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Blaming Me Blaming You: victim identity in recent feminism 1
Words are like pockets, into which this and now that has been put, and now so many things at once!
Aramoana
As I write a group of people are wandering past my house and up the
street, in the direction of Shelly Beach. They're strolling at a
leisurely pace, although I'm certain that their purpose is at some
remove from leisure. I see now that their faces are sombre. Some are
carrying flowers. Some of the women are holding each other's hands.
There are arms around shoulders and handkerchiefs. They're here to
mourn.
Ten years ago today this street was the last thing thirteen people saw.
David Gray, armed with a thing well made, went from house to house
shooting the people inside. Someone called the police. When a lone
officer arrived, Gray shot him dead. Then he took off into the dunes,
which he knew like the back of his hand. Twenty-two hours passed while
police staked the lion's share of Aramoana abodes and helicoptered
cameramen circled the village like a murder of crows.
Gray had managed to elude police and hide out in that crib around the
corner. He tended his weapon. Eventually police approached. The stand
off drew to a close. Gray burst out of the crib firing randomly,
roaring SHOOT ME. They did. The media dubbed it 'suicide by police.'
Real estate prices fell to their deaths. A pall descended on the
village. Survivors burned Gray's crib down. Some packed up their pain
and left. Many stayed.
The news tonight begins with a segment on the tenth anniversary of the
Aramoana shooting. A voice-over rehearses the narrative of the event
while mug shots of Gray are montaged with images of the beaches, the
wildlife, footage from the day, the dead while they were alive, and the
list of names and ages of the dead carved into the memorial pillar near
Shelly beach 3. The camera pans over the groups gathered at the
memorial. The report speaks of this day as one of grief refreshed and
pain renewed, but ultimately emphasises healing, recovery, overcoming
and the possibility of forgiveness.
A plush Santa Fe-style villa has been built on the site of Gray's crib.
New people have moved into the village. Families come from town to walk
the length of the beaches and marvel at Bear Rock. Open wounds have
closed into scars. Ten years have passed. Time perhaps to rethink Gray?
Tui, a seasoned Aramoanan, tells the reporter that Gray was fragile,
damaged and unhappy. He had been beaten up and teased relentlessly by
his neighbours just prior to the shooting. Perhaps, if this had not
happened, the shooting would not have happened. Julie, whose daughter
Rewa was killed, tells the reporter that she feels sorry not so much
for Gray himself, but for his soul. She can forgive the soul but not
its host or his final deeds. 'Gray had many victims,' the reporter
concludes, 'but he too was a victim of Aramoana.' 4
Victims and victimologies
'Victim' is an unruly word. Its meanings and connotations, its capacity
to invite scorn or sympathy, tend to depend not just on what 'type' of
victim is being addressed, but on whether 'victim' is supposed to
denote a kind of agency or an utter lack of agency, and on what reading
of power relations the denotation is servicing. Using a selection of
feminist writings on victimology, victim activism and 'victim
feminism,' I will examine a range of contemporary meanings and
connotations of the word 'victim' before focusing on the central matter
with which this paper is concerned: 'victim identity' and directions of
blame in critiques of 'victim feminism.'
In criminological settings, 'victim' means "recipient or object of
criminal action" 5. For criminologists, 'victim' is a technical term
attached to the practice of 'victimology', which is itself twofold in
meaning. A 'victimology' is a list of the names of those victimised by
one person or by a particular kind of crime. But 'victimology' is also
the term used to describe that form of criminology devoted to studying
"the criminal-victim relationship", the "interaction" between criminal
and victim, and the "role" of the victim in the crime, a role which is
thought to vary "from passive to quite active" 6. As Anne McLeer
describes, a victimology (in this second sense of the term) will not
necessarily assume that the relationship between criminal and victim is
simply one of 'actor' and 'acted-upon'. The victim is not necessarily
or automatically cast as one who utterly lacks the capacity for
positive action (as opposed to passive reaction) and who, therefore,
will be of little interest to the project of examining the crime and
the agency of its executor. As McLeer elucidates, The acted-upon (the victim) is presumed to have
subjectivity that informs the subjectivity of the actor (the criminal),
and also to have subjectivity that informs the action (the crime).
Deleting the role of the victim in this configuration would lose
important knowledge about the whole situation7.
Importantly, victimologists make it clear that their focus on the
victim-their social location, role in the crime, account of the crime,
and so forth-is not to be confused with blaming the victim. In
focussing on the victim their intention is to elaborate more nuanced
geographies and demographies of crime, and to contribute to crime's
prediction and prevention. It is not their aim to redirect blame or
overhaul conventional understandings of criminal responsibility and
intent. Thus victimology, as McLeer indicates, is to be distinguished
from accounts of victim 'precipitation' and 'participation' which tend
to facilitate a transference of blame from the perpetrator to the
victim-a transference that has been of much concern to feminists in
relation to cases of rape and sexual harassment 8.
