What Bill Cosby and the University of Virginia Can Teach Us
What Bill Cosby and the University of Virginia Can Teach Us
As accusations of sexual assault against Bill Cosby mount, students, faculty and staff of the University of Virginia, meanwhile, are adding their names to a petition addressed to the colleges president, demanding that campus organizations be held accountable for sexual violence. Both cases have gained a significant amount of media attention recently for allegations that have persisted for decades. A joke reignited accusations against Cosby that span from the mid 1960s to 2004. A campus investigation by Rolling Stone exposes a culture of silence and inaction around sexual assaults on UVAs campus that date back at least 30 years. From Hollywood green rooms to frat house bedrooms, sexual violence is widespread and normalized in American culture. These high profile cases reveal how power, privilege and patriarchy work in tandem to uphold rape culture, which is defined as a complex set of beliefs that encourage male sexual aggression and supports violence against women.
While UVA is not part of the Ivy League, the elite institution commands a comparable endowment and attracts prestigious students. Prestige is at the core of UVAs identity, Sabrina Erdely observes in her Rolling Stone piece. Although a public school, its grounds of red-brick, white-columned buildings designed by founder Thomas Jefferson radiate old-money privilege, footnoted by the graffiti of UVAs many secret societies, whose insignias are neatly painted everywhere. For students and alumni alike, UVA holds the status of a sacred American institution. To expose the universitys rape culture, for some, is tantamount to treason.
Bill Cosby is an institution in his own right. He has been regarded as Americas dad. He has also wielded enough power and influence to make or break careers. Most of the women who have accused Cosby of sexual assault recall being young and hopeful protégés of the seasoned actor and writer. Having Cosby as a mentor would jumpstart their stardom, they thought. As a recent piece in The Washington Post puts it, They didnt see a comedian. They saw the king of the world. It is that same power, Cosbys accusers allege, that kept many of them silent. I was convinced no one would listen to me, Barbara Bowman admits. That feeling of futility is what ultimately kept me from going to the police.
No one would believe me is far too common a refrain in sexual assault cases. Because the burden of proof rests on alleged rape victims, every word they speak and action they take after their assaultand their entire history leading up to itis subject to scrutiny. We expect women who speak out about rape to be perfect victims and unassailable witnesses. Cosbys legal team, friends and supporters question his accusers reluctance to speak out sooner or, in some cases, their decisions to accept money from him. They weigh the credibility of former models, actresses and a Playboy bunny against a man who popularized chunky sweaters and Jell-O pudding pops. It shouldnt come as a surprise that many of these women have been reluctant to make their stories public.
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http://msmagazine.com/blog/2014/11/24/what-bill-cosby-and-the-university-of-virginia-can-teach-us/
LuckyLib
(6,819 posts)college campuses by the need to curry future alumni giving by the fraternity members.
"Whats perhaps most shocking to me about Cosby and UVA is the way the cases betray the ordinariness of sexual violence in American culture. Drugging freshman girls and/or plying them with liquor at campus parties too often becomes a part of orientation. Many of these girls will be raped in their first six weeks of college. At UVA and on numerous other college campuses, binge drinking and hard partying serve as a cover-up for sexually predatory behavior. Some fellow students and even administrators would rather victims chalk their assaults up to a bad night than for their schools to earn a bad reputation for rape.