2006. “Male Rape and the Careful Construction of the Male Victim.” Social & Legal Studies 15 (2): 187–208.

Author: Ruth Graham

Abstract:

Sexual assault generates much attention in social research, but male victims are largely neglected by a predominantly feminist perspective that seeks to highlight the gendered nature of sexual assault as a social phenomenon. As a result there is a relative lack of empirical information on male rape, but it is possible to chart the theoretical development of male rape as a social problem as it emerges in the social research discourse. It is important to examine this development because the current direction ofthe research on male rape has worrying consequences for how we theorize sexual assault in general. Here [Graham] examine[s] how male rape is understood in academic discourse, and [Graham] focus[es] specifically on how a credible male victim is constructed with reference to sexual difference, sexuality, and hierarchies of sexual harm. The analysis demonstrates the problems around the concept of ‘male rape’, and the need for all those researching sexual assault to account adequately for both male and female victims alike.

Topics: Gender, Men, Gender-Based Violence, Gendered Discourses, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Hierarchies, Sexual Violence, Rape, SV against Men

Year: 2006

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