Riding the Donkey Backwards: Men as the
Unacceptable Victims of Marital Violence
MALCOLM J. GEORGE, Department of Physiology, Queen Mary and Westfield College, London, United Kingdom
The Journal of Men's Studies, Volume 3, Number 2, November 1994, p. 137-159
In post-Renaissance France and England, society ridiculed and humiliated
husbands thought to be battered and/or dominated by their wives (Steinmetz,
1977-78). In France, for instance, a "battered" husband was trotted around
town riding a donkey backwards while holding its tail. In England, "abused"
husbands were strapped to a cart and paraded around town, all the while subjected
to the people's derision and contempt. Such "treatments" for these husbands
arose out of the patriarchal ethos where a husband was expected to dominate
his wife, making her, if the occasion arose, the proper target for necessary
marital chastisement; not the other way around (Dobash & Dobash, 1979).
Although the patriarchal view supporting a husband's complete dominance of
his wife persisted into the twentieth century (E. Pleck, 1987), during the
latter half of this century, we find a definite shift in people's attitudes
toward marital relationships. Beginning in the 1970s, for instance, advocates
like Del Martin (1976) and Erin Pizzey (Pizzey 1974; Pizzey & Shapiro,
1982) exposed the "hidden" secret of domestic violence. As a result, terms
like "domestic violence," "domestic abuse," and "battered wife" have found
their way into our everyday speech. Finally, society seems to be taking the
issue of domestic violence against women seriously and looking for solutions
to stem if not to end the violence.
Most of the early research dealing with domestic violence focused solely
on the female victims and the social factors that supported the victimization
of women (Smith, 1989). Consequently, a voluminous literature now exists
that portrays domestic violence as a unitary social phenomenon stemming from
a patriarchal social order where women are portrayed as the victims and men
perceived as the perpetrators (Dobash & Dobash, 1979). Such research
has had a significant impact upon the evolution of recent changes in civil
law, enforcement of criminal law, and the ways law enforcement and social
agencies respond to the needs of battered wives (see Victim Support, 1992).
As noted in the opening section, finding evidence that society in centuries
past found it necessary to punish men who did not uphold the patriarchal
way suggests previous recognition that a husband could be assaulted or dominated
by his wife. In recent years though, such a possibility has found little
support or credence. Rather, the view of husband-as-victim of domestic violence
is more likely a subject of cartoons (Saenger, 1963) or of jokes about
"hen-pecked" husbands (Wilkinson, 1981). In fact, raising the issue of
husband-as-victim has spawned a heated controversy within academic circles
pitting those who have reported such evidence (see Mills, 1990; Mold, 1990;
Straus, Gelles, & Steinmetz, 1980) against those who scoff at such a
possibility (see Pagelow, 1985; Pleck, Pleck, & Bart, 1977; Walker, 1989,
1990).
A number of factors apparently are stoking the debate. Among those most often
cited are the relative numbers of male versus female victims, the methods
used to determine whether or not male victimization has occurred, and the
nature and context of female violence. With respect to this last factor,
the nature and context of female violence, the debate has widened to include
whether the violence perpetrated by a woman against a man is motivated solely
in terms of self-defense from either actual or possible bodily threat, whether
the violence perpetrated by a woman against a man is in retaliation to previous
victimization by a male partner, and whether the resulting injury inflected
on a man by a woman is comparable to that inflicted on a woman by a man.
With respect to the first issue much of the data available on domestic violence
in the United States, for instance, indicates that, as Mildred Daley Pagelow
(1985) argues, females far outnumber males in terms of being the victims
of violence. Such is also the conclusion of a literature review prepared
for the United Kingdom's Home Office (Smith, 1989). Given that most studies
suggest that domestic violence is exclusively perpetrated by men against
women and propose theoretical frameworks to account for this unilateral
condition, men who experience unilateral violence at the hands of their wives
or female partners have been all but neglected. Dismissed by the argument
that few men are actually the victim of spousal abuse or that these few were
in all probability men in denial of their own abuse complaining of their
spouses' self-defense needs, the experiences of such men have warranted sparse
academic concern.
Another feature preventing serious attention toward the issue of battered
men is the belief that studies of battered women will suffice to provide
a background for understanding male victims. Further, it has been suggested
that in those very few cases of battered men that their social and legal
needs are already met within the context of present and available social
and legal provisions (Pagelow, 1985).
Although some argue that the relatively few cases of battered men warrant
little serious study, incidents of battered men have drawn the attention
of numerous social agencies in the United Kingdom, for instance, among the
police (Burrell & Brinkworth, 1994; Kirsta, 1994), police surgeons (Harrison,
1986), counseling agencies (Jaevons, 1992; Kirsta, 1991, 1994; Thomas, 1993),
probation services (Jaevons, 1992), social agencies like the Samaritans,
the Salvation Army, and shelters for the homeless (Harrison, 1986; Jaevons,
1992; Lewin, 1992), psychiatrists and physicians, (Borowski, Murch, &
Walker, 1983; Harrison, 1986; Oswald, 1980), fathers' rights groups (Harrison,
1986), lawyers (Wolff, 1992), and even among those who work with battered
women (L. Davidson, personal communication, April, 1994; ; Kirsta, 1991;
Lewin, 1992; E. Pizzey, personal communication, December, 1992).
