Rape and Persuasive Definition

Canadian Journal of Philosophy 25 (3):415 - 454 (1995)
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Abstract

If we [women] have not stopped rape, we have redefined it, we have faced it, and we have set up the structures to deal with it for ourselves.[T]he definition of rape, which has in the past always been understood to mean the use of violence or the threat of it to force sex upon an unwilling woman, is now being broadened to include a whole range of sexual relations that have never before in all of human experience been regarded as rape.In 1989 the philosopher and self-described feminist Christina Sommers published a short essay — ‘an opinion piece,’ she called it — that was eventually developed into and published as a philosophical article. In this essay Sommers criticized ‘feminist philosophers’ for being ‘oddly unsympathetic to the women whom they claim to represent.’ Specifically, Sommers accused these philosophers of ignoring the ‘values of the average woman’ and of being caught up in an ‘ideological fervor.’ To emphasize her point that the so-called feminist philosophers have lost touch with ‘the average woman,’ Sommers wrote that ‘One must nevertheless expect that many women will continue to swoon at the sight of Rhett Butler carrying Scarlett O'Hara up the stairs to a fate undreamt of in feminist philosophy.’

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Author's Profile

Keith Burgess-Jackson
University of Texas at Arlington

References found in this work

Ethics and Language.Charles L. Stevenson - 1946 - Philosophy of Science 13 (1):80-80.
Ethics and Language.DeWitt H. Parker - 1946 - Philosophical Review 55 (6):704.
Persuasive definitions.Charles Leslie Stevenson - 1938 - Mind 47 (187):331-350.
Philosophy and Feminist Thinking.Jean Grimshaw - 1988 - Hypatia 3 (2):170-172.
Toward a Feminist Theory of the State.Catharine A. MacKinnon - 1989 - Law and Philosophy 10 (4):447-452.

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