Midlands State University Library
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Against our will : men, women and rape Susan Brownmiller.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Middlesex Harmondsworth 1975Description: 472 p. 25 cmISBN:
  • 9780140227413
  • 0140227415
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Against our will.NLM classification:
  • HV 6558 B885a 1975
Available additional physical forms:
  • Also issued online.
Contents:
A personal statement -- The mass psychology of rape: An introduction -- In the beginning was the law -- War -- Riots, pogroms and revolutions -- Two studies in American history -- The police-blotter rapist -- A question of race -- Power: Institution and authority -- The myth of the heroic rapist -- Victims: The setting -- Victims: The crime -- Women fight back.
Summary: The author shows why she considers rape not to be just a brutal crime but a reflection of how our society is conditioned. To do this she traces the use and meaning of rape from Biblical times through to Bangladesh and Vietnam, unravels the origins of rape laws in medieval codes and examines interracial and homosexual rape and child molestation. She also includes a discussion of Freudian sexual psychology, legal defence strategy and the message behind popular books, magazines and films. Always, she argues, the myths generated by the latter serve to glamorize the victim while they romanticize the rapist -- even in cases of rape murder.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book School of Social Work Library Open Shelf HV6558 BRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 134138 Available BK115237

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A personal statement -- The mass psychology of rape: An introduction -- In the beginning was the law -- War -- Riots, pogroms and revolutions -- Two studies in American history -- The police-blotter rapist -- A question of race -- Power: Institution and authority -- The myth of the heroic rapist -- Victims: The setting -- Victims: The crime -- Women fight back.

The author shows why she considers rape not to be just a brutal crime but a reflection of how our society is conditioned. To do this she traces the use and meaning of rape from Biblical times through to Bangladesh and Vietnam, unravels the origins of rape laws in medieval codes and examines interracial and homosexual rape and child molestation. She also includes a discussion of Freudian sexual psychology, legal defence strategy and the message behind popular books, magazines and films. Always, she argues, the myths generated by the latter serve to glamorize the victim while they romanticize the rapist -- even in cases of rape murder.

Also issued online.

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