... masz przeżywać życie, a nie je opisywać.
58. S. Haley, „The Vietnam Veteran and His Pre-School Child: Child Rearing as a Delayed Stress in Combat Veterans", Journal of Contemporary Psychot- herapy 41 (1983): s. 114-21. 59. T. S. Foley, „Family Response to Rape and Sexual Assault", (w:) Rape and Se- xual Assault: A Research Handbook, A. Burgess (red.), s. 159-188; C. Erickson, „Rape and the Family", (w:) Treating Stress in Families, C. Figley (red.) (Nowy Jork: Brunner/Mazel, 1990), s. 257-89. 60. Wed³ug: „If I can survive this..." (Cambridge, MA, Boston Area Rape Crisis Center, 1985). Film video. 61. C. C. Nadelson, M. T. Norman, H. Zackson i in., „A Follow-up Study of Rape Victims", American Journal of Psychiatry 139 (1982): s. 1266-70; J. V. Becker, L. J. Skinner, G. G. Abel i in., „Time-Limited Therapy with Sexually Dysfunc- tional Sexually Assaulted Women", Journal of Social Work and Human Sexu- ality 3 (1984): s. 97-115. 62. Wed³ug: Warshaw, I Neuer Called It Rape, s. 76. 63. 0'Brien, The Things They Carried, s. 163. 64. Grinker i Spiegel, Men Under Stress; A. Schuetz, „The Homecomer", American Journal of Sociology 50 (1944-45): s. 369-76; Lifton, Home from the War, C. Figley and S. Levantman (red.), Strangers at Home: Vietnam Veterans Siñce the War (Nowy Jork: Praeger, 1980). 65. M. P. Koss, „Hidden Rape: Sexual Aggression and Victimization in a National Sample of Students of Higher Education", (w:) Rape and Sexual Assault, t. 2, A. W. Burgess (red.) (Nowy Jork: Garland, 1987), s. 3-26. Spoœród badanych kobiet, opowiadaj¹cych o sytuacji, w której wymuszono na nich wspó³¿ycie - jest to oficjalna definicja gwa³tu - tylko 27% okreœli³o swoje prze¿ycie jako „ewidentny gwa³t". 66. Ów podstawowy problem z definicj¹ znajduje odzwierciedlenie w tytu³ach wielu ostatnich prac na temat gwa³tu, np.: S. Estrich, Real Rape (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987); Koss, Hidden Rape; Warshaw, I Neuer Called It Rape. 67. Estrich, Real Rape; C. MacKinnon, „Feminism, Marxism, Method and the State: Toward Feminist Jurisprudence", Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 8 (1983): s. 635-58. 68. New York Radical Feminists Speakout on Rape, 1971, wed³ug: Connell i Wil- son, Rape: The First Sourcebook for Women, s. 51. 69. Boston Area Rape Crisis Center, „If I can survive this..." Film video, 1985. 70. Hendin i Haas, Wounds of War, s. 44-45. 257 71. Bart i O'Brien, Stopping Rape; Becker i in., „Time-Limited Therapy". 72. Bart i O'Brien, Stopping Rape; Warshaw, I Never Called It Rape; A. Medea i K. Thompson, Against Rape: A Surviva³ Manua³ for Women (Nowy Jork: Farrar, Straus i Giroux, 1974). 73. Nadelson i in., „Study of Rape Victims". 74. Lifton, „Concept of the Survivor", s. 124. 75. C. Shatan, „The Grief of Soldiers: Vietnam Combat Veterans' Self-Help Move- ment", American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 43 (1973): s. 640-53. 76. Grinker i Spiegel, Men Under Stress; Figley i Levantman, Strangers At Ho- me. 77. D. Lessing, „My Father", (w:) A Smali Personal Voice (Nowy Jork: Random House, 1975). 78. O'Brien, The Things They Carried, s. 76. 79. Lifton, Home from the War; Figley i Leventman, Strangers At Home. 80. Wywiad, K. Smith, 1991. 81. MacKinnon, Feminism, Marxism, Method, s. 651. 82. Estrich, Real Rape; MacKinnon, Feminism, Marxism, Method. 83. MacKinnon, Feminism, Marxism, Method; Estrich, Real Rape; Brownmiller, Against Our Will; Bart i O'Brien, Stopping Rape; Connell i Wilson (red.), Rape: The First Sourcebook For Women (Nowy Jork: New American Library, 1974). 84. Russel, Sexual Exploitation. Potwierdzaj¹ to dane zebrane przez Koss (1987): jej szeroko zakrojone badania nad wiktymizacj¹ studentek wykaza³y, ¿e tylko 8% gwa³tów zg³oszono organom œcigania. 85. Burgess i Holmstrom, „Adaptive Strategies". 86. Estrich, Real Rape, s. 3. Rozdzia³ 4 1. G. L. Borovsky i D. J. Brand, „Personality Organization and Psychological Functioning of the Nuremberg War Criminals", (w:) Suruiuors, Victims, and Perpetrators: Essays on the Nazi Holocaust, J. E. Dimsdale (red.) (Nowy Jork: Hemisphere, 1980), s. 359-403; J. Steiner, „The SS Yesterday and To- day: A Sociopsychological View", (w:) Dimsdale, Survivors, Victims, and Per- petrators, s. 405-56; J. L. Herman, „Considering Sex Offenders: A Model of Addiction", Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 13 (1988): s. 695- 724. 2. H. Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report of the Banality of Evil, wyd. II (Nowy Jork: Penguin Books, 1964), s. 276. 3. G. Orwell, Rok 1984, t³um. Tomasz Mirkowicz, Warszawa, 1989, s. 175. 4. A. Dworkin, Pornography: Men Possessing Women (Nowy Jork: Perigee, 1981); C. MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified, cz. 3: Pornography (Cambridge: Har- vard University Press, 1987). 5. Amnesty International, Report on Torturê (Nowy Jork: Farrar, Straus i Giroux, 1973). Raport dotyczy przede wszystkim prac Alfreda Bidermana, który bada³ skutki „prania mózgu" u amerykañskich jeñców wojennych. Patrz: A. D. Bider- 258 man, „Communist Attempts to Elicit False Confessions from Air Force Prisoners of War", Bulletin of New York Academy of Medicine 33 (1957): s. 616-25. Patrz te¿: I. E. Farber, H. F. Harlow i L. J. West, „Brainwashing, Conditioning, and DDD (Debility, Dependency and Dread)", Sociometry 23 (1957): s. 120-47. 6. K. Barry, „Did I Ever Really Have a Chance: Patriarchal Judgment of Patricia Hearst", Chrysa³is 1 (1977): s. 7-17; K. Barry, C. Bunch i S. Castley (red