Victimology, then, is premised on a way of thinking about a victim's
'role' in what happened to them, and their relationship to the agent of
harm, without crossing the floor into victim blame. This definition of
'victim' avoids any necessary connotation of passivity because it is
inherently unstable in so far as the capacity for positive action on
the part of the victim is understood as variable. Further, while
victims are formally the 'object' or 'recipient' of another's action,
they are at the same time a kind of actor who, having interacted with
or reacted to the criminal, can yield important information about "the
agency of the criminal" 9. So this definition of 'victim' avoids tying
the term to either pole-passivity or activity-in any fixed way. McLeer,
following victimologists, does not use the term 'agency' in relation to
victimhood. Rather, she uses the terms "active subjectivity" and
"subjectivity", reserving 'agency' to describe the criminal 10. So,
while the victim is understood as having a variable capacity for
positive action and can therefore be described as an actor or subject,
she or he is not understood as a fully-fledged agent since
victimisation is precisely a (momentary or otherwise) deprivation of
agency. This said, the victim is not entirely prohibited from agency
either.
This kind of victimology can be distinguished from what McLeer calls
'radical victimology', where the category 'victim', still understood in
the sense outlined above, is broadened to encompass victims of
institutional and systemic oppression, and where the term 'criminal' is
traded for the term 'oppressor' or the less individualised 'dominative
power' 11. Here, the 'victim-criminal relationship' is grafted onto
relations of domination more generally. As I will indicate later in the
paper, it is this kind of victimology, in its feminist guise, with
which critics of 'victim feminism' take issue. The critique of 'victim
feminism' might be seen as the feminist branch of a much wider
contemporary critique of 'victim culture' or, as Robert Hughes put it,
the 'culture of complaint' 12. The broadening of the category 'victim'
as a part of emancipatory projects has provoked counterarguments of the
sort: 'will the real victim please stand up'. But one of the problems
is that critics of 'victim culture' are still working with a narrow,
classic definition of the word victim. They have not appreciated the
extent to which this word means very different things to their
opponents or, alternatively, that their opponents have made a
calculated move beyond this word for well considered reasons. To put it
simply, critics of victim culture use 'victim' to denote passivity, an
utter lack of agency, and a deflection of responsibility. Their
opponents have either redefined 'victim' to connote certain kinds of
activity-as we have seen above-or they have elected to use an
alternative term with which to facilitate these connotations. For
feminist victim activists, that alternative term is 'survivor.'
Surviving Victimhood
In crossing from the realm of criminology and radical victimology to
the realm of feminist victim activism, we find rather different
versions of the word 'victim' 13. In general, the relationship between
feminism and the word 'victim' is extremely complex. On the one hand,
feminism serves to remind women of their capacities for positive action
and agency (or, to put it another way, to construct women as the
bearers of these capacities). On the other hand, feminism aims to
examine, critique and oppositionally counter the variety of ways in
which women are constituted as passive non-agents in relation to men 14.
The moral purchase of 'victim' can be irresistible politically, but at
the same time calling oneself, or all women, or some women, 'victims'
in the classic sense of the term can cede agency, court
misrepresentation, and reaffirm a chillingly familiar image of feminine
weakness. This last objection-the reaffirmation of weakness-is
particularly significant to feminist victim activist definitions of the
word 'victim', and the well known predilection for an alternative word,
'survivor.' For some, 'victim' simply denotes the dead: sufferers of
fatal abuse. In accord with this, a 'survivor' is one who literally
survives abuse. For others, 'victim' refers to "those who blame
themselves, carry shame, or continue to let others victimise them" 15.
Here, a victim is one whose momentary victimisation has become an
abiding aspect of their self-identity and social being. A victim's
'allowance' of further victimisation is linked to having blamed herself
for her original victimisation. Self-blame lends victim identity a
self-perpetuating character and makes victimhood a kind of mire one
must work to escape. I will concentrate on this second definition of
victim, and on the version of 'survivor' with which it is generally
paired.
Here the classic connotations of the term 'victim' come into play:
passivity, defencelessness, powerlessness, guilelessness. Unlike the
victimological definition of the term (indeed this is precisely the
definition victimology seeks to overcome), this victim is the 'done-to'
and is marked by an utter lack of agency (or to be more precise, an
unwillingness or inability to exercise potential agency). It should be
noted that this victim's self-blame is not represented as a conscious
choice or reasoned adjudication. Rather, self-blame is most often
understood as an effect of an abuser's manipulative tactics, which are
all the more effective in being practised within a wider context of
gendered asymmetries of power. It should be noted further that accounts
of victim identity tend to posit this identity as indigenous to the
experience of victimisation, as a kind of generic starting point, stage
or phase. It is the task of the victim to survive not just
victimisation, but the 'victim identity' attendant upon it. This
'victim identity' is a kind of performance, one that involves forms of
acquiescent behaviour also understood as 'dysfunctional' and ultimately
debilitating 16.
The claim that victims 'continue to let others victimise them' at first
appears to be at odds with feminist arguments against the notion of
victim precipitation. One suggestion that follows from this claim is
that victimisation can give rise to particular behavioural practices
which serve to 'invite' or 'allow' further victimisation. Such an
argument might easily be placed in the service of the transference of
blame considered above. If 'victims' proceed to 'invite' or 'allow'
further victimisation, the flow of blame toward the victimiser is
stymied somewhat, or might be stymied in certain legal contexts.
Obviously this would be contrary to the intentions of feminist victim
activists. Indeed, my point mainly concerns the pragmatics of legal
defence rather than the verity of this claim. But, as I hope to reveal
at a later stage, the connotation that victimhood is a kind of
performance that runs the risk of fulfilling its own prophecy is
currently the most volatile of the many connotations the word 'victim'
can be said to bear.
