000 02942nam a2200289Ia 4500
001 112222
005 20250625151241.0
008 110331s2001 eng
040 _aWSS
_dAFV
100 _aMitchell, Katherine Jane
_91738
245 _aRape in the news :
_bmedia portrayals of rapists, victims and rape in New Zealand
_cMitchell, Katherine Jane
260 _c2001
300 _a138 p.
365 _a00
_b0
500 _aThesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Criminology at Victoria University of Wellington. Available for loan from Victoria University Library.
520 _aIn this study, the author analysed news media coverage of high profile rape cases to reveal the media's understanding of rape. The cases were chosen for their ability to highlight the different aspects of the offender, victim or crime. In line with the international literature on which it builds, the findings of this study show a significant disparity between the media's portrayal of rape and women's realities of sexual violence. Women's typical rape experiences involve incidents in which the woman knows the rapist and does not suffer excessive physical violence. Conversely, media accounts of rape typically involve strangers and extrinsic violence. Furthermore, when the media does cover acquaintance rapes, the model of the violent stranger rape is used as the benchmark against which truth and seriousness are measured. Acquaintance rape is rarely held to be as serious as 'real' (violent stranger) rape, and aspects of victims' behaviour and character are scrutinised for clues to her credibility. This thesis finds that media representations of rape are therefore informed by ideological assumptions regarding gender appropriate behaviours. These stereotypical notions of masculinity and femininity are used to underpin explanations of rape. The credibility of both offenders and victims relies on being perceived as existing within these constructs. A victim's transgression of feminine norms means that coverage is likely to be less supportive of her, and the rape is assumed to be less significant. An offender's failure to fit the masculine stereotype means he is more likely to be configured as a 'real' rapist. The media's understanding of rape is thus underpinned by the dominant discourse, in which rape is un-gendered, infrequent, and associated with monster-like men, quite unlike 'normal' men. This study situates the media as supportive of the status quo in which rape is one tool of the social control of women.--AUTHOR'S ABSTRACT
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aCULTURAL DIFFERENCES
_9174
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aGENDER
_9269
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aMEDIA
_9367
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aRAPE VICTIMS
_9489
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aRAPE
_9488
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aSEX OFFENDERS
_9528
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aWOMEN
_9645
650 2 7 _aTHESES
_9606
650 2 4 _aSEXUAL VIOLENCE
_9531
942 _2ddc
_cTHESIS
999 _c3126
_d3126