Why do some people see violence as sexually pleasing, or artistic, or sophisticated? Because I honestly do not understand.
I may respond to other parts of your post later, time and energy permitting, but it was a given that I had to respond to this.
Violence and ArtViolence can be artistic because of its powerful impact on people, and art deals in making impacts. Let me illustrate some of the forms that a “powerful impact” might take.
Violence is a means of achieving control, and when utilized it can overwhelm nearly all other forms of control. Control is essential for us to develop our lives, and essential to the maintenance in society, yet violence often disrupts the development of a life and the order of a society. Violence settles disputes. Before humans had invented the concept of justice, there was the reality of physical domination.
Violence traumatizes people, yet most of us are born with an inherent desire to inflict it. Has any person here never hit another person? I can be relatively confident that the answer is no because all of us were children once, and children hit each other. If you were one of the few who didn’t, you probably still
got hit. Violence entwines even the people who do not themselves commit it. It is a part of our human nature. It may achieve control, but it inflicts trauma too—and not necessarily just on the victims. Both aggressors and bystanders can be traumatized by it, too. Indeed, the trauma itself is a part of why violence is so effective as a means of control.
Violence can be enjoyable or even delightful, even though the result is pain and sometimes injury. Moreover, it can be completely free of emotional trauma. Violence is a behavior that evolves from physical roughhousing—from play. Many humans
like violence even when it doesn’t pose a threat and doesn’t burden the conscience. Most of our competitive sports are just highly stylized forms of violence. (And some aren’t even all that stylized.) There are also sexual connections to violence, which I’ll discuss in the next section.
In violence, art finds much to ponder. Human society has yet to approach and master the concept of violence maturely and satisfactorily. Meanwhile, the allure and the fear of violence remain, as well as the very real threat of it. Artists often strive to explore what societies do not yet understand but cannot seem to escape.
Violence and SexViolence can be sexually pleasing because of our animal heritage. We evolved, as many animal species did, with violence as an integral component of social life. Violence is a very simple form of communication, behooving the simplicity of the animal world. Before the dawn of Civilization, there were no laws to constrain behavior abstractly, and no words for the mature resolving of differences through conversation. But violence was always there, and can manipulate the social context. In particular, violence can chide, violence can intimidate, and violence can kill.
Animal societies exist for one reason: They promote the propagation of the species. If animal human society involved violence, it’s because, in some way or another, the violence helped. And when it comes to the propagation of a species, there is no social function more direct than the facilitation of sex between individuals whose offspring are likely to survive and procreate. Violence, and the threat of it, was a means of organizing mating pairs. Violence was an instrument to sex—including violence between humans who were vying for the same prospective sexual partners, and between humans who subsequently became sexual partners.
This has been true for so long that the human species has evolved so that many individuals are sexually attracted to being violently dominated, being violently dominating, or both, and to being the object of violence between others.
Sexuality itself is one of the most primitive components of human nature. It originates in the deepest, most primitive parts of the brain, far below the realm of reason and rational choice. It is a part of our nature that we have never domesticated—which is why sexual violence is still such a problem today. Most people can control their sexual
behavior, when they choose to do so or are compelled, but nobody can control the impulses of their underlying sexuality—and, for many, that includes some kind of resonance with violence.
It’s difficult to think about. Violence was, for so long, integral to sexual success. Essentially all sexism, sexual violence, and human aggressiveness is the consequence of our sexual evolution. If my understanding is correct, males are physically stronger than males because our male ancestors competed very fiercely with each other to mate with females. Both sexes are violent amongst themselves, and violence between the sexes established a patriarchal system that, for better worse, ensured that the males who triumphed over their male peers would have sex with the females of their choosing. Outright rape often led to lasting partnerships. Rape even became a means for males to dominate other males (as well as females), quite apart from pursuing procreation—a sign of how primitive that area of the brain is, and how closely connected sex and violence are.
Evolution doesn’t care if we have comfortable lives. It only sees to it that the species which survive are able to live long enough and well enough to procreate successfully. At least we’re not one of those species where sex is a death sentence. But that’s about the most charitable thing I can say. In some regards, our animal legacy is pretty shitty.
The desire for violence didn’t go away with the inception of Civilization, even though today many sexual pairings begin (and continue) without violence—a testament both to the power of humans to control their behavior and to the power of attraction. Instead, people have begun to live out their violent sexual desires more in the realm of fantasy and consent. And some still resort to actual, non-consensual violence.
Today there are plenty of males and females who fantasize about copulating with dominating, physically brutal members of the opposite sex. Presumably this extends into the non-heterosexual segments of the population as well. And there are plenty of people who fantasize about the opposite, about having sex with timid, weak, or otherwise submissive members of the opposite sex. And so too are there those who take the Klingon view, where both partners just beat the shit out of each other, as well as those who like the tamest, plainest, most vanilla sex you can imagine.
