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24/12/03
Public Heaps Scorn on
Male Victims of Abusive Women
Linda Mills
USA
Today
There has been much public snickering
about David Gest's $10-million lawsuit against his estranged wife, Liza
Minnelli, in which he claims she beat him. Whether the suit is rooted in
truth or in greed, its existence opens the door for a public discussion
about our society's disquieting and pervasive problem of abusive women.
Most people's first reaction to the term "abusive women" is
disbelief. Who would believe the so-called weaker sex can be as guilty
of abuse as men can be? But consider these facts: In a 1975 national
survey, researchers Richard Gelles and Murray Straus found that nearly
equal numbers of husbands and wives committed violent acts against each
other. These findings were confirmed 10 years later and in more than 100
additional studies. So, women have a long-established record as abusers.
What clearly emerges from these
studies is that abusive women get away with their sins. Abused husbands
either refuse to admit they are abused — and why should they,
considering the scorn heaped upon Gest? — or, in a chronic state of
fear or denial, refuse to recognize or even understand that they are
being abused.
A striking feature of women's violence
is that it can be both physical and emotional. Suzanne Steinmetz, now a
sociology professor at Indiana University, called "husband
beating" the most unreported crime in the United States. According
to a 1997 study of New Zealand young adults, women admitted committing
severe physical aggression at three times the rate of men. Kicking and
hitting with an object were typical examples of severe physical violence
inflicted by women.
Emotional antagonism
Violence researcher Victoria Burbank
found that women also are guilty of emotional abuse, such as locking a
partner out of the house or belittling him. Those who are quick to
minimize emotional abuse should know that these tactics have been found
to predict physical aggression in marriage. In other words, a woman's
emotional abuse can be a catalyst for a physical reaction from her
partner.
The fact is that taking Gest's
accusations seriously challenges our core assumption that women always
are victims. In another recent high profile case, actor Christian Slater
received several stitches to the back of his head after being struck
with a drinking glass. According to news reports, Slater initially told
the police that his wife threw the glass at him. Later, after learning
about Nevada's strict domestic violence laws, he changed his story and
said the glass accidentally slipped out of her hand while they were
joking around.
Not as simple as it may look
The picture of a violent couple is
always complicated. Although it is important to note that men tend to
harm women at greater rates, what's most often occurring is a nuanced,
even imperceptible dynamic between a man and woman in which they provoke
each other. Minnelli's divorce papers, which were filed one day after
Gest's lawsuit, claimed "cruel and unusual treatment." Five
years ago, Christian Slater served 90 days in jail for slugging a
girlfriend.
Sorting out exactly who is doing what
to whom is a matter for a Solomon to decide. But until the American
public recognizes and begins to grapple with this interwoven dynamic,
the true causes of intimate abuse never will be understood nor its sad
consequences adequately addressed.
Beliefs about men's and women's
violence are so sacred and arouse such strong feelings that the thought
of questioning them can sometimes evoke violence. After Steinmetz
published her groundbreaking book, The Battered Husband Syndrome, in
1978, she was not only derided and denounced, but her children's lives
also were threatened.
We must begin to revise our views on
men's and women's violence, especially as it relates to the insights
that a great body of research already reveals. Failing to do so will
compromise all victims, men and women alike, in their efforts to gain
the peace and justice that they deserve.
And lastly, perhaps it is time to stop
snickering over David Gest's dilemma and begin to appreciate the sadness
and complexities of his situation.
Linda G. Mills is a New York
University professor of social work, an affiliated professor of law and
author of Insult to Injury: Rethinking Our Responses to Intimate Abuse.
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