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Male Violence Quotes

Quotes tagged as "male-violence" Showing 1-11 of 11
Andrea Dworkin
“Many women, I think, resist feminism because it is an agony to be fully conscious of the brutal misogyny which permeates culture, society, and all personal relationships.”
Andrea Dworkin, Our Blood: Prophecies and Discourses on Sexual Politics

Susan Brownmiller
“[Rape is] nothing more or less than a conscious process of intimidation by which all men keep all women in a state of fear.”
Susan Brownmiller, Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape

Zeyn Joukhadar
“Even now, I sometimes run over in my mind all the men who catcall me the moment I step out my door, the men who corner me on subway platforms, the man who reached under my dress at a parade once and slipped his finger beneath my underwear. I think of my father complaining to my mother that the dishes weren't washed, or of the time they fought over something stupid and he called her a camel to shut her up. I grew up with dozens of boys who would one day become the same kind of man. Sometimes the world is one long chain of men from whose anger there is no protection, an obstacle course I run to stay safe.”
Zeyn Joukhadar, The Thirty Names of Night

Sheila Jeffreys
“Women are prevented by the threat and reality of male violence from entering public space on equal terms with male citizens.”
Sheila Jeffreys, Unpacking Queer Politics: A Lesbian Feminist Perspective

“One group of people that get a lot of PTSD are soldiers who have been in combat. You know who gets more PTSD, has higher rates of PTSD? Women who have escaped prostitution. That tells me that the war that men wage against women is actually worse than the wars they wage against each other.”
Lierre Keith

Rachel Hawkins
“I’ve been dodging men’s hands since I was twelve, so wishing a man would touch me is a novel experience.”
Rachel Hawkins, The Wife Upstairs

“What is acted out on the female body parallels the larger practices of domination, fragmentation, and conquest against the earth body, which is being polluted, strip-mined, deforested, and cut up into parcels of private property. Equally, this pattern points to the fragmentation of the psyche, which ultimately underlies and enables all of this damage.”
Jane Caputi

Robin Morgan
“Pornography is the theory, and rape is the practice.”
Robin Morgan, Going Too Far: The Personal Chronicle of a Feminist

Sheila Jeffreys
“To clarify the dilemma women have about sexual enthusiasm for men, it is helpful to contrast it with men's situation. It is unlikely in the extreme that men will have experienced actual sexual violence from women or its threat. Men do not live in cultures where the degradation and brutalisation of men at the hands of women is the stuff of pornography, entertainment and advertising. Men do not live with the consciousness that they are being hunted by women who would take sexual delight in dismembering them simply on account of their gender. They do not live in a society in which their degradation through sex is the dominant theme of the culture. They do not have to approach women sexually in fear or with distressing images or associations with their own oppression. The images they are likely to carry with them are those of women degraded and brutalised by men. In fact they are likely to have practised sexual arousal with such images, extensively, through pornography and fantasy. It is not surprising, then, that sexologists have identified women's 'inhibition' as the main sexual problem of this century. They have identified as healthy sexual feelings those which the male ruling class experiences and have chosen to avoid recognising the political reasons why women might feel differently.”
Sheila Jeffreys, Anticlimax: A Feminist Perspective on the Sexual Revolution

“The common perception is that man hating is solely a radical feminist practice. In my essay, I maintain that is neither radical nor particularly feminist. It's a human response to having your autonomy restricted, and in some cases, destroyed.”
Coleen Kearon, Feminist on Fire: A novel

Lundy Bancroft
“Dehumanization can be a sickening, horrible experience for the person at whom it is directed. If you are involved with a sexually exploitative partner, you may find that sex is sometimes, or perhaps always, a nightmare. Exploitative, rough, coercive, uncaring sex is similar to physical violence in its effects, and can be worse in many ways. And part of why it feels so degrading is that a woman can sense the fact that in her partner's mind she has ceased to exist as a human being.”
Lundy Bancroft, Why Does He Do That? Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men