How about that
I was doing some research on Sara DeKeuster, the University of Wisconsin Post Photo Editor who created the photo essay "Bedtime Stories" exploring her rape fantasies, which I've still yet to see because it appears to have only been in print, that caused such an uproar, and found this from Kyle Duerstein's blog Panther Talk Live:
Sara DeKeuster ought be raped today.
And after that, she ought be raped tomorrow, by someone else.
And next week, she ought be raped again, more violently by someone else each day.
Even once she discovers that rape isn't all that it's "cracked up to be."
And every day for the rest of her life, she ought be raped and hurt. She ought be sexually scarred, physically battered, and emotionally devastated.
And then, like so many other rape victims, she might be killed by her attacker.
And then, maybe then, she'll get it, and if not, she'll be dead, and the world will be a less f*$!ed up place.
But don't react to it, because (another quote from that post) "Nobody had better get angry at what I said."
This is by Kelly Schlicht from The Daily Cardinal:
I normally view sexuality with a “to each their own” sentiment, but the actual desire to be raped induces utter disgust and mild nausea. While each person has a right to express their sexuality in whichever way they desire, this sordid “artistic” display crosses the line of respect for others. By making a rape into a staged occurrence and printing it in a free publication, DeKeuster and her editor Diego Costa disrespected all victims of sexual violence. Their message could not be further from their intended “exploration of age-old repressed female sexuality in its attempt to strip itself of social and feminist constraints.”
Labels: feminism, sexual freedom






















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