Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

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First published: February 1, 2024 - Last updated: February 1, 2024

TITLE INFORMATION

Author: Juana Campos

Title: Rape Myths in the Local and National Newspaper Coverage of the Brock Turner Case

Subtitle: -

Thesis: M.A. Thesis, University of Houston

Advisor: Samantha S. Kwan

Year: 2020

Pages: vi + 68pp.

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 21st Century | American History: U.S. History | Cases: Real Victims / Brock Allen Turner; Cases: Real Victims / Chanel Miller; Types: Rape; Society: Rape Culture / Rape Myths; Representations: Press



FULL TEXT

Link: University of Houston Institutional Repository (Free Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Abstract: »Rape myths are false claims that pardon perpetrators, blame victims, and justify sexual assault. They are invoked when a case of sexual assault deviates from the socially constructed definition of "real rape," in which a deranged man attacks an innocent woman despite her physical resistance. When characteristics or actions by the victim and perpetrator defy this definition, the victim can be held responsible. Rape myths help their endorsers explain and distance themselves from sexual assault. Previous studies focusing on high profile sexual assault cases found rape myths in the print media coverage of such cases. My study focuses on the Brock Turner case. Turner, a white Stanford student athlete, was found guilty of sexually assaulting an intoxicated and unconscious Emily Doe. He successfully used Doe's intoxication, sexual history, apparel, and partying history to excuse his behavior. Because rape myths surfaced during the trial, they may surface in the media coverage of this case. Specifically, I examined rape myths in the reporting of this case in newspapers (n=50). Using a quantitative coding scheme, I documented the prevalence of these myths and how often journalists criticized these myths. Research shows when journalists report on cases of sexual assault, they often frame stories in which the victim is to blame. In the newspaper coverage of the Brock Turner case, 68 percent of articles contained at least one rape myth. The most prevalent rape myth was "rape is insignificant" (54 percent). The myth to receive the most criticism was "rape is insignificant" (60 percent).« (Source: Thesis)

Contents:
  Acknowledgements (p.iii)
  Abstract (p.iv)
  List of Tables (p. vi)
  I. Introduction (Rape Myths in the Local and National Newspaper Coverage of the Brock Turner Case) (p. 1)
  II. Literature Review (p. 6)
    Sexual Scripts, Real Rape, and Rape Myths (p. 6)
    Rape Myths in the Media (p. 10)
  III. Methods (p. 16)
    Sample (p. 16)
    Prevalence (p. 19)
    Variables Coded (p. 19)
      Rape Myths about the Victim (p. 19)
      Rape Myths about the Perpetrator (p. 21)
      Journalist Endorsement/Condemnation (p. 21)
      Measures of Portrayal (p. 21)
      Article Characteristics (p. 22)
    Coding and Analysis (p. 23)
      Process of Coding (p. 23)
      Reliability (p. 23)
      Analysis (p. 24)
      Research Questions (p. 24)
  IV. Results (p. 25)
    Information about Journalists (p. 25)
    Prevalence of Rape Myths (p. 26)
      Measures of Portrayal (p. 29)
    Commentary on Rape Myths (p. 29)
  IV. Discussion (p. 32)
    Limitations (p. 36)
    Future Research (p. 37)
  References (p. 40)
  Appendix (p. 51)
    Codebook (p. 51)
    Tables (p. 66)

Wikipedia: History of the Americas: History of the United States / History of the United States (2008-present) | Feminism: Rape culture / Rape myth | Sex and the law: Rape / Chanel Miller, People v. Turner