(First published in The Dominion Post, December 29.)
In 2014 the then leader of the Labour Party, David Cunliffe,
controversially apologised for being a man.
Some commentators ridiculed him for wallowing in liberal
male middle-class guilt. To others, it just looked like an attempt to
ingratiate himself with women voters.
But you could see what Cunliffe was getting at. He was
speaking at a Women’s Refuge symposium and the subject was male violence. He made the point that most sexual abuse and domestic violence
was perpetrated by men, and who could dispute that?
Cunliffe’s mistake was to assume personal responsibility for
what some other men did. But following the worldwide outpouring of women’s fury
at sexual harassment, I imagine many more men are now wondering whether they
should feel ashamed to be male.
A couple of things are clear. One is that sexual harassment by
rich and powerful men has been going on for a very long time. The other is that
the perpetrators have been protected and encouraged up till now by the silence of
their victims – a silence that almost amounted to complicity.
I’m not sure what’s changed, but women who previously kept
quiet have now come out into the open. Perhaps there’s an element of
opportunism in some of the accusations being made, but what’s not in doubt is
that far too many men behave abominably toward women.
And while we’ve heard a lot about celebrities who have gone
to the media with their accounts of harassment and molestation, there remains
an infinitely greater number of powerless, anonymous women suffering silently
in factories, restaurants, offices and other workplaces.
Sexual harassment mystifies me. What pleasure could a man
get from sex with a woman who doesn’t want it? Groping, Donald Trump-style, is equally
hard to explain. It can only be about humiliating and demeaning the victim.
In those circumstances sex isn’t about mutual pleasure. It becomes
a means of asserting power. The feminists are right about this.
I have known men who used their positions to obtain sexual
favours. They didn’t boast about it, so perhaps there was some part of their
conscience that told them it wasn’t something to be proud of.
It was usually the victims who revealed it, and I was shocked by their apparent acceptance of it, as if having sex with the boss was something they had to do to get ahead.
Some of these women were young and attractive while the men
they slept with were decades older and slobs – Harvey Weinstein types. Even if
one accepts that power is an aphrodisiac, and that some women are attracted to
men in positions of influence, there are surely limits.
Anyway, back to David Cunliffe. In the light of what has now
been revealed about rampant sexual harassment at the highest levels of politics
and the entertainment business, should all men feel guilty?
There is an extreme school of feminism, after all, which
holds that all men are rapists. It’s not unusual to hear the entire male sex disparaged
as if all men can’t help behaving like dogs around a bitch on heat.
But I would guess that only a relatively small proportion of
men are sexual predators, and those who are not in that category don’t need to do
a Cunliffe in atonement for the sins of others.
What we will have to do, however, is learn some new rules,
because one consequence of the “me too” harassment saga is that it will
redefine relations between the sexes, and not necessarily for the better.
Men
will find it harder to discern where the boundary lies between mere flirtation,
which many women welcome and enjoy, and harassment.
Physical contact, in particular, has become a minefield. It
brought down Garrison Keillor, the revered former host of the American radio
show A Prairie Home Companion.
What Keillor characterises as a misdirected pat on a female
colleague’s bare back years ago, which he says he apologised for at the time
and thought had been forgotten because the woman seemed to remain friendly with
him, came back to bite him last month when he got a phone call from her
lawyer.
Now he’s in disgrace and his former employer has taken such
fright that it’s changed the name of his old show.
At what point, I wonder, does a touch or a kiss become
harassment?
Blatant groping or an uninvited hand up a skirt can’t be mistaken for
anything other than molestation, but there’s now an undefined grey area between
what’s acceptable and what’s not.
Like the kindergarten teacher who no longer feels it's safe to cuddle an upset child, we're all having to navigate new territory.
2 comments:
It has become ridiculous (a moral panic). I remember (1960's) watching older boys and girls on the school bus. What I observed was that what went on was between willing participants and that the unwilling treated as a joke (eg when RP made a swipe at AMcG's crotch area). There seemed to be a learning process going on. Imagine if that was the age of the mobile phone and you received a biscuit for being the victim?
I remember a bar manager harassing a solo mother (1970's). Back then she had enough support from the other staff.
Now it has been designated an infectious disease. We are in a space where the person is an entity (not to be) harassed by biology?
Maggie Barry could have fixed Rolf Harris: she could have said "would you mind removing your hand from my leg?" "Do you always do that?" with the mic on.
Who’d have thought that in a post Christian, and increasingly post liberal society, dignity and respect would become less prevalent in male, female relationships?
Post a Comment