The overturning of Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction is an affront to women | Moira Donegan
#MeToo's real legacy may not be ending predators' impunity so much as highlighting the tenacity of that impunity
Usually, rape isn't reported. When it is reported, it is often not charged. And when it is charged, it rarely leads to a conviction. These facts shape both our cultural understanding of sexual violence and women's sense of their own embodied lives, clarifying something many of us already know - that while sexual violence is technically illegal and officially abhorred, it is also tolerated in practice, with actual arrests and convictions being so rare that most sexual violence is de facto decriminalized.
Only occasionally does a notable rape conviction come to pass; when it does, its very rarity highlights this dissonance, making plain the gulf between how rape is officially talked about and how it is usually treated. Now, that gulf has come to the fore again, because on Thursday one of the most high-profile rape convictions in American history was overturned.
Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...