Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
376019 Women's Studies International Forum 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

SynopsisThe 2011 prosecution in New York City of former IMF chief and potential French presidential challenger Dominique Strauss-Kahn (DSK) for charges of ‘non-consensual forced sexual acts’ on hotel maid Nafissatou Diallo became a transnational affair. The ‘malestream discourse’ that swept through the French media shortly thereafter revealed a stubborn tolerance for sexual violence rooted in French history and public philosophy. A culture of privacy and privilege inherited from the monarchy, incompletely challenged by the revolution, has left the republic with a public philosophy glorifying a masculine form of virile citizenship confining women to the private sphere. This has led to a partially democratized polity and a malfunctioning of the public sphere. From a political theory perspective, and based on content analysis, the article shows how the DSK Affair exemplifies the simultaneous over-publicization and over-privatization at work in the French Republic, leading to both the misrepresentation of women in politics and an anachronistic understatement of their private-sexual mistreatment.

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