The process of overcoming victim identity is thought to entail a number
of existential manoeuvres, all of which are well charted in the
taxonomies of victim and survivor identity elaborated in the feminist
therapeutic and victim activist literature. As we saw with the first
pair of definitions of 'victim' and 'survivor', a survivor is one who
literally survived abuse. In this second pair of definitions
survivorship is presented as an "earned status", and it actually has
much in common with the connotation of 'active subjectivity' in the
victimological definition of 'victim', although survivorship connotes
agency in a much less hesitant manner 17. Whereas victim identity is
understood as indigenous to the experience of victimisation and as an
utter lack of agency, survivorship is understood as an intervention
upon the experience of victimisation and, in this, as a reclamation and
exercise of agency. In Dawn McCaffrey's telling, survivor status is
earned by its proponents after a process of "taking responsibility for
ending dysfunctional patterns in their lives, desisting in self-blame,
and focusing on emerging from a traumatic event alive" 18. It is this
kind of identity that is encouraged by feminist victim activists. The
encouragement of the possibility of survivorship is intended to restore
dignity and a sense of resourcefulness to those who have experienced
sexual abuse.
Before crossing to one last version of the word 'victim'-that found in
critiques of 'victim feminism'-we must examine what "desisting in
self-blame" means for survivorship. We must ask after the difference
between 'taking responsibility' and 'self-blame', for they are both
centred on the subject's 'role' in past or potential future
victimisation. Desisting in self-blame is presented as a kind of
settling of accounts with the victimiser, but it is also
future-oriented. A survivor's ability to transcend self-blame issues
from two things. First, the ability to attribute guilt or blame to the
victimiser (and so cease to blame themselves). Second, a preparedness
to 'take responsibility' for one's actions. 'Taking responsibility',
which forms a central part of the kind of activity associated with
survivorship, is posited as the means by which the 'allowance' of
further victimisation on the part of 'victims' might be overcome.
'Taking responsibility' means a preparedness to employ one's capacity
to be resourceful, active, strong, courageous, skilful, and resistant,
where these are precisely the capacities that are obscured in the
experience of victimisation and the victim identity attendant upon it.
Oddly enough, however, 'taking responsibility' does seem to reinstall
an element of the self-blame associated with victim identity.
'Self-blame' and 'taking responsibility' are most often presented as
diametrically opposed in taxonomies of victim and survivor identity,
perhaps in order to retain the sense of achievement, progress and
overcoming that a leap from victim to survivor must be made to
promise 19. But they are kindred in the sense that they are both
focussed on the role of the self in one's past and potential future
victimisation and, in this, on one's possible 'allowance' of future
abuse. The difference is that a 'survivor' is cognisant of her capacity
for active resistance, and scripts her future in accord with this,
whereas a victim is not cognisant of her capacities and so scripts a
passive future. Either way, 'responsibility' for potential future
victimisation is on the heads of, not only the potential victimisers,
but the responsible survivors and acquiescent victims as well. In the
case of survivor identity, 'taking responsibility' is at once a
vigorous form of empowerment and-by its own logic-a reinstallation of
the possibility of self-blame.
Playing the Victim
As I noted earlier the meanings and connotations of 'victim' depend on
whether 'victim' is supposed to denote a kind of agency, or an utter
lack of agency. This same pair of alternatives inform recent feminist
debates regarding subjectivity. The question as to whether the subject
is "enacting or being acted by" social norms has renewed currency in
the wake of Judith Butler's concept of performativity 20. Indeed there
is some correspondence between the relations of the victim/survivor,
the victimiser and the deed of victimisation in feminist victim
activist accounts and the relations of the (fictive) "doer", social
norms and the "deed" in Butler's account. While a thoroughgoing
application of her concept to the question of victimhood and
survivorship is beyond the scope of this article, I will examine
writings in which victimhood is understood as a kind of performance or
'role' that one is either compelled to play, or 'volunteers' to play.
While these conceptions of victimhood are actually akin to the
voluntarist version of identity Butler argues against, they are of
relevance to her project. They offer a challenge, not to the discursive
power of phallocentrism, but to feminism. Thus they lend feminism the
kind of weight Butler lends gender norms in her account of the
constitution of gendered subjects.
The meaning of the term 'victim' in critiques of 'victim feminism',
such as those of Naomi Wolf and Katie Roiphe which I will be
considering here, appears to be quite complex, as a number of arguments
converge around the word 21. However, neither Wolf nor Roiphe attend to
the variety of meanings this word has, for feminists or others. Both
tend to use the term to denote a resentful person who lays blame,
deflects responsibility, and claims they lack agentic capacities. One
cannot find meaningful reference to the victim/survivor dichotomy in
their books. Although they argue that feminism has become an exercise
in representing women as victims, they do not acknowledge longstanding
feminist efforts to elaborate and encourage alternatives to 'victim
identity' 22. Rather, these efforts are obscured in the interests of
delivering an unequivocal image of a 'victim feminism' whose ideology
disavows female agency and must be rejected on that basis. In this way,
the complexity of feminism's relationship to the category 'victim' is
written out of their accounts. Wolf's and Roiphe's accounts of victim
feminism are different in many respects, with Wolf's account being the
more generous and systematic of the two. But there are a number of
commonalities between them. One is the argument that 'victim feminism'
represents women as the powerless victims of men and, in so doing,
threatens to bring this victimhood into effect. As Naomi Wolf puts it,
"victim feminism . . . urges women to identify with powerlessness, even
at the expense of taking responsibility for the power they do
possess" 23. Thus victim feminism runs the risk of self-fulfilling its
prophecies regarding the sexism endemic to the gender system prevailing
within social life. Women become victims since victim feminism
encourages them to allow the victimisation they either fear or
experience to define their identity. This argument is especially
applied to the issue of feminist interpretations of sexual assault and
harassment. The second argument is peculiar to Roiphe's account and is
an extension of the first. It is that in affirmative action settings
women take on victim identity as a ruse so that they might benefit from
the kudos it provides. Here, Roiphe uses the word 'victim' to refer to
a fully-fledged, calculating and duplicitous agent engaged in a cynical
feminist 'performance.'
