Rape fantasy

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A rape fantasy or a ravishment is a sexual fantasy in which a person imagines themselves being coerced, raped, or otherwise forced into a sex act. Some people enjoy the feeling of sexual submission, while others like imagining themselves as so irresistible and unattainable that their attacker must let loose their animalistic instincts. Those who have forced sex fantasies seldom wish to actually be forced into sex. The difference between a fantasy and a real life situation is that in the fantasy, the person remains in full control of what happens and maintains their power. It can be feeling of domination or submission also, as someone fantasises of forcing someone, or being forced, to have sex.[citation needed]

Fantasy

45.8% of men in a 1980 study reported fantasizing during heterosexual intercourse about "a scene where [they had] the impression of being raped by a woman" (3.2% often and 42.6% sometimes); 44.7% of scenes where a seduced woman "pretends resisting;" and 33% of raping a woman.[1]

Male fantasy

There are two main types of male rape fantasies, which usually involve a woman. In the first type, the woman objects then comes to like it, eventually participating in the sex. In the second type, the woman doesn't like it, and the fatasists arousal is based on hurting the woman.[2]

Rape fantasy in fiction

Rape fantasy is also a sub-genre of erotic fiction usually containing humorous and arousing conclusions. Just as some people like to imagine rape, others like to write and read about it. The taste is not restricted to purely pornographic works; the bodice ripper is a perennially popular sub-genre of mass-market romantic fiction.

A high level of controversy surrounds a scene in Ayn Rand's novel The Fountainhead in which the male protagonist supposedly rapes the female protagonist not long after meeting her, even though the novel was not written with a deviant or shock-based theme. The raped character explicitly identifies the experience as rape, stating "He didn't ask my consent. He raped me." However, Rand is reported to have said, later, upon being asked about the scene, "If it was rape, it was rape by engraved invitation."[citation needed]

In Gone with the Wind by author Margaret Mitchell, Scarlett O'Hara is raped by her husband, Rhett Butler, and she later seems pleased rather than resentful of it.

In the Sam Peckinpah film Straw Dogs, Susan George portrays Amy Sumner, a woman who is raped by two workmen and appears to submit to the assault while initially resisting it. This scene was responsible for the film being denied a UK video release between 1984 and 2002, and was referenced on more than one occasion by real-life rapists.

In the Lina Wertmuller film Swept Away, a rich insensitive woman is stranded on a deserted island with a lower-class worker who rapes her while reciting communist propaganda. Afterwards, she becomes devoted and submissive to him.

General Hospital Head Writer at the time Patricia Falken Smith created the popular story of a rape victim, Laura Webber (Genie Francis), who marries her rapist, Luke Spencer (Anthony Geary). The wedding of Luke and Laura on November 16/17, 1981 was the highest rated hour in soap opera history, garnering 30 million viewers. However, the switch from a rape to a "seduction" was the basis for criticism in later soap opera storylines outside of "General Hospital," notably the character of Eden Capwell Castillo on Santa Barbara. After having been brutally raped, Eden appeared on a talk show with two soap stars, "Link" and "Laurie," who had acted out a rape scene on "General Clinic." She was appalled and told them they had no idea what it was like to have been raped. The Santa Barbara writers took the further irony of this statement into account, and had Eden's portrayer, Marcy Walker, appear as herself at the end of the episode.

These above four instances of rape depicted without condemnation (for the most part) are notable for having been written by women.

In Chapter 24 of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, the nameless black protagonist is asked by a wealthy white woman to help her enact her sexual fantasy of being raped by a colored man, in one of the book's many racially charged episodes. A similar episode occurs in the post colonial novel Season of Migration to the North.

In Chuck Palahniuk's novel "Choke", the main male character and a female character engage in a rape-role playing fantasy. They have a safe word.

Roleplay

One form of sexual roleplaying is the rape fantasy, also called "ravishment" or Forced Sex Role play (FSRP) [1]. Ravishment has become a more preferred term in BDSM circles, as it makes a distinction between consensual roleplay and nonconsensual assault.[3]

Since the illusion of non-consensuality is important to the fantasy, one or more safewords are typically employed. This way, a participant can protest without stopping the scene, unless the safeword is used. Often a variation on the "stop-light" system is used, with different colors designating different messages: "red" to stop everything, "yellow" to slow down or take it easy, and so forth. For scenes where there is an element of surprise, the top or "ravisher" may use a "startword" or other identifying signal.[3]

In healthy ravishment scenes, all participants carefully negotiate what will transpire beforehand. Limits are respected and made very clear, to maintain safety and consensuality. Such negotiation would also include discussion of emotional issues for both partners, especially if there has been a prior history of actual sexual abuse or assault.[3]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Crépault C, Couture M (1980). "Men's erotic fantasies". Arch Sex Behav. 9 (6): 565–81. doi:10.1007/BF01542159. PMID 7458662.
  2. ^ Bader, Dr, Michael J. (2003). Arousal: The Secret Logic of Sexual Fantasies. Macmillan Publishers. p. 126. ISBN 0312302428.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b c Ravenstone, Desmond. Ravishment: The Dark Side of Erotic Fantasy (2005) ISBN 1-4116-5547-8

References