This paper addresses the question of male victimization by reviewing research
studies and literature in which domestic violence directed against husbands/male
partners has been found or considered. Further, I argue that more research
is needed to help define the similarities and differences between male and
female victims of domestic violence. The contention that the numbers of battered
men in society are very small and thus present an anomaly to the general
thinking that women are the only "legitimate" subject of domestic violence
is denied. The fact is that taking a serious look at the phenomenon of battered
men may actually be a necessary next step to help "de-contaminate" the study
of domestic violence (Note 1).
ARE MEN VICTIMS? RESEARCH AND CONTROVERSY
Although domestic assaults against men have been reported in the literature
since the 1950s (Bates, 1981; Straus, 1993), the earliest academic reference
to "battered husbands" can be traced to the work of Suzanne Steinmetz (1977,
1977-78). Extrapolating from a small scale study, Steinmetz suggested that
the incidence of "husband beating" rivaled the incidence of "wife battering"
and that it was husband abuse, not wife abuse, that was a largely underreported
form of domestic violence. Her claims received considerable media attention
in the United States and elsewhere, but she was savagely attacked for misreading,
misinterpreting, and misrepresenting her findings by opponents. Pagelow,
for one, (1985) criticized Steinmetz's evidence on a number of grounds, for
instance, the use of aggregate, as opposed to couple samples. Further, she
noted that Steinmetz's work did not address the context in which women were
the perpetrators of violence, namely, "self-defense." Consequently, Pagelow
argued that the claim of husband abuse could not be supported and that the
"battered husband syndrome" was "much ado about nothing."
Despite the criticisms leveled at Steinmetz and her concept of the battered
husband, violence directed at husbands has been reported by others. For instance,
Murray Straus, Richard Gelles, and Suzanne Steinmetz (1980) estimated that
about one in eight men in the United States acted violently during marital
conflict. However, they estimated a similar number of women also acted violently
during marital conflict. They also noted that in a majority of these cases,
violence was a mutual or bilateral activity, with only 27% of cases finding
that husbands were the sole perpetrators of violence and 24% of cases finding
only wives acting violently. With respect to serious violence, as judged
by the Conflict Tactics Scales (Note 2), these authors stated that the rate
for men beaten by their wives was 4.6%; a figure that indicated "over 2 million
very violent wives." While 47% of those husbands who beat their wives did
so severely three or more times a year, 53% of women who beat their husbands
severely did so three or more times a year.
In a later article, Straus and Gelles (1986) reviewed both their own and
other studies in the United States and reported somewhat equivalent assault
rates for both male-to-female and female-to-male. In their 1975 survey, Straus,
Gelles, and Steinmetz (1980) estimated that approximately 38 out of every
1000 families experience severe husband-to-wife violence, while 46 out of
every l000 families experience severe wife-to-husband violence. Ten years
later, Straus & Gelles (1986) reported that the rates have dropped from
38 to 30 and 46 and 44 per 1000 couples, respectively. In overall acts of
violence, as defined by the Conflict Tactics Scales, husband-to-wife rates
of violence were 121 and 113 and wife-to-husband rates of violence were 116
and 121 per 1000 couples for the two study years (i.e., 1975 and 1985).
Although Straus and Gelles (1986) did not dwell on these comparisons, they
did make a statement that seems to run counter to the prevailing academic
and public perception of the time, namely, that "an important and distressing
finding about violence in American families is that, in marked contrast to
the behavior of women outside the family, women are about as violent within
the family as men" (p. 470). The small change in the wife-to-husband rate
of violence, as opposed to some change in the husband-to-wife violence, was
suggested to result from a lack of attention or concern to male victimization.
The case for giving due regard to domestic women-on-men assaults and an
acceptance of this higher level of victimization was backed by reference
to other studies finding similar levels of male victimization (Brutz &
Ingoldsby, 1984; Gelles, 1974; Giles-Sims, 1983; Jourilles & O'Leary,
1985; Lane & Gwartney-Gibbs, 1985; ; Laner & Thompson, 1982; Makepeace,
1983; Sack, Keller, & Howard, 1982; Saunders, 1986; Scanzoni, 1978;
Steinmetz, 1977, 1977-78; Szinovacz, 1983).
