Hey Peter, Dominique's overt behavior shows her sexual invitation on several occasions. She comes back to the quarry day after day, checking Howard out, trying to pick him up without seeming to be trying. She invites him up to fix her broken fireplace (the movie was, perhaps unintentionally, more candid about this when she asks him "How would you like to earn some extra money?" Who can forget that shot of Cooper pounding a pneumatic drill, almost as big as he is, into the stone?). She reacts angrily when he sends Pasquale Orsini in his place.
You're evidence only supports the argument that the woman in question was sexually attracted to the man. It also suggests that she was not at all clear how she intended to act upon that attraction, if at all. Her right as an individual extends not only to her desire, but to her ability to choose. Honestly, when you read these scenes for the first time, did you imagine that Roark was gonna barge into her house and rape her? As their flirtation proceeded, did that seem like what she was after to you? How then does Roark reach this conclusion, and more to the point, why would he even care?
You make the typical mistake of defining the scene solely on the evidence of Miss Francon's actions and her state of mind. Even Ayn Rand fell into that trap with her “engraved invitation” remark (hey, she wrote the book in the 40's, what's your excuse?). Would the fact that someone begged you to shoot them in the head mitigate the fact that you murdered them? Good golly, does personal responsibility simply not apply to sex? (Well, I guess it does if you're the woman. ;-) ) And let’s not forget that Dominique Francon is a 26 year old virgin at the time; she’s bound to have some pretty unrealistic notions about the act.
As I said in my last post: the real issue is not whether Dominique found sick pleasure in being forced, but rather what in blazes does Roark think he is doing? Roark does what he wants for his own reasons. Roark has never acted because someone else wanted him to. Seriously, do you really think he did this thing to please her? That’s a level of self-sacrifice worthy of Peter Keating: “Well, dear, if you really want me to rape you, what can I say? I suppose it is my civic duty to shove you down and take you right now.”
But this is Howard Roark we’re talking about. Rand states his intent clearly enough in the book:
He did it as an act of scorn. Not as love, but as defilement. Defilement. "Sex as an act of defilement." It's hard for me to get around such a straight forward definition. Force is force. Are you saying that there's a context in which Roark didn't hold her down and forcibly penetrate her as she struggled to escape? A context that exists outside the twisted mind of Dominique Francon? If you did this to a woman you barely knew, could you convince anyone that you hadn't just raped her? "But she made eyes at me! She asked me to fix her fireplace!" The book has been in print for over 60 years. If it were sending bad messages and encouraging rape, we would have heard about it by now. I don't imagine you expect me to take this last bit too seriously, but how exactly would we have "heard about it?" Serial Rapist Found With Copy of Novel in Back Pocket? How many people do you imagine have turned away from Objectivism because of this one scene? Is that a wholly irrational response? You want to know how it sends bad messages and encourages rape? Because redefining this rape scene as something benign and consensual is the price some are willing to pay to become Objectivists. And if they will engage in this kind of moral slipperiness simply to join a club, reason suggests that they might find their morality slipping in the face of more powerful urges.
I’m interested in Objectivism, not justifying Ayn Rand’s sexual fantasy life.
Personally, I think it’s a flaw in Rand's depiction of her ideal man. Howard Roark’s behavior in the novel is exhilaratingly ethical until his response to Miss Francon’s question here:
"Why didn't you come to set the marble?"
"I didn't think it would make any difference to you who came. Or did it, Miss Francon?"
Of course I had no idea at that point what shape their first sexual encounter would take, but I was surprised and disappointed by this remark coming from a character who was fast becoming my favorite straight shooter in American literature. On the face of it, this response struck me as a load of b.s. Of course he knew it would make a difference. Is Howard playing head games with her? He seