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Sexy violence or violent sex? | page 1, 2

"Let's go girls," Edwina hissed. "All the way, now. To submission."

In her brand of wrestling, the object was not to press your opponent's two shoulders firmly against the mat, but throttle her until she whimpered, "I submit!" Venus and I fought for a gruesome 10 full minutes -- the designated length of the first half. By then my body was surging with a nausea I'd never know before. As black amoeba-like stuff closed off my vision, I realized I was in over my head. We were nouveau gladiators performing for men with wrestling fetishes –- which I have since learned is relatively popular. A short trip into cyberspace will yield a myriad of Web sites devoted to wrestling, cat fights and other gore for the violently horny. For these men, it's the sight of women really hurting one another that turns them on. Edwina's claim that the work was "non-sexual" had put me at ease. But just because it wasn't sexual for us didn't mean that it wouldn't become a turn-on for the video's eventual consumers, their greasy faces flickering in the blue glow from the TV screen. That was an image that grew more vivid each time I felt myself splayed in a new position of humiliation. Someday unzipped sleaze balls on couches would eat up this spectacle like vultures on carrion.

Had the listing actually used the word "sexual" I probably never would have had the nerve to try it. And if for some strange reason I had arrived to find real sexual interaction, I doubt I could have ventured onto the mats. But I didn't really think subjecting myself to a little violence would traumatize me. In fact, I didn't really recognize it as violence at all until I was sick with it. Like much of our society, I apply a different set of criteria to the taboos of sex and violence. After all, I engage in sex but feel less comfortable talking about it to a child than I would about violence, which I do not engage in. Violence is bad; sex is good. But somehow a job that involved a little head-bashing put up fewer red flags for me than one that might involve the lighter kind of touching.

My failed career as cat fighter forced me to confront the ways in which I bought into all the strange contradictions of our culture's twin obsessions. Despite the yoking of "sex and violence" in the debates around censorship, V-chips, TV and movie ratings, I realized they rarely figure in the same political struggles. By bringing them together, uttering them as a single phrase, they taint and distort each other. Sex becomes scarier; violence a little less real. Whether it involves Larry Flynt's latest fight over a filthy cartoon or Tipper Gore's mission to institute labeling for the recording industry, sex is usually the source of the most consternation. Yet football and boxing -- which both cause real brain damage -- are prime-time sports, and the nightly news lingers over the details of murders in far more detail and with far less hand-wringing than all the recent chatter about cigars, stained dresses and blow jobs. Even the rating systems often overlook the obvious: The video label for the recent Joaquin Phoenix picture "Return to Paradise" offers warnings about nudity and profane language but suggests nothing of the graphic and harrowing execution at the end of the movie.

After my "submission," I sat on the sidelines, watching Ellie eagerly strut her stuff against Grace, a 6-foot bodybuilder who had been in Edwina's stable for some time. Neither woman wanted to submit. They tore at each others' faces, swore, pulled hair, until finally Grace, bleeding from a gash along her neck, gave out under pressure. Ellie walked away with $225, thrilled with her newfound employment. She returned the next month only to rip a knee ligament and sue Edwina for unsafe working conditions.

Although Ellie had a little more cat-fight mettle than I did, neither of us really understood "violence work" as well as we might have understood "sex work." After all we were both happily sexually active. But violence was an unknown world to us, except for movies and TV. Unlike the hard-luck women who found nothing to giggle at in Edwina's lectures, we didn't have any firsthand experience beating people up. America hasn't seen a war on its own soil in this century. Increasingly, with the advent of high-tech weaponry, even our soldiers barely know what it feels like to hurt someone. We may have grown inured to violence as much for the ubiquity of its images as our own ignorance about it.

I also learned how much longer a shelf life violence has in our consciousness. Soon after our fights, Ellie discovered that Grace, despite her bodybuilding thighs and sharp long nails, had been like us, a feminist performance artist slumming for a cheap thrill and a quick rent check. My husband ended up befriending Grace, and I am still friends with Ellie. But the two women -- despite their shared community -- continue to hate one another 12 years later, as if their scratches had never healed. Had they been locked in a deep-throat kiss instead of a choke hold, somehow I doubt their feelings would be quite so raw.
salon.com | May 25, 1999

 

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About the writer
Carol Lloyd is the senior editor of Ivory Tower for Salon Books and Urge for Salon Health.

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Fetish nation The sexual underground, amplified by Internet culture, is more visible than ever, celebrating its brave new world of whips, diapers and corsets. But is the rest of America ready to follow?
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