In conclusion, summarized such data as Straus and Gelles (1986) indicating
that women engage in minor assaults against their male partners at a slightly
higher rate than for the same attacks upon women by men. In situations in
which both partners use violence, men and women were also almost equally
responsible for the first blow, but in only one quarter of these relationships
was the man the sole victim. At more potentially injurious levels of assault,
men were considered to exceed women in their aggressive behavior and it was
suggested that a relative rate in the order of 6 or 7 to 1 (male versus female)
was evident for the perpetration of injurious assaults.
Returning to the controversy surrounding the issue of violence against husbands,
Straus (1989, 1993) and Straus and Kaufman-Kantor (1994) have extended such
observations and reiterated the importance of giving due consideration to
the issue. Straus (1993) has pointed out that some studies fail to report
findings of female-to-male violence. For instance, Straus noted that in a
Kentucky study of battered wives, the study failed to report a 38% rate of
unilateral female-to-male violence. Straus further noted that in reviewing
over thirty studies, every (Straus's emphasis) study using a sample that
was not self-selecting had found rough equivalence of assault rates for both
women and men (e.g., Brush, 1990; Sorensen & Telles, 1991). Some of the
variation in the reports of incidence of violence directed against husbands
or male partners could be attributed to the difference in whether the studies
surveyed the general population or were based upon samples of reported victims
as found in police records or agencies dealing with domestic violence. The
much lower rates of male victimization evident from studies on samples of
victims of domestic violence drawn from victimization programs police records,
or other similar agencies working in the field were suggested to introduce
a "clinical sample fallacy" into the debate. In contrast evidence derived
from the use of the Conflict Tactics Scales, although widely recognized and
used, has been criticized by some as seemingly giving credence to attacks
by women upon men by erroneously equating female assaults with potentially
more harmful male assaults (e.g., Bogarde, 1990; Kurz, 1993).
Several American and Canadian studies have indicated levels of female violence
against husbands or male partners as more than just an anomaly or a small
percentage of isolated individual cases. For instance, Nisonoff and Bitman
(1979) reported that 15.5% of men and 11.3% of women reported having hit
their spouse, while 18.6% of men and 12.7% of women reported having been
hit by their spouse. Studies of both dating and married/cohabiting couples
have also found that women admit committing unilateral acts of violence against
their male partners at levels not greatly dissimilar to those committed by
men (Arias & Johnson, 1989). In a survey of 884 United States university
students, Breen (1985) found that both male and female students reported
being the victim of an act of violence by a romantic partner in approximately
equal proportions (18% of the men and 14% of the women). And among married
male students, Breen found that 23% reported being slapped, punched, or kicked,
while 9% reported being the victim of an assault involving a weapon and a
similar percentage reported receiving injuries that required them to seek
medical treatment. In a study of particular interest, as it surveyed patients
attending an emergency department, Goldberg and Tomianovich (1984) found
that men constituted 38% of the victims of spousal violence.
Bland and Orn (1986), in a Canadian study of the relationships between family
violence, psychiatric disorder, and alcohol abuse, found that men and women
were nearly equal in committing acts of violence against their partners.
In another study, this time for 562 married and co-habiting couples living
in Calgary, Canada, Brinkerhoff and Lupri (1988) found nearly twice as much
wife-to-husband, as husband-to-wife, severe violence. Using data derived
again from the Conflict Tactics Scales, these researchers reported a 4.7%
rate of severe violence in husband-to-wife relationships while a 10.4% rate
was found for wife-to-husband severe violence. These authors also suggested
that male violence decreased with level of educational attainment, but female
violence increased. Also Sommers, Barnes, and Murray (1992) reported a higher
incidence of at least one incident of partner abuse for females as opposed
to males (39.1% versus 26.3%).
In the United Kingdom, surveys of domestic incidents are more restricted
than the National Family Violence Survey or other comparable surveys in the
United States or Canada (Smith, 1989). However, if we allow as evidence the
reporting in the popular media, evidence of male victims can be found. For
instance, in a UK survey of 2,075 people about family life reported in the
popular press, Moller (1991) reported that three times as many women, as
men, admitted hitting their spouse or partner. Individual case histories
of battered men have also been reported in various popular presses as well
as details of an unpublished British study, using the Conflict Tactics Scales,
where similar results were found (e.g., Kirsta, 1989, 1991, 1994; Stacey
& Cantacuzino, 1993; Wolff, 1992). In an article reviewing a number of
legal cases, Bates (1981) commented that while "little had been written about
male victimization, it was not difficult to find male victims from even a
superficial search of case law."