Within the first argument, that victim feminism threatens to bring
women's victimhood into being, a number of points are made 24. The point
of most interest to us here is that victim feminism threatens to
encourage women who have experienced or feel vulnerable to sexual
assault or harassment to allow victimhood to become a dominant and
abiding part of their identities. In this regard, Wolf writes, "[t]here
is nothing wrong with identifying one's victimisation. The act is
critical. There is a lot wrong with moulding it into an identity" 25.
Wolf distinguishes between 'identifying one's victimisation' and
'identifying as a victim', where the latter trades realisation of one's
agentic capacities for the attribution of all agency to the blameworthy
victimiser. Wolf's point is that women who either experience or feel
vulnerable to sexual assault or harassment might benefit if they refuse
to allow victimhood and a sense of vulnerability to become dominant and
abiding aspects of their identities as women. As against this, Wolf
would have women adopt a 'power feminist' ethos whereby they might
retain or gain cognisance of their strengths and transcend victim
identity's embittered circuit of blaming men and eschewing
responsibility in which, she argues, victim feminism threatens to
ensnare them 26. What is clear from this is that the dichotomy which
runs through Fire With Fire, that of 'victim feminism' versus 'power
feminism,' bears a strong resemblance to the victim/survivor dichotomy
of feminist victim activism. In particular, it would appear that Wolf's
portrait of 'power feminism' has much in common with feminist victim
activist understandings of survivorship insofar as both constructions
seek to ontologise women as capable agents who might transcend 'victim
identity.' Why, then, is there no discussion of the victim/survivor
dichotomy in Wolf's account? What does Wolf have to say about feminist
victim activist elaborations of female agency? To address these
questions we must turn to Wolf's "case study" of victim feminism. Here
we find that Wolf not only excludes feminist victim activist
elaborations of female agency from her discussion, she renders feminist
victim activism as inimical to female agency. That is, Wolf locates
feminist victim activists as "victim feminists" who, instead of valuing
and promoting survivorship, are complicit in victim feminism's
hortatory call for women to 'identify with powerlessness.'
In seeking to provide a "case study" of victim feminism in action, Wolf
offers an account of the internal political climate of the rape crisis
centre in which she worked as a volunteer over a two year period 27.
This case study functions as an exemplar of victim feminist politics,
and also operates emblematically to describe the general political
culture of feminist victim activism. In other words, any distinction
which might exist between 'victim feminism' and 'feminist victim
activism' given the latter's investment in the elaborations of female
agency under the rubric of 'survivorship', is obscured in Wolf's
account. Survivorship is mentioned in her account only in so far as the
centre's clients are referred to as "survivors". The notion that
survivorship is an ethos which underpins feminist victim activism is
deleted from Wolf's study, thus leaving no impediment to her argument
that this form of activism is stricken with victim feminism. Wolf's
case study is a story of bad politics, bad air and bad decor. Of the
decor, Wolf writes "the shabbiness of the centre reinforced the 'moral'
of the rape: you were made to feel like nothing by the crime; now come
and try to recover in a place where we treat ourselves like nothing,
too" 28. Careful not to impugn the survivors serviced by the centre,
Wolf levels her criticisms at fellow volunteers whose victim feminist
edicts eventually brought about the centre's downfall 29. She writes,
"[i]t was not the survivors who drained us; their resilience was
energising. It was the volunteers themselves whose culture of
hopelessness was so different from the quality with which survivors
brought themselves back into life" 30. Here, Wolf charges feminist
victim activists with being mired in 'victim identity', and suggests
that they threatened rather than facilitated the recovery processes of
survivors (who healed autonomously, bringing 'themselves back to
life') 31.
The story Wolf tells may be an accurate portrait of the politics of one
rape crisis centre, and on the face of it her charge is levelled at the
specific individuals she worked with (who were "suffering the hangover
of an obsolete femininity" 32). I am not seeking here to dispute the
nature of Wolf's experience, or to place feminist victim activism
somewhere beyond hermeneutics. Rather, my specific concern is that in
her overall narrative Wolf's 'case study' functions as a commentary on
the general culture and politics of feminist victim activism (qua
victim feminism) and as such involves a particular form of
misrepresentation. In Wolf's construction of this case study, a sleight
of hand is performed in which the strengths of feminist victim
activism, in particular its elaboration of and investment in the
agentic capacities associated with survivorship, are divorced from
feminist victim activists themselves; only to reappear as the novel
insights offered as part of Wolf's inauguration of 'power feminism.' In
this sense, Wolf's 'power feminist' goal to promote among women the
kinds of capacities associated with survivorship is not so much a
radical departure from, but a legacy of, the very form of feminism Wolf
impugns.
