Sexual Assault Gossip: Who Do We Share with and Why?

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Archives of Sexual Behavior Pub Date : 2024-11-18 DOI:10.1007/s10508-024-03045-7
Emma M Walquist, Christina Byrd, Domenic P Roberto, Melissa M McDonald
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Abstract

Despite its bad reputation, gossip plays an important role in communicating and policing the social norms, morals, and values of a community. People are likely to be particularly attuned to gossip that helps solve recurrent adaptive challenges. Among women, sexual assault is a pervasive threat to reproductive choice that exacts serious costs on women's reproductive fitness. Research has demonstrated that women fear sexual assault and are motivated to engage in behaviors to reduce the threat of being victimized. Here we propose that women may gossip about sexual assault as a means of protecting themselves and others. Participants read a series of vignettes describing instances of sexual assault of a female victim and were asked to indicate how likely they would be to share that information with a variety of recipients, and what factors motivated their sharing intentions. Results indicated that, overall, sexual assault gossip was especially likely to be shared with proximal female family and friends, as well as authority figures. Women were more likely to share sexual assault gossip than men, and this gender effect was strongest when sharing gossip with female family and friends. The strongest motivations for sharing gossip were to warn the recipient, damage the reputation of the perpetrator, and check agreement with the recipient, with women being more motivated to damage the perpetrator's reputation than men were. Women who expressed a greater fear of rape were more likely to share the information with all recipients except proximal male friends, and reported stronger motivations to share in order to damage the perpetrator's reputation and check agreement with the recipient. Results are consistent with the idea that women may use gossip to create a whisper-network of information exchange that helps women protect themselves and others.

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性侵犯八卦:我们与谁分享,为什么?
尽管流言蜚语声名狼藉,但它在传播和维护社区的社会规范、道德和价值观方面发挥着重要作用。人们可能会特别关注有助于解决反复出现的适应性挑战的流言蜚语。在妇女中,性侵犯是对生育选择的一种普遍威胁,它使妇女的生育健康付出了严重代价。研究表明,女性害怕性侵犯,并有动机采取一些行为来减少受害的威胁。在此,我们提出,女性可能会通过谈论性侵犯来保护自己和他人。受试者阅读了一系列描述女性受害者遭受性侵犯的小故事,并被要求指出她们与不同受众分享这些信息的可能性有多大,以及促使她们分享信息的动机是什么。结果表明,总体而言,性侵犯的流言尤其有可能与近亲女性亲友以及权威人士分享。与男性相比,女性更有可能分享性侵犯方面的流言蜚语,这种性别效应在与女性亲友分享流言蜚语时最为明显。分享小道消息的最大动机是警告接收者、损害犯罪者的声誉以及确认接收者是否同意,其中女性比男性更倾向于损害犯罪者的声誉。对强奸表示出更大恐惧的女性更有可能与除近亲男性朋友之外的所有接收者分享信息,并且报告说,为了损害犯罪者的名誉和与接收者确认是否同意,她们有更强的分享动机。研究结果与以下观点一致,即妇女可能会利用流言蜚语来建立一个信息交流的耳语网络,从而帮助妇女保护自己和他人。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
13.20%
发文量
299
期刊介绍: The official publication of the International Academy of Sex Research, the journal is dedicated to the dissemination of information in the field of sexual science, broadly defined. Contributions consist of empirical research (both quantitative and qualitative), theoretical reviews and essays, clinical case reports, letters to the editor, and book reviews.
期刊最新文献
Perspectives of Young People on Social Media-Based Sexuality Education Using a Feminist Approach in China: A Qualitative Study. Sexual Assault Gossip: Who Do We Share with and Why? Stigma and Sexual Dissatisfaction in Middle-Aged and Older Sexual Minorities Correction: To Improve Sex Research, Don't Suppress Ideas You Dislike: Reply to Walters et al. (2024). Theorizing the Role of Sex Educators in the Resistance and Reification of Epistemic Injustices Related to the Sexual Expression of People with Intellectual Disability.
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