By contrast, a study of police and court records in Scotland found that only
2.4% of cases involved a male victim (Dobash & Dobash, 1978). Two other
studies in the United Kingdom gave a somewhat different picture. Borowski,
Murch, and Walker (1983) in a survey of fifty general practitioners found
that just over 80% of physicians reported seeing a case of a female victim
of domestic violence about once every six months, but totally unsolicited,
27% of the physicians reported seeing a male victim with about the same
frequency. In a study by psychiatrists in Scotland, Oswald (1980) reported
on 299 women involved in violent relationships. Forty-six percent of these
women reported being both victims of violence by a spouse/partner or near
relative and perpetrators of violence towards their spouse/partner or near
relative. Another 12% stated they had been violent towards a spouse/partner
or near relative, but received no violence from them. In a more recent UK
study, Smith, Baker, Buchan, and Bodiwala (1992) reported on the results
of their gender-blind study of victims of domestic assaults attending Leicester
Royal Infirmary casualty department. Retrospective study of the casualty
department records for 1988, of assault victims of both genders who identified
their injury as arising from "domestic incidents," found an incidence of
male victims of spousal assault. Covering a number of categories of
inter-relational violence within the home, eleven men and 55 women were
positively identified as the victim of an assault by their spouse or partner.
Another six men and 30 women were identified as having been assaulted by
a romantic partner. In the total study of 142 male and 155 female identified
victims, an interesting feature was the fact that 59% of males and 25% of
females did not identify their assailant.
Furthermore, reports of male victims of female-perpetrated domestic violence
can be found using data from Australia (Scutt, 1981). Thus academic literature
reporting studies of domestic violence from four countries (United States,
Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia) has reported an incidence of male
victimization from zero to slightly higher than the incidence of female
victimization. While a surprising number of studies find rates of male
victimization, the data is not always complete. What is clear, however, is
that assaults by women against their husbands or male partners do occur.
This is even acknowledged by some of critics of the concept of "battered
men" (Walker, 1990). Whatever the incidence of female assaults on male partners
is, Pagelow's (1985) view that male victimization hardly ever occurs is being
challenged by numerous researchers coming from a variety of disciplines and
research areas (Macchieto,1992). Further, the debate about battered men is
becoming more heated, as more men come forth and publicly describe their
status as victims of domestic abuse (see Aardoom, 1993; Edwards, 1992;
Greenfield, 1992; Raeside, 1993; Smith, 1992; Thomas, 1993; and Turner, 1988).
ON THE NATURE OF ASSAULTS AGAINST HUSBANDS SELF-DEFENSE?
A major criticism leveled at Steinmetz's claim of "battered husbands" was
that she failed to address the context or the situation that would have prompted
a woman to act violently against her male partner. The critics claimed that
in those (rare) cases when a woman attacked a man such an assault was in
all probability justified in terms of self-defense, stemming from either
his previous assaults or the likelihood of imminent assault. Initially, owing
to this criticism and believing that most assaults by women on men would
be in self-defense, Straus did not pursue any of the initial interest from
the original 1975 survey (Straus, 1993). Subsequently, however, reviewing
both their own and other studies in the United States, somewhat equivalent
assault rates for both male-to-female and female-to-male were identified
and discussed (Straus & Gelles, 1986) in the context of this criticism.
Detailed considerations to take account of the severity of assault, different
reporting and surveying methodologies, and the likelihood that assaults were
in self-defense or in response to previous victimization were addressed.
It was argued from national survey data that the reported rates at which
women admitted a violent act against their spouse and the rate that men reported
an attack upon them, seemed to indicate that all female-to-male violence
could not be exclusively explained as only women retaliating in self-defense.
The responses of women themselves concerning unprovoked assaults on their
male partners also mitigated against self-defense as being the sole reason
for female-to-male violence. Additionally, the higher median and mean rates
of assaultive behavior for women in such studies also mitigates against an
explanation that all assaults by women are in self-defense (McNeely &
Robinson-Simpson, 1987).
She repeatedly started fights, then called the police accusing him of assault.
The cops refused to believe that he had been the victim. It had reached the
point where he would stand with his hands clasped behind his back refusing
to react or retaliate in any way, while she attacked him with her fists and
her nails. (Thomas, 1993, p. 167)
In concluding whether assaults by women were always in self-defense, Straus
(1993) pointed out that every study that had investigated who initiates violence,
using methods that did not preclude the wife as the instigator, has found
that wives instigate violence in a large proportion of cases. Straus' case
that women are likely to be violent in the home is given further support
by observations of the behavior of young women in a youth assessment center.
The levels of aggression and violence by females has been reported to be
as high as for males, but in contrast to the males, is more likely to be
expressed inside the center rather than outside in public places (Kirsta,
1994, p. 322). Straus stresses, however, that the high level of violence
by women in the studies he reviews might not indicate who started the argument
or whether wives attacked as a way of obviating a potential assault from
their physically more able male partner.
Critics of Straus's thesis point out that such evidence against assaults
by wives being in self-defense, which are based upon data obtained from the
Conflict Tactics Scales, fail to take account of the occurrence of acts of
violence before the survey year for which questions are asked and fail to
take account of the more serious potential for injury to women (Bogarde,
1990; Kurz, 1993; Pagelow, 1985). Thus, it is suggested that assaults by
women may be a result of abuse and violence in previous years by the husband
or male partner. Straus (1993), in reply to such criticism, has stated that
he considers at least some writers to misrepresent his published work in
respect to the victimization of both women and men (e.g., Kurz, 1993). Nowhere
perhaps is controversy more acute than in the argument over assaults made
by women that result in death of their male partner. In this instance,
considerable attention has been paid to the cumulative process of abuse that
may lead a woman to commit such an attack out of shear desperation (Walker,
1993). Even here, however, Mann (1989) has propounded that there is room
for doubting that all such attacks are as a result of "delayed" self-defense
by noting that not one woman in her sample of women imprisoned for murdering
husbands or lovers had been battered. Straus (1989, 1993) and Sommer, Barnes,
and Murray (1992) have also noted that other studies of homicides indicate
women not acting in self-defense.
INJURY OR NON-INJURY?
The final dismissal of violence by wives against husbands or male partners
derives from the assumption that female violence is not as injurious or is
less injurious than violence perpetrated by men. Data already discussed indicates
that assaults by women on men can fall into the more serious category of
the Conflict Tactics Scales or, in other words, the level of assault at which
there is much greater risk of injury. Reviewing data obtained in hospitals,
both Goldberg and Tomianovich (1984) and Smith (et al., 1992) found that
male victims received injuries that required medical attention. Smith (et
al. 1992) also reported that males tended to receive more severe injuries
and lost consciousness more often than women.
[A] man was admitted to Barts [St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London] after
his wife had split his head with a meat knife. He was lucky to escape with
his life. (quoted in Harrison, 1986, p. 34)
I've sewn up men who have had crockery thrown at them and bottles smashed
over their heads. I once saw a man who looked as if he'd walked into a
steamroller ... he was covered in bruises and cuts. (quoted in Harrison,
1986, p. 35)
In one well publicized case last year, Mrs. D... C..., ripped off one of
her husbands testicles. Surgeons failed to save it and the judge ordered
the woman to pay £480 in costs. A judge ordered Mrs. C... to pay court
costs of £480 but did not make a compensation order. (quoted in Wolff,
1992, p. 22)
It must be pointed out, however, that in the case of the United Kingdom study
(Smith et al, 1992), victims had been attacked by a variety of related and
unrelated aggressors in the home, and some male victims could have received
greater injuries as a result of attacks by men. The upper body strength of
the average woman is less than that of the average man and so it is possible
to argue that there is less ability to injure. However, the difference in
strength need not be large (Fausto-Sterling, 1992). Reference has also been
made to the disparities in method of assault used by women as opposed to
men (Flynn, 1990; Straus, 1980) whereby a woman attacking a man tends to
use methods of assault not dependent upon strength, for example, using a
household implement as a weapon. Seeking to determine whether females sustained
greater injury than males, McLeod (1984) reported on an analysis of 6,200
cases of domestic assaults reported to law enforcement officers or the National
Crime Survey interviewers. Therein, she reported that women, in attacking
men, were more likely to use weapons (75% of females used weapons while 25%
of males did so). Although the numbers of women attacked in the sample were
larger, the extent of the injuries suffered by the male victims tended to
be more serious. Thus women made up for their lack of physical strength by
using a weapon, usually a household object. The prevalence of women using
weapons has been reported in United Kingdom studies (George, 1992) as well
as in an Australian study of battered husbands (B. Thurston, personal
communications, May-November, 1993). These findings are in keeping with the
suggestion that women are more prone to use weapons and forms of assault
that do not depend upon physical strength for their efficacy (Straus, 1980).
The rate at which men might report injuries, and indeed attacks, was also
suggested to conceal the extent of male victimization; a point that has been
made by others (Mack, 1989; McNeely & Robinson-Simpson, 1987). Evidence
that men view attacks made upon them and the resulting injuries somewhat
differently than women's reactions was presented by Adler (1981) in a paper
that was essentially refuting domestic violence against men. The consequence
of this tendency to underreport, which is also very evident by women victims,
would have considerable implications for the reported incidence of male
victimization.
I suffered broken ribs.... I certainly never seriously contemplated taking
any action that might have resulted in her being charged with assault. (Scottish
victim, abstracted from a personal letter to author, March, 1992)
In any case, Straus (1989, 1993) has pointed out that dismissing male
victimization on the basis of less or lack of injury has implications for
the whole consideration of domestic violence. By noting the difference between
the figures derived from the Conflict Tactics Scales studies and injury adjusted
rates, he pointed out that the number of women victimized would be drastically
reduced, even though they had still been technically assaulted in the home
and potentially left fearful. Thus it could also be considered an inequity
to dismiss non-injurious attacks against men on this basis and assumes that
even non-injurious attacks on a man are of no psychological trauma; a view
that presupposes a stereotypical attitude towards men. Psychological trauma
of men as a result of threat or stressful life events is established by
literature from both physiological and psychological studies (Frankenhaeuser,
1975; Stoney, Davis, & Mathews, 1987) and the social sciences (e.g.,
Travato, 1986).
