Sexual abuse narrative: Difference between revisions
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The "rape narrative," "incest narrative," and the "child abuse narrative" are little spoken about in public, due to the histrionics of those opposed to rational thinking about incest and adult-child [[sexual activity]]. These topics are occasionally addressed in academic publications which are not easily available to the "unwashed masses". | The "rape narrative," "incest narrative," and the "child abuse narrative" are little spoken about in public, due to the histrionics of those opposed to rational thinking about incest and adult-child [[sexual activity]]. These topics are occasionally addressed in academic publications which are not easily available to the "unwashed masses". | ||
The "child abuse narrative" (falsely) claims that: | |||
*"[[child sexual abuse]]" is common (they confound sexual ''abuse'' with sexual ''experiences'' | |||
*adult-child sexual activities are characterized by: | |||
::violence (false -- most adult-child sexual relationships do ''not'' involve any violence) | |||
::fear (false -- most children involved are ''not'' afraid when the sexual activity takes place) | |||
::physical and psychological trauma (false, in the majority of cases. Only force and violence cause trauma). | |||
::force (false -- pedophiles almost never use any kind of force against children) | |||
::threats (false -- threats are almost never a part of intergenerational sexual activities. But the adult may warn the child that "telling" may create serious problems, which is true) | |||
==See also== | |||
*[[Whores_of_the_Court_(Book)|Whores of the Court: The Fraud of Psychiatric Testimony and the Rape of | |||
*[[Child_sexual_abuse|child sexual abuse]] | |||
*[[Sociogenesis]] | |||
*[[Iatrogenesis]] | |||
*[[Psychobabble]] | |||
*[[Pseudoscience]] | |||
*[[Sexophobe]] | |||
*[[Antisexual]] | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 08:38, 4 March 2015
Narratives are created by those wishing to stereotype certain situations.
The child abuse narrative, along with the rape narrative, are paradigms created by certain groups interested in demonizing, respectively, adult-child sexual activity and paternalistic attitudes towards incest in society.
The "rape narrative," "incest narrative," and the "child abuse narrative" are little spoken about in public, due to the histrionics of those opposed to rational thinking about incest and adult-child sexual activity. These topics are occasionally addressed in academic publications which are not easily available to the "unwashed masses".
The "child abuse narrative" (falsely) claims that:
- "child sexual abuse" is common (they confound sexual abuse with sexual experiences
- adult-child sexual activities are characterized by:
- violence (false -- most adult-child sexual relationships do not involve any violence)
- fear (false -- most children involved are not afraid when the sexual activity takes place)
- physical and psychological trauma (false, in the majority of cases. Only force and violence cause trauma).
- force (false -- pedophiles almost never use any kind of force against children)
- threats (false -- threats are almost never a part of intergenerational sexual activities. But the adult may warn the child that "telling" may create serious problems, which is true)
See also
- [[Whores_of_the_Court_(Book)|Whores of the Court: The Fraud of Psychiatric Testimony and the Rape of
- child sexual abuse
- Sociogenesis
- Iatrogenesis
- Psychobabble
- Pseudoscience
- Sexophobe
- Antisexual
External links
- Wikipedia would never allow direct discussion of the narratives mentioned above, but the following articles do provide a little information.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Manning#Archetypes_and_rape
- This paper addresses the "child abuse narrative" and how it affects attitudes towards touch in pedagogical relationships:
- https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:OhvTPKzfpDcJ:https://www.esrc.ac.uk/my-esrc/grants/RES-000-22-0815/outputs/Download/b6a92aee-a5a4-44a8-a582-8f8319c43f23&hl=en-FR&gbv=1&&ct=clnk
- the above as .PDF:
- https://www.esrc.ac.uk/my-esrc/grants/RES-000-22-0815/outputs/Download/b6a92aee-a5a4-44a8-a582-8f8319c43f23
- This paper - "Postcolonial Affects: Victim Life Narratives and Human Rights in Contemporary India" discusses the construction of narratives:
- https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:8ebmj5fX9msJ:http://postcolonial.org/index.php/pct/article/download/1078/1027&hl=en-FR&gbv=1&filter=0&&ct=clnk
- the above as .PDF:
- http://postcolonial.org/index.php/pct/article/download/1078/1027
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