A first glance at the title of
Alexander Pope’s poem The Rape of the
Lock immediately rouses the sensibilities to his deployment of the word
‘rape’. Although the mind instantly acquires a sexual cognition of ‘rape’,
Pope’s use of it connotes entirely different meaning in the context of the
poem. For Pope, ‘rape’ means to take away or remove something from its original
place thereby depriving the owner of its importance and service. Indeed, this
appears remote from ‘rape’ which describes the forceful initiation of sex
without the consent of one of the persons involved.
Before we begin to scrutinize
rape, let us establish that the symbolic ethos of any society is essentially
composed in its moral order by which the conduct of members is regulated. A
breakdown of moral order in any society through rape signifies a dislocation of
cosmic harmony and therefore requires propitiation, sometimes punitive; in
order to salvage humanity’s doomed fate before chthonic gods. Rape is an
undesirable, anti-social act which must be consistently repudiated and
abhorred. I do not know of any religion, culture or creed that condones rape.
Whether as an act of sexual perversion or an act of stealing, rape today – like
all other social vulgarity – stands trial in the court of public opinion.
Showing posts with label Extreme sexual violence against women and girls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Extreme sexual violence against women and girls. Show all posts
Monday, April 2, 2018
Saturday, October 28, 2017
Is The Devil Winning The Game?
By Osondu Anyalechi
Ugly things have
been repeating themselves in recent times. It is either a man is defiling his
teenage daughter or a 70-year-old man is doing so with his neighbour’s
daughter. The plea of one of them was that he was misled by the devil. Another
man said that he did what he did under the influence of alcohol. Well, the
effect is the same, irrespective of their plea. An innocent girl has been
exposed to an evil practice. A little girl has been abused and cheated. A man
is suffering from what his fellow man has done to his daughter. It is all about
the devil, rightly called devil [deviser of evil].
In one case, Uncle admitted that he defiled his daughter but
blamed the native doctor, who had told him that it was a quick means of getting
rich. And he obeyed! He must have put his daughter and wealth on the scale and
then made his choice. Money became more important to him than his daughter.
There are many people who are in pains because they have no children, and yet,
they are very wealthy. To them, children are more important than wealth. Not Uncle!
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