Had Wolf provided a thoroughgoing account of the victim/survivor
dichotomy in her book, an account which acknowledged its ongoing
presence and development in feminist victim activism and theory, she
would have been forced into a different thesis for her book. In
particular, her representation of 'power feminism' and 'victim
feminism' as distinct and indeed opposed forms of feminism would have
been unsustainable. This is because the political form her case study
associates with 'victim feminism' actually redraws elements of her
'power feminism' in its emphasis on survivorship and its awareness of
the disabling effects of 'victim identity.' But in avoiding a
thorough-going engagement with the victim/survivor dichotomy, Wolf has
also elided the complexities surrounding the term 'victim'. Wolf
employs 'victim' to denote a resentful person who lays blame:
specifically, a resentful woman/feminist who blames men ("victim
feminism ... attacks men themselves as wrong" 33). Withholding such
blame is the key to adopting 'power feminism' and responding to its
imperative to 'take responsibility.' But as feminist victim activists
point out, the problem with victim identity is self-blame, precisely
the inability to lay blame on others. The 'victim' who remains a
'victim' because she blames herself for her victimisation is absent
from Wolf's account. Thus her account inherits the problematic
relationship noted earlier between 'self-blame' and 'taking
responsibility,' and neglects the question as to how power feminism, or
indeed any feminist version of agency, might be approached from the
disposition of self-blame.
But Roiphe's version of the argument that feminism threatens to bring
women's victimisation into being is of most concern. This account
involves a sleight of hand which transfers blame for women's sexual
victimisation from patriarchal modes of social organisation to feminist
agitation against such modes. Unlike Wolf, whose framework allows for
feminism to be seen as responsive to victimisation, Roiphe holds that
feminism first implants the idea that women are victimised, then
encourages women to play out the role of the victim. She offers the
strange formulation that women 34 who believe they have experienced
sexual assault or harassment are 'performing feminism.' She writes: At the most uncharted moments in our lives we reach
instinctively for the stock plots available to our generation, as
trashy and cliched as they may be. . . . Now, if you're a woman,
there's another role readily available: that of the sensitive female,
pinched, leered at, assaulted daily by sexual advances, encroached
upon, kept down, bruised by harsh reality. Among other things, feminism
has given us this35.
What Roiphe is suggesting in this passage is that sexual assault and
harassment are 'stock plots' (scripted by feminism), not social
realities. Roiphe is confusing the valid argument that feminists cannot
claim to be dispossessed of discursive power as they examine and
contest sexual assault and harassment, with the anachronistic view that
women who claim to have experienced sexual abuse of some form are not
to be trusted because they are duplicitous. Roiphe is denying the
existence, or at least the seriousness and extent, of sexual abuse
rather than making a measured argument regarding how feminists have
engaged with it 36. Roiphe's analysis might have sought to gauge the
empirical extent of sexual abuse in a manner alternative to those which
feminists have previously employed, but instead of this it performs its
delegitimisation of feminist approaches to sexual abuse by fiat.
At the beginning of her book Roiphe absolves herself of the task of
rigorous engagement with her object of critique in stating that readers
will not find the "objective truth" in her book because she is "not a
camera" 37. She writes that her book is comprised of "what [she] see[s],
limited, personal, but entirely real ... impressions" 38. However her
assumption of this authorial location as an innocent but opinionated
bystander who is at the mercy of "the real" does not perform its
intended function. In part this is because her book seeks to challenge
feminists who assume this very location. The kinds of claims regarding
sexual assault which Roiphe critiques-for example, victim testimonies
made at Take Back The Night Marches 39 - are based on the heavily
contested feminist category of experience. Rather than contesting the
explanatory power of "experience", Roiphe harnesses this power for her
counter-narrative which is comprised of testimony to different
experiences: Roiphe's "limited, personal, but entirely real"
impressions. What we can glean from her book, then, is not so much a
powerful critique of feminist dealings with the category 'victim', but
simply the fact that Roiphe herself, unlike a number of her peers, does
not believe she has experienced sexual assault. She does not,
therefore, identify as a "victim" in any sense of the word.
Conclusion
The news report on the tenth anniversary of the Aramoana shooting is
interesting for its willingness to extend the category of 'victim' to
include the perpetrator of an intensely violent crime, a character who
is famous for having victims, not for being a victim. The idea that
those who have victims might themselves be victims, and may even have
victims because they are victims, has a good deal of presence among
contemporary readings of victimisation 40. This is of interest to this
paper since it conveys the sense in which shifts in what the word
'victim' is made to connote tend also to shift directions of blame.
Once we see him, as well as his victims, as a victim, David Gray cannot
be seen as completely blameworthy for the victimisation he performed.
Blame is not redirected toward his victims in any straightforward way,
but the waters of blame are muddied once significance is attached to
the fact that Gray's own neighbours victimised him, and that some of
them in turn were victimised by him in his gesture of revenge. In other
words, blame, responsibility and victim status become ambiguous to the
extent that no position within the relation of victimisation has
exclusive purchase on innocence. Of most interest to this paper are the
ends to which such manoeuvres as these can be put 41.