The danger is, however, that this view could either result in, or be used
to legitimize, subsequent attacks by the man (Straus, 1989,1993; Straus &
Gelles, 1986). It is clearly appropriate that concern should be addressed
to even non-injurious assault given the fact that medically it is well
established that, for instance, blows to the head need only inflict superficial
soft-tissue injury to be associated with loss of consciousness and potential
for neural or cerebrovascular trauma (Kelly, Nichols, Filey, Lilliehei,
Rubinstein, & Kleinschmidt-DeMasters, 1991).
THE CONTEXT OF VIOLENCE?
Little attention has been paid within the debate over battered husbands as
to the reasons why women might attack their male partners other than for
reasons of self-defense (Makepeace, 1983; Walker, 1984). The prevalent thinking
underlying why men attack their female partners rests upon the notion that
men need to control women (Dobash & Dobash, 1979; Makepeace, 1983; Walker,
1984). In contrast, even Straus (1993) tends to discuss female violence against
male partners only with reference to either self-defense or "slap the cad"
scenarios that imply an element of justification.
Not all accounts accept the notion that a woman's aggressive behavior toward
a man is a consequence of her need to protect herself from imminent danger,
though. For instance, in a chapter dealing with violent women, Shupe, Stacey,
and Hazlewood (1987) argue against the "universal" application of the
self-defense motive in women's aggression noting that "women's violence cannot
be dismissed as sheer rationalization" (p. 52). Women can act in very aggressive
ways for reasons other than self-defense. Certainly, the aggression found
among some lesbian couples cannot be attributed to self-defense only (Hart,
1986; Renzetti, 1992), including among some couples a high level of sexual
coercion (Waterman, Dawson, & Bologna, 1989). The fact is that women
are capable of performing instrumental acts of aggression against their partners.
Some have argued that women's aggression toward men, as well as men's toward
women, can be attributed to their need to dominate, possess, or from feelings
of insecurity (Marsh, 1976). In the author's governmental report dealing
with battered men (George, 1992), two thirds of the male victims surveyed
identified "bullying" or "control" as the major reason why they felt their
wives used violence in their relationship. Similar findings are also reported
in studies of abused husbands in Australia (B. Thurston, personal communications,
May-November, 1993) and Canada (Gregorash, 1993). Bates (1981), in his review
of legal cases, such as Willan vs. Willan (United Kingdom), Keehn vs. Keehn
(United States), Green vs. Green (Canada), and Sangster vs. Sangster (South
Australia), found evidence of bullying, massive ill-treatment, and acts that
caused danger to life and limb. Thus these isolated reports of male victims
seem to indicate that, at least in some cases, violence directed at men by
their wives has very similar motivation and content to that reported for
men's aggression against their wives.
Also as women are often the victims of sexual aggression (Walker, 1989),
reports of male victims of female sexual abuse can be found in the literature
(Bates, 1981; Stets & Pirgood, 1989; Struckman-Johnson, 1988; Swet, Survey,
& Cohan, 1990; Thomas, 1993; Travin, Cullen, & Potter 1990). Further,
such sexual abuse can be very devastating for the male victims (Sarrel &
Masters, 1982).
Some have suggested that battered husbands may precipitate their wives' violence
by being "emotionally unresponsive" (Harrison, 1986; Kusta, 1991), inattentive
(Straus, 1993), or being physically weak or disabled (Pagelow, 1985). The
suggestion, however, that a man's "emotional passivity" or "inattentiveness"
may be the cause for some women's assaultive behavior can hardly be used
to justify such behavior. Arguably, we would never justify a man's assault
on a woman, for instance, for her passivity or inattentiveness.
Early accounts of battered wives echoed popular misconceptions that such
women were to blame for their victimization (Pizzey & Shapiro, 1982).
Recently, such victim blaming has been firmly rebutted as little more than
a mechanism for the abuser to escape or excuse his antisocial actions (Smith,
1989). Victim blaming is also very much a problem suffered by battered men;
while it's roots lie in humor of the hen-pecked husband variety, it can also
be seen within academic analysis of violence against husbands. For instance,
Adler (1981) suggested that some men may be accepting and unconcerned by
their partners assaults, express jocularity at them, and thus see no reason
to end the relationship despite being exposed to violence. It is open to
question whether such denial by a victim of his victimization is anything
other than an attempt to suppress such feelings and to escape stigmatization
by using humor, even though self-directed. Men may view violence towards
them and even the resulting injuries with little overt concern, arguably
though experiencing inward trauma, all because of the need to deny a sense
of their vulnerability (Levant, 1991). The "slap the cad" scenario would
seem to be an instance of the application of blame on the male victim based
on stereotypical notions that it is not injurious and that men should accept
such admonishment for any and all perceived failings in their behavior.
