Davies Michelle, Rogers Paul, Bates Jo-Anne
Department of Psychology, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, Lancashire PR1 2HE, UK.
J Homosex. 2008;55(3):533-44. doi: 10.1080/00918360802345339.
This study investigates the impact of victim sexual orientation, the degree of victim physical resistance, and respondent gender on attributions of blame and assault severity in a hypothetical case of stranger-perpetrated male rape. One hundred eighty-three participants read a scenario depicting a rape in which the victim's sexuality and degree of resistance were both varied between-subjects before completing 12 blame attribution items. Overall, findings suggest that male respondents were less pro-victim than were females. While women generally attributed little victim blame and considered the assault very severe regardless of condition, men were influenced by both factors. Specifically, although men considered the assault severe, they blamed a gay victim more when he fought back against his attacker but, conversely, blamed a heterosexual victim when he did not fight back. Results are discussed in relation to homophobia and judgments about victim resistance during rape. Implications for treatment services are also considered.
本研究调查了在陌生人实施的男性强奸这一假设案例中,受害者的性取向、受害者身体抵抗程度以及受访者性别对责任归因和攻击严重程度的影响。183名参与者阅读了一个描述强奸的场景,在完成12个责任归因项目之前,受害者的性取向和抵抗程度在不同受试者之间有所变化。总体而言,研究结果表明,男性受访者比女性受访者更不支持受害者。虽然女性通常很少将责任归咎于受害者,并且无论情况如何都认为攻击非常严重,但男性受到这两个因素的影响。具体而言,尽管男性认为攻击很严重,但当男同性恋受害者反击攻击者时,他们会更多地指责他;相反,当异性恋受害者不反击时,他们会指责他。研究结果结合恐同症和强奸期间对受害者抵抗的判断进行了讨论。还考虑了对治疗服务的影响。