These same kinds of manoeuvres are made in critiques of 'victim
feminism.' As a part of these critiques feminists are generally urged
to relinquish their willingness to blame men exclusively or at all for
women's subjugation. Feminism is seen as being rather like an
unofficial (or regrettably in some cases official) criminal justice
system that refuses to do justice to the complexity of relations of
victimisation, and that instead favours a naive victimological morality
that casts "women themselves as good and attacks men themselves as
wrong" 42. The questions this kind of reading raises are important for
feminists to confront. However, as I have sought to demonstrate in this
article, feminists have not tended to deal lightly with the word
'victim'. They have in fact been rather more thoughtful in their
handling of victimhood, blame, responsibility and the relational
complexities attendant upon these terms than they are given credit for
in critiques of 'victim feminism.' Thus, in the course of this article,
I have crafted something of a defence of feminist victim activism and
'feminism' in general against the charge that they are invested in a
naive victimological morality.
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the critique of victim feminism is
the suggestion, which in Roiphe's case is an assertion, that feminism
brings women's victim identity and victimisation into being through its
discursive emphasis upon victimisation. This is troubling firstly
because, on closer examination, it is not the case that feminists have
actually emphasised victimhood in the way it is claimed they have done,
and secondly because this argument has pointed to the complexity of
relations of victimisation only to defy this complexity. Most of the
definitions of the word 'victim' that have been investigated in this
paper seek to render directions of blame and assumptions of
responsibility as inherently and indeed irresolvably complex, meaning
that the waters are irretrievably muddy and moral adjudication
terminally difficult. However critics of victims feminism, where they
suggest that feminism risks bringing women's victimisation into being,
are muddying the waters only to shore up a newly clean place to stand.
In the same way as victim feminism is said to represent women as
victims, critics of victim feminism seek to represent a hitherto
silenced population comprised of victims of victim feminism. Their
newly clean place to stand is occupied by the strong woman alienated by
victim feminism, the duped woman who robotically performs victimhood,
and of course the man too terrified to say out loud that the
subjugation of women is not his fault. In producing a new list of
innocents the naive victimological moralism originally at issue is
rehearsed rather than overcome. On the basis of this we might say that
the challenge for those invested in the study of victimisation is to
avoid the predicament wherein fresh redirections of blame serve as
final resting points for politics.
Notes
(1) This article is a revised version of a conference paper presented to
The Australian Sociological Association annual conference at Flinders
University, Adelaide in December 2000. I am most grateful to Chilla
Bulbeck for enabling it to appear here. While the views presented are
my own, I would also like to thank the article’s two anonymous
reviewers for their helpful comments, Brian Roper and Heather Brook for
reading the paper and providing characteristically acuminous advice,
and Peta Morris for her insightful conversation on the themes of the
paper. The article is based on research for the doctoral thesis on
feminism, victimology and ressentiment which I am currently completing
through the Program in Political Science, RSSS, ANU.
(2) Friedrich Nietzsche, On The Genealogy of Morals: a polemic, trans.
Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage Books, 1967), 180. This comment
comes as part of Nietzsche’s discussion of the word ‘revenge.’
(3) The list, which for obvious reasons excludes Gray’s name, reads: Garry
Holden 38, Jasmine Holden 11, Rewa Bryson 11, Jim Dickson 45, Tim
Jamieson 69, Vic Crimp 72, Leo Wilson 6, Dion Percy 6, Ross Percy 42,
Aleki Tali 41, Chris Cole 62, Sgt Stu Guthrie 41. A collective epitaph
also appears on the pillar: “If it is for your comfort to pour your
darkness into space, it is also for your delight to pour forth the
dawning of your heart.” The shooting at Aramoana is generally
understood as the largest criminal mass murder by a civilian of
civilians in Aotearoa/New Zealand’s postcolonial history (presumably
this excludes consideration of the violence attendant upon
colonisation). On account of this, two books about the shooting
appeared soon after it occurred: Bill O'Brien, Aramoana: twenty-two
hours of terror (Auckland: Penguin Books, 1991) and Paul Bensemann,
Tragedy at Aramoana (Whatamongo Bay: Inprint, 1991).
(4) TV3, TV3 Evening News, November 13, 2000.
(5) Anne McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim: recuperating the language of the
victim and reassessing global feminism,’ Hypatia Vol. 13, No. 1 (Winter
1998): 42.
(6) William H. Parsonage, ed. Perspectives on Victimology (London,
Beverley Hills: Sage, 1979): 9; cited in McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’
42.
(7) McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’ 43.
(8) McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’ 43.
(9) McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’ 43.
(10) McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’ 51.
(11) McLeer, ‘Saving the Victim,’ 45.
(12) Robert Hughes, Culture of Complaint: the fraying of America (London: Harvill, 1994).
(13) By ‘feminist victim activism’ I am referring to feminist campaigns
and support networks designed to serve women who have experienced
sexual harassment and/or violation. The phrase is borrowed from Dawn
McCaffrey’s phrase “victim activism”. Dawn McCaffrey, ‘Victim
Feminism/Victim Activism,’ Sociological Spectrum: the official journal
of the Mid-South Sociological Association 11/1 (January/March 1991):
263-284. Many thanks to Jennifer Curtin for providing me with this
reference.
