The truth about TV’s rape obsession: How we struggle with the broken myths of masculinity [View all]
Fascinating Read.
The truth about TVs rape obsession: How we struggle with the broken myths of masculinity, on screen and off
The Sopranos did it in 2001, when Lorraine Braccos Jennifer Melfi was suddenly and violently raped in a parking garage. Veronica Mars made it part of the titular protagonists backstory, in the 2004 pilot. In 2006, The Wire introduced and then never confirmed it, when it showed us the story of Randy (Maestro Harrell) keeping watch as a girl named Tiff fooled around with two boys in the bathroom. Mad Men did it in 2008, when Joan Holloway (Christina Hendricks) was raped by her fiancé, Greg (Sam Page) on the floor of Dons office.
A few shows were practically founded on itLaw And Order: SVU, which premiered in 1999, has dealt with rape in nearly every episode of its 16-season and counting run. Oz, the 1997 HBO show set in a prison, regularly featured male-on-male rape.
But starting around the turn of the decade, rape on television morphed from a delicate topic to practically de rigueur. In the last two years alone, shows as vastly different as Downton Abbey and Game Of Thrones have graphically portrayed violent rapetypically, but not always, perpetrated by men onto womento the point that depictions of sexual assault on television have become a regular part of the national discourse. SVU, Outlander, Broad City, Inside Amy Schumer, Orange Is The New Black, Tyrant, Stalker, Shameless, Scandal, and House Of Cards have all handled sexual assault, in their own wayeither by depicting rape, exploring whether or not a sexual encounter is rape, or making jokes about how often rape happens. For a crime that has a dismal 2 percent conviction rate, it certainly is getting talked about an awful lot.
I can identify that this is a phenomenon that is happening. Its a little harder to explain why. Some of it is purely a numbers game: Theres more television than everand more and more of that television is not on broadcast networks, with their stricter censorship rules and mandates for reaching a mainstream audience. Its certainly easier to depict and discuss sexual assault on television now than it ever was before.
http://www.salon.com/2015/06/25/the_truth_about_tvs_rape_obsession_how_we_struggle_with_the_broken_myths_of_masculinity_on_screen_and_off/