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The year women got beat up

Over the past 12 months you have been bombarded with stories of brutalized women. Chances are, you didn’t notice.
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  December 20, 2006

061222_women_main3

You don’t have to play Grand Theft Auto to be blind to violence against women. The local TV-news and print media feature so many dead women, they barely register as much more than cartoons. The Herald alone put pictures of 20 individual female victims of violence on its covers this year. And one of every five of the paper’s covers mentioned a story of violence against women.

All year long, stories of victimized women and girls were routinely plucked from the swarm of local and national news items that face editors each day and given front-page, talk-radio, top-of-the-hour treatment. The next one grabbed our attention as soon as we lost interest in the last: Rachel Entwistle gave way to Imette St. Guillen, who was followed by Jill Carroll and then Dominique Samuels. If we weren’t guessing whether John Mark Karr killed JonBenet Ramsey, we were debating whether Philadelphia Phillies star Brett Myers should pitch the day after allegedly beating his wife outside a hotel in downtown Boston. Even long-dead victims were back in the headlines: Christa Worthington, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Aislin Silva.

Yet while most of us became caught up in the salacious details of each new story, we failed to see them as part of a greater trend. It’s odd, given how quick we are to discern patterns and similarities in even the most distantly related news events.

Even worse, say those who make it their business to track and tend to violence against women, these recent storylines were often disproportionately cast as TV drama, with the victim struck down by some psycho stranger in terrifying isolation, when more often than not, domestic violence was involved.

This distorted way of looking at violence against women — when we recognize it at all — was crystallized in the controversial ads run by Republican gubernatorial candidate Kerry Healey, which made Benjamin LaGuer, convicted of rape 22 years ago, a household name. Not long after, we even learned of a rape victim within our governor-elect’s close family.

Jane Doe Inc., which tracks homicides directly attributable to domestic violence in Massachusetts, has identified 31 such deaths this year — 50 percent more than the average of the previous three years. And at least 34 women have been murdered in the state under all circumstances, according to Phoenix research, the highest total in several years. Although violence in Boston and across Massachusetts has been a topic of constant public discussion, it has gone unnoticed that rapes in the city have climbed 15 percent this year, and a stunning 61 percent since September 1, compared with the same dates in 2005. In Allston-Brighton, rapes are up 136 percent. Meanwhile, as the Phoenix reported in October, the arrest rate for rapes in Massachusetts dropped by nearly half during the past three years.

Yet most of us missed this bigger picture as we eagerly consumed the details of each new victimization — what online sexual shenanigans Neil Entwistle was up to, or where in the Ella J. Baker House the ex-con staffer allegedly raped a teenage girl.

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Related: We love you, Dems!, The biggest loser, Deval and the lawmen, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Deval Patrick, Mitt Romney, Imette St. Guillen,  More more >
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2 Comments / Add Comment

admin

Thank you for weighing in on how "perpetuating the false perception of stranger-danger" keeps alive the belief that sexual assault can only be 'legitimate' if the woman does not know her attacker. 90% of women assaulted knew their attacker, how else would he have any chance of getting close to her or alone with her? This attitude places blame and even culpability on the victim, who "often feels conflicted" and "might find it hard to take steps that could lead to his arrest and prosecution." Should a woman be brave enough to make a report, that conflict and hestation can be interpreted by lawyers to a jury as 'crying rape' out of guilt or regret. When did a woman's testimony become worthless or unreliable? Unfortunately, it seems too many people cannot 100% believe sex wasn't consensual unless the victim provides the necessary proof--a death certificate.
Posted: December 21 2006 at 3:42 PM

admin

Another insightful piece on how violence against women continues.... As does violence against men .... I wonder if the origins and expressions of all human violence aren't important to advancing our understand of these issues? The September Dialogues, a comic for adults, tries to start the process ... it explores the domestication of human violence in all its forms --- personal, familial and institutional. Read more at www.september-dialogues.net Meantime, keep up the good work, and cheers from here, L.
Posted: December 27 2006 at 12:08 PM
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