(14) My characterisation of ‘feminism’ is generalised here for the
purposes of brevity. For a closer account of the victim question in
relation to modernist and postfoundationalist feminisms, and the
critique of victim feminism more generally, see Rebecca Stringer, ‘‘‘A
Nietzschean Breed’: feminism, victimology, ressentiment,’ in Alan
Schrift, ed., Why Nietzsche Still? Reflections on drama, culture and
politics (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000): 225-247.
(15) McCaffrey, ‘Victim Feminism/Victim Activism,’ 272.
(16) McCaffrey, ‘Victim Feminism/Victim Activism,’ 273.
(17) I am drawing on McCaffrey’s research on survivorship as an “earned status” here. ‘Victim Feminism/Victim Activism,’ 271.
(18) McCaffrey, ‘Victim Feminism/Victim Activism,’ 273.
(19) It is true that some feminist victim activists reject the
dichotomisation of ‘victim’ and ‘survivor’ identities since it obscures
the complex emotional reality of those negotiating these terms. As Liz
Kelly, Sheila Burton and Linda Regan argue, “Anyone who has worked on
their own experiences, and/or with individuals who have experienced
sexual violence knows that the two sets of
understandings/feelings/responses/meanings [attached to the categories
‘victim and ‘survivor’] co-exist; that strong, courageous children and
adults can simultaneously feel hurt and damaged. We also know that the
balance between these shifts, and that not all of the issues which
experiences of abuse raise emerge at the same time. There is no
absolute resolution, since changes in life experience and over the life
cycle produce new areas of difficulty.” See Kelly, Burton & Regan,
‘Beyond Victim or Survivor: sexual violence, identity and feminist
theory and practice,’ eds. Lisa Adkins and Vicki Merchant, Sexualising
the Social: power and the organisation of sexuality (London: Macmillan
Press, 1996): 94.
(20) This phrasing is borrowed from Paul Patton (‘Nietzsche and the
Problem of the Actor’, in Alan Schrift, ed., Why Nietzsche Still?
Reflections on drama, culture and politics (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2000): 172). In regard to Butler’s concept of
performativity, see Judith Butler, Gender Trouble: feminism and the
subversion of identity (London and New York: Routledge, 1990) and
Bodies That Matter: on the discursive limits of “sex” (London and New
York: Routledge, 1993).
(21) Naomi Wolf, Fire With Fire: the new female power and how it will
change the twenty-first century (London: Chatto and Windus, 1993);
Katie Roiphe, The Morning After: sex, fear and feminism (London: Hamish
Hamilton, 1993). Other salient critiques of what Wolf calls ‘victim
feminism’ include: Christina Hoff Sommers, Who Stole Feminism? How
women have betrayed women (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994); Rene
Denfeld, The New Victorians: a young woman’s challenge to the old
feminist order (New York: Warner Books and Sydney: Allen & Unwin,
1995); Helen Garner, The First Stone: some questions about sex and
power (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1995). The latter three texts,
especially Rene Denfeld’s, all contain arguments similar to those which
concern me here. For example, in Denfeld’s book it is argued that
contemporary “feminist mythology” is centred on “a singular female
subject . . . woman as a helpless, violated and oppressed victim.” (The
New Victorians, 62). However in this paper I focus on Wolf and Roiphe’s
accounts since the theme of greatest concern to me here—that is, victim
identity as a form of feminist-inspired performance—is pronounced and
interestingly configured in their accounts. I examine Denfeld’s account
elsewhere (see Stringer, ‘“A Nietzschean Breed”,’ 250-259). For a
further account of Denfeld, one which analyses her book in relation to
Helen Garner’s The First Stone, see Shane Rowlands and Margaret
Henderson’s excellent piece ‘Damned Bores and Slick Sisters: the
selling of blockbuster feminism in Australia,’ Australian Feminist
Studies 11/23, 1996: 9-16.
(22) As I will go on to note, in recounting her experience of working at a
rape crisis centre, Wolf refers to the centre’s clients as “survivors”,
and is clearly aware of the victim/survivor dichotomy. However she does
not address the reasons why the term ‘survivor’ has such currency in
rape crisis circles. Thus the significance of the term for feminist
figurations of female agency is wiped from her account of feminist
victim activism. See Wolf, Fire With Fire, 164-169. (23) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 148.
(24) One of these points, which I am unable to go into at any length here,
is that victim feminism takes some women’s ‘real’ experience of sexual
assault to be emblematic of women’s experience in general. This means
women who have not experienced sexual assault (“real rape”) are either
encouraged to understand themselves as perpetually vulnerable to it, or
to retrospectively decide that previous sexual encounters were in fact
abusive. A familiar critique of Catharine A. MacKinnon and Andrea
Dworkin underpins this point. Victim feminism is thought to accomplish
these feats of identity formation by popularising the notion that ‘all
heterosexual sex is rape,’ that ‘pornography is the theory, rape is the
practice,’ and that ‘all men are rapists’; notions that are readily
identified with MacKinnon and Dworkin’s feminist perspective and
anti-pornography campaign. This point is particularly evident in
Roiphe’s scathing critique of MacKinnon and Dworkin (see Roiphe, The
Morning After, 138-160). While MacKinnon and Dworkin’s views certainly
require critical responses, the ad hominum (or feminam) invective
directed toward them in Roiphe’s account seems overstated and largely
unwarranted. For MacKinnon and Dworkin’s work, see: Catharine A.
