Yes. And 50 Shades normalizes it.
Couples don't read 50 Shades together. That's just silly.
Couples don't read 50 Shades together. That's just silly.
I'm saying that 50 Shades and similar books are linked to abuse and normalization of abuse. We can never know whether 50 Shades would directly cause abuse, because that would be near impossible to study. But if we look at trends between two cultures - one in which abuse is regularly normalized by crap like 50 shades and one in which it isn't - the former almost always has a lot more incidents of abuse than the latter.
Books like these perpetuate and normalize these beliefs. They are a reflection of a problem with society, and they in turn feed that problem.
Something becomes a problem-factor when it creates or is a substantive part of one, yet saying ''fifty shades normalizes abuse in society'' is looking at only one side of what Fifty Shades is and has done. Yes, it may well normalize it, but as for applicable function, I, again, assert that few if any will read this book and break into a woman's office for rape. Even the women reading the book recognize the undesirable nature of that act, as do the men. But that act is all part of the entire theme of the book which is submissiveness of women and dominance of men. It plays into the obsessive sexual fantasy because it encapsulates obsession itself.
The book plays on the stereotype: strong dominant man finds submissive woman who is overbowled by his confidence, self superiority, grandeur, mystery and eventually carnality. It's bad-boy teeny love (like Twilight) with lots of BDSM.
It's cyclical ... like abuse! How can you seriously claim that literature does not influence people? That's the whole point of it. Why would I write a book if it didn't influence anyone?
This isn't supposed to be a book about a nice, handsome young man who takes his girl on ice cream dates. It's about a ruthless businessman with deep insecurities who preys on a vulnerable young women without a mind of her own for intense, sometimes unbearably so, sexual liasons.
Have you ever seen a Clockwork Orange? That move glorifies violence, but in glorifying that violence, the audience are ever-more squeamish and emotionally repulsed in viewing it. The director doesn't make the effort to morally justify the violence, nor to show the incidents with any light shed on the emotional and psychological impact on the victim. He makes no effort to oppose the psychopathic nature of those carrying out in the violence, and in doing so he leaves those emotional or moral decisions entirely up to the viewer.
I personally, for that reason, find sympathy for the victims and hostility toward the agressors comes more easy and more intense than were the director to lead my hand.
So, just because a movie or a book glorifies something, or fails to illustrate moral deliberations in line with the societal norm, doesn't mean there's no purpose in doing that.
As I referred to before, in the Ballet Russes, a play written many years ago when prudence was common, there is a scene where a harem master leaves his concubines and they invite tall, dark, handsome, animalistic men into the harem and have an orgy on set, as a personification of ultimately sexually liberated women who had hitherto been under the command of their present master, who was off on a trip. The director made no effort in that scene to morally conclude that this was wrong of the concubines to do. He simply let the scene happen, without moral inflection. It was what it was. And the audience responded with curiosity and at some points disgust, but the play received fantastic reviews because by going against the common trend of establishing some level of moral 'right and wrong' in his play, he left those deliberations up to the audience. It made the audience think about both the fierce insatiability of female sexual desire (which was hitherto considered ''ladylike'' and not animalistic as mens' appetities were). In this regard, Fifty Shades does something similar for modern women, in that it further dispels the notion that women can't have animalistic sex drives.
However, the abuse of the women in the play was not at the hands of the men they'd invited, but actually at the hands of the harem master, and it was this abuse which was the part of the play the audience disproved of. So, like Fifty Shades, there is a commonality in that the book, when viewed, can help (and has helped) people realize that women have taboo desires too, but it also has made us think about how on a social level, women are often expected to submit psychologically (to fathers, brothers, or husbands) yet are not able to express their desire for kink and submission in the bedroom because of its taboo nature.
Women's sexuality, in my eyes, is little different to men's. Both sexes' desires for sex are equally as intense, and the difference comes in that women most often like to be submissive in bed, while men like to be dominant. In society, however, I think both sexes desire equality in that regard. I think, in all honesty, that the way EL James paints the woman as submissive to the man in society as well as in bed shows up this kind of traditionalist idea that men are to be superior or Lord over women, and takes it to the absolute extreme.
That's good for nobody.
But if we got more literature in which the heroine didn't justify every horrible thing the hero does, the readers might also start to realize that a man stalking them across the country is not cute or romantic.
I've mentioned more than once that dark romantic fantasy is okay and that I have written such things. Obviously I don't oppose it. I do oppose romanticized abuse ... in which the abuse is normalized and many readers think it's totes romantic.
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