Human sexuality is very fascinating, and rather disgusting. It is not civilized at all. Human sexual preferences are extensive, encompassing all aspects of human existence. The world of fetishes is immense and unfettered by rationality. Violence is a part of our sexual heritage, and many people react to the idea of it with pleasure or desire. It’s times like these that I feel fortunate that I “only” have a fat fetish. I do not, myself, have a violence fetish, nor a weaker preference for, or attraction to, sexual violence. I have only sympathy, or else outright pity, for the people whose sexual wiring is incompatible with a healthy sexual relationship that preserves the self-determination of both (or all) partners.
Thankfully, there is the realm of fantasy. Many people, friends, have said to me that they fantasize or have a fetish about sexual violence in some form or another. The most common version is rape. People have told me that they fantasize about raping others. People have told me that they fantasize about being raped themselves. It is not uncommon at all, unless I am disproportionately surrounded by people who enjoy rape. Clearly, in addition to all the traumatic sexual violence out there, there are plenty of people who are really getting a lot of satisfaction out of it, or the thought of it.
To me, the idea of sexual violence is abhorrent. I wouldn’t want to give it or receive it. And yet, because of my own sexuality, I understand what it is like to experience a fetish. I understand how primitive human sexuality is, by its very nature. And I
do derive sexual pleasure from the thought of dominating, or being dominated by, a female partner. The only difference is that for me, violence itself is not the instrument of that uneven pairing. Fat is. I can’t relate to the appeal of violence, but I can relate to the driving fixation of a fetish. And I understand how non-rational human sexuality is.
That’s the really difficult part. Most people who derive pleasure from sexual violence are not “evil” for that reason alone. With so much genetic predisposition toward sexual violence floating around in the human genome, it’s quite understandable that such a large minority of the population is the cause of, or victim to, non-consensual sexual violence.
Everyone who has a sexuality—and that is almost all human adults—is stuck back in the animal ages with regard to their sexual impulses. In such a relatively well-ordered society as ours, most people can control themselves. But some can’t. They are a danger to others, and they need to be educated, rehabilitated, medicated, or killed. They are set up to fail, not even by society but by their own bodies. It’s terrible. And the destruction they cause to others (and themselves) is terrible. And, oftentimes, they build a worldview around their violent sexual desires that is repulsive and odious and terrible all on its own. Did I mention that our animal legacy is, in some ways, pretty shitty?
Ultimately, the evil of sexual violence exists in the injuries and harm it causes...not in the underlying propensity toward it.
Violence and SophisticationAs for violence being sophisticated, that’s a harder one. Violence is inherently a primitive behavior, and the impulse to commit violence is primitive. Mature, rational-minded people only engage in violence when they have a good reason to do so. “Wanting” it is not a good reason.
Thus, after thinking it over for a while, I can’t say I know of any reason why people would justly find violence to be sophisticated, other than sheer ignorance.
(This isn’t to imply that the
form of violence cannot be sophisticated. We have created some truly remarkably exquisite forms of violence. It’s really amazing to think about all the ways there are to use technology to commit violence on people.)
I suspect that what people probably mean when they talk about violence being sophisticated is that the violence is committed by sophisticated people. Lots of folks here like Magus...so suave, so debonair, so intimidating and dangerous. Lots of folks like Ayla as well...whose worldview and social status are predicated on successfully committing violence. By her wisdom and power, she is in her own way a sophisticated person.
It’s not that the violence itself is sophisticated. The conflation that people may make is a mistake. I suspect that it has to do with the idea of dominance. Both violence and sophistication are generally understood as forms of dominance.
It’s interesting...before I even saw this post of yours, this morning I happened to be thinking about the original series
Star Trek episode, “Space Seed.” That’s the episode which introduces Khan, a genetically engineered superhuman who once ruled a quarter of the Earth before being defeated. He fled to the stars in cryogenic stasis, and was eventually picked up by the Enterprise. While there, he promptly attempted to murder Captain Kirk and seize the ship. But before it came to that, a member of the Enterprise crew, Marla McGivers, fell in love with him. She was the ship’s historian and had always romanticized the great rulers—Alexander, Napoleon, and so forth. When presented with a living, breathing Khan, she fell for him immediately. This demure, submissive person was sexually enthralled by the fantasy of being spirited away by a noble brute. And that’s exactly what happened. She went away with Khan at the end of the episode.
I remember it because it makes me bristle. But, whether I like it or not, many people feel that way. They see a sophisticated, vaguely threatening figure...and they swoon. And other people aspire to
be the sophisticated, vaguely threatening figure. Violence itself may not be sophisticated, but the idea of a sophisticated person using it can be irresistable.