MacKinnon, Only Words (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
1993), Toward a Feminist Theory of the State (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1989), Feminism Unmodified: discourses on life and
law (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1987) and Andrea
Dworkin, Intercourse (New York: Free Press, 1987), Pornography: men
possessing women (London: Women's Press, 1981) and Woman Hating (New
York, Dutton, 1974). A comprehensive compilation of MacKinnon and
Dworkin’s collaborative anti-pornography work, as well as a defence of
their campaign and reply to its critics, appears in their book In
Harm’s Way: the pornography civil rights hearings (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1997). For a thoughtful critique of MacKinnon based
on a close reading of her work rather than a reaction to her popular
reputation see Wendy Brown, ‘The Mirror of Pornography,’ States of
Injury: power and freedom in late modernity (Princeton, New Jersey:
Princeton University Press, 1995): 77-95.
(25) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 148.
(26) I mention ‘blaming men’ here because Wolf’s portrait of victim
feminism suggests that this direction of blame is one of victim
feminism’s customary reflexes. Wolf’s account of the rape crisis centre
where she worked suggests that this reflex underpins the centre's
prohibition of “affectionate talk about [one’s] boyfriend.” Wolf, Fire
With Fire, 168.
(27) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 164-169.
(28) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 165.
(29) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 169.
(30) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 169.
(31) Here, one must wonder how feminist victim activists managed to
promote survivorship and pursue the victim feminist gesture of “urging
women to identify with powerlessness even at the expense of taking
responsibility for the power they do possess” (Wolf, Fire With Fire,
148).
(32) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 169.
(33) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 149. Emphasis in original.
(34) I am tempted to say “some women” here because, as I elaborate in a
later footnote, Roiphe does not go so far as to say that all rape is
illusion and that it effectively does not exist. In this sense Roiphe
does not apply her formulation to all women, but rather to ‘some’ or
‘most’ women. However it is also the case that central to the style of
Roiphe’s book, which despite declarations to the contrary (The Morning
After, 7) is a self-consciously provocative polemic, is its tendency
toward ambiguous play with morally charged questions such as those
surrounding sexual assault. In this way Roiphe’s book goads gravity.
(35) Roiphe, The Morning After, 172.
(36) Roiphe is adopting the conventional notion of ‘real rape.’ At times
she acknowledges that rape occurs, but she takes exception to feminist
attempts to conflate heterosexual sex with rape, and to make rape an
emblem of relations between the sexes. Thus she wants to narrow the
band of sexual assault-related injuries feminists are prepared to
acknowledge as ‘legitimate.’ Of course the risk here—which is one I
think Roiphe would gladly take—is that feminist readings of rape would
become indistinguishable from regressive readings which hold that
unless sexual assault is evidently brutal, violent and/or fatal, it
cannot be registered as a ‘legitimate’ cause for complaint. This
predicament is, I suggest, symptomatic of the critique of victim
feminism as it has been articulated so far: its productive potential in
relation to feminist readiness for auto-critique is undercut by its
essentially regressive political drive.
(37) Roiphe, The Morning After, 7. Upon closer inspection this comment of
Roiphe’s is quite contradictory. A camera only ever translates ‘the
real’ in accord with light conditions and always in a partial way owing
to the limits of the viewfinder, the perspective of the photographer,
and the techniques of photographic post-production, among other things.
In this sense, the ‘impressions’ the camera yields are borne out of
tension between the ‘limit’ and the ‘real.’ It might have been more
accurate for Roiphe to claim the opposite—“I am a camera”—thus leaving
Isherwood’s “famous narrative metaphor” intact.
(38) Roiphe, The Morning After, 7.
(39) Roiphe, The Morning After, 29-50.
(40) A recent and startling example of this is the way in which the word
‘victim’ was employed in the New Zealand media in relation to alleged
murderer Mark Lundy. After a year-long investigation Lundy was arrested
and charged with the brutal murder of his wife and child. At the
funeral of his wife and child Lundy’s extraordinary display of grief
was captured by news cameras and shown on primetime news. At the time
of the funeral Lundy was not a suspect for the murders and was referred
to as a “victim” by police and media. However, when Lundy was arrested
for the murders, police refused to renege on their previous adoption of
the term “victim” in relation to Lundy. Rather, in a newspaper article
entitled “‘Victim’ charged with murder” police claimed “He was a
victim. Mr Lundy was a victim of himself.” Otago Daily Times, February
24, 2001: 1.
(41) I am not arguing here that directions of blame and assignments of
innocence need to be firmed up or finalised. Such gestures would
inevitably defy the complexity of relations of victimisation and
involve repressions which I would regard as fundamentally at odds with
the aims of feminist politics. But what I am seeking to argue is that
the manoeuvres referred to here can not be divorced from the projects
of which they are a part. In this sense, redirections of blame and
reconfigurations of the category ‘victim’ in relation to the category
of ‘agent’ can have vastly different manifestations and consequences
depending on whose hands they are in.
(42) Wolf, Fire With Fire, 148. Emphasis in original
Rebecca Stringer is completing a doctoral thesis which explores the
uses of Nietzsche's conception of ressentiment for interpreting
feminist victim politics. While this work is based in the Program in
Political Science at RSSS, ANU, Rebecca teaches in the Gender &
Women's Studies Program at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New
Zealand.
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