A confluence between male and female domestic violence in terms of defined
psychiatric conditions was suggested by Bates (1981), although it has also
been estimated independently that less than ten per cent of family violence
can be explained by psychopathology (Gelles & Straus, 1988). In contrast,
some have suggested that family violence is highly prevalent among individuals
with particular mental health problems (Gondolf, Mulvey, & Lidz, 1989).
Sommers, Barnes, and Murray (1992) have criticized the view, derived from
sociological study, that mental disorders play a negligible role in the genesis
of family violence. For instance, Bland and Orn (1986) found a positive
correlation between certain personality disorders, alcohol abuse, and violence
against either a spouse or children in both male and female aggressors. Sommers,
Barnes, and Murray (1992) found certain factors more predictive for both
female and male abusers, namely, being young and achieving high scores on
Eysenck's Psychoticism Scale, the Neurotiscism Index, and the McAndrew Scale.
Similarly, O'Leary (1993) found that the men in his sample who batter also
scored high on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, measures
of emotional lability, or evidenced certain personality disorders.
Thus, despite the fact that certain psychiatric conditions are thought associated
with a propensity toward violence, there has been relatively little consideration
of the role of psychiatric/psychological criteria in the genesis of inter-spousal
violence in much of the literature. For instance, jealousy has been linked
to patterns of abuse and even homicide among men and women (Bourlet, 1990;
Docherty & Ellis, 1976; Freeman, 1990; Renzetti, 1992; Seeman, 1979;
Tarrier, Beckett, & Ahmed, 1989).
If we are to develop a cogent theory of the causes of family violence we
need to integrate and define the interplay between the social, psychological,
and physiological factors (Johnston & Campbell, 1993). Rather than assume
we have all the answers by focusing only on the social (e.g., issues of power
in relationships) or the psychological (e.g., need to dominate), we must
look at all the possibilities. For instance, further research is needed to
understand better the underlying neurochemical abnormalities (e.g., dysfunction
of the Raphe 5-Hydroxytryptamine system), which leads to impulsivity, heightened
aggressiveness, and violent behaviors in some individuals. Medical studies
indicate that some women, as well as some men, are found to have conditions
that might predispose towards violence and abuse of a partner (Brown et al.,
1979; Lidberg, Asberg, & Sundqvist-Stensman, 1984; Lidberg et al., 1985;
Linnoila et al., 1983). Rather than focus on purely social theories of family
violence we need to reexamine partner abuse in light of what the neurosciences
can tell us of such behaviors as well.
MEN AS VICTIMS: THE GREAT TABOO
Straus & Gelles (1986) sum up much of the problem we find when discussing
male victims of female violence when they say "Violence by wives has not
been an object of public concern. There has been no publicity, and no funds
have been invested in ameliorating this problem because it has not been defined
as a problem" (p. 472, italics added). It can be argued that by defining
wife battering as the problem, and husband battering as a non-problem, realistic
estimates of husband-battering, be they large or small, are nearly impossible
to obtain. It is easy, for instance, to argue that battered husbands occur
only as rare and isolated cases. Nearly all male victims are isolated individuals
owing to the relative paucity of groups willing to acknowledge their victim
status. The fact is that a large proportion of the social agencies that deal
with family violence target only female victims. Thus we should not be surprised
if these groups do not find evidence of male victims of domestic violence.
Further, the politicized nature of domestic violence among many within academia
mitigates against finding any evidence of male victims (Note 3). Consequently,
some professionals, like mental health professionals, may be insensitive
or even hostile to a man describing himself in victim terms (Macchieto, 1992).
Added to all this, the traditional stereotypes give creditability to a woman
to be seen as a victim. The stereotypes associated with men, however, lead
most to deny such a possibility or to ridicule' such a notion as male-as-victim
(Farrell, 1993; Wilkinson, 1981). This clearly deters men from making such
an admission (Machietto, 1992; Steinmetz, 1980). Also, male victims may be
aware, if only dimly, that to proclaim victim status will only lead to
unfavorable or unequal treatment compared with female victims (Harris &
Cook, 1994).
If a man is attacked by his wife and decides to call the police, he is the
one who is likely to be arrested. (quoted in Wolff, 1992, p. 22)
She was knocking the shit out of me; no one would believe me. (Male victim
and resident of the Kingsland Estate, Hackney, London, England speaking on
Kingsland, Channel 4, television documentary, 4th June 1992)
When you are talking to your mates, it's hard to admit you're being bullied
by a woman. (quoted in Kent, 1993, p. 37)
If they knew how she knocks me about, and the fact that every time it happens
she manages to take me by surprise, catching me off guard, can you imagine
how they'd take the piss? (quoted in Kirsta, 1994, p. 237)
Steinmetz (1980) has suggested that some men, following traditional social
norms, consider it unmanly to attack or even retaliate against an assault
by a woman. Further, when men and women rate violent male-female interactions,
they perceive male-to-female aggression as more negative than female-to-male
aggression (Arias & Johnson, 1989). By implication, female-to-male violence
has a type of social acceptance not accorded to male-to-female violence
(Greenblatt, 1983). Thus while it is argued that "society does not appear
to shape the attitudes of most men and women to accept the use of violence
by men against women..." (O'Leary, 1993, p. 24), we could suggest that society
does appear to condone the use of violence by a woman against a man.
And finally, the whole issue of male victimization can be suggested to receive
scant attention because of the threat it poses to masculine self images and
"patriarchal" authority, as much as for any threat it poses towards efforts
to counter female victimization. The lack of attention of female aggression,
as opposed to male aggression, has been suggested to be rooted in scholarly
debates on nature, culture, and gender in which "sameness" or "differences"
are key issues; but actually result from a reluctance to consider similarities
between men and women, as opposed to differences (Fry & Gabriel, 1994).
Thus it is not surprising that domestic violence against women, as opposed
to men, is a socially acceptable concern and receives study and support.
This reinforces two more easily recognized social stereotypes, female
vulnerability and male authority or dominance, and protectiveness. The admission
and recognition of male victimization, in the battered husband, is the antithesis
of this acceptable order and an equality between the sexes that has been
resisted historically, especially by men (e.g., see judgments in the Willan
vs. Willan and Teal vs. Teal cases, Bates, 1981).
It can be argued that the social values (e.g., patriarchy) that form the
foundation for male violence against women, also underpin the lack of acceptance
of the battered husband. Why the "battered husband syndrome" is so belittled
and considered a non-social problem can be found in the patriarchal ethos
that reinforces female victimization. By rooting the debate on domestic violence
only in notions such as gender and physical size or strength, rather than
the inherent attitudes and propensity of individuals to use violence and
abuse as an interrelational strategy, female victimization will continue
as will the unseen victimization of some men both inside and outside the
home. The fact that so many in society, including some academics, are so
unwilling to accept the unilateral battering of men by women stems, in large
part, from the deep and profoundly disturbing challenge such a fact poses
to cherished male and female stereotypes.
While most only view male victims of domestic violence as the subject of
incredulity or objects of humor, the fact is that some men are battered.
No matter their number, battered men deserve better than to be seen as little
more than footnotes from earlier historical periods when they were castigated
and forced to ride a donkey backwards.
NOTES
1. Richard Gelles and Murray Straus (1988), two of the leading researchers
in family violence, have described how the often inflammatory debate over
the issue of battered men helped to squelch any serious study of the subject
as well as sent a signal to many well-intentioned scholars to avoid the field
totally. They write:
Perhaps the most unfortunate outcome of the wrangle over battered men is
that since the debate in the late 1970s, there has been virtually no additional
research carried out on the topic. The furor among social scientists and
in the public media has contaminated the entire topic. Consequently, we have
refused every request for an interview or to appear on any talk show on this
topic for fear of yet again being misquoted, miscast, or misrepresented.
Other social scientists who witnessed the abuse heaped on our research
groupespecially on Suzanne Steinmetzhave given the topic of battered
men a wide berth. (pp. 105-106, italics added)
2. The Conflict Tactics Scales, devised by Murray Straus (1978, 1979) and
several co-workers at the University of Minnesota, consists of several scales
designed to assess the various ways that family members try to deal with
conflicts in the home. The Conflict Tactics Scales is divided in three parts,
with one part asking a series of questions about escalating levels of threatened
or actual physical assault between adult partners. Starting with "Threatened
to hit or throw something at the other," it concludes with "used a knife
or gun on the other." The eight point scale is often analyzed by researchers
in terms of less serious and more serious violence; more serious violence
being those acts more likely to cause injury. See Straus (1993) for a recent
discussion of the validity and criticisms of The Conflict Tactics Scales.
3. We could argue that "husband-battering" is a more emotionally contested
and politically charged issue in the U.S. than in many other industrialized
countries. In Sweden, for instance, refuges have been established for male
victims of domestic violence (Kirsta, 1994). In another example of the difference
in attitudes toward male victims, Detective Inspector Sylvia Aston, West
Midlands Police Force (UK), reported:
We've made absolutely sure through our training that no officer will ever
dismiss a male domestic violence victim just because he's a man. We don't
take the attitude that a man can leavemany can't And it's invariably
the nice sensitive ones who get battered. I think we risk going down a very
dangerous path by discriminating between the sexes in these offenses. Some
of the most violent people I've dealt with as an officer are women, and if
you don't judge a woman by her crime, but by her gender, then not only do
you perpetrate the old, misleading stereotypes but you risk such offenses
recurring, perhaps in another relationship. Domestic violence as we see it
is not a women's issueit's a social issue. (quoted in Kirsta, 1994,
p. 229)
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