Heterosexual male victims and female perpetrators tend to be omitted from rape
perception research as well as legal and everyday notions of rape. Therefore this thesis examined
the effects of sex and sexuality on rape attributions. Criticisms of social representations theory
provided the rationale for a new theory of social perceptions and for combining methods normally
associated with opposing epistemologies and ontological beliefs. A grounded theory derived from
ten interviews revealed double standards in the way that men and women are labelled for the same
behaviours, whereby female-perpetrated male rape was considered less serious than male-perpetrated
rape. Discourse analysis of newspaper coverage of a case involving a female and two
males accused of raping a woman also revealed double standards in the way the defendants were
constructed. All of the defendants were constructed as deviant, but in ways that served to direct
blame away from the males and towards the female. A 16 condition, multi-factorial. Internet-based
experiment suggested that female perpetrators tend to be blamed more than males, and male
victims tend to be blamed more than female victims. Younger participants and those high in rape
myth acceptance (RMA) blamed victims more than older participants and those low in RMA. The
theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Date of Award | 2004 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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TOWARDS A NEW THEORY OF SOCIAL PERCEPTION: THE EFFECTS OF SEX AND SEXUALITY ON RAPE ATTRIBUTIONS
FARBUS, L. (Author). 2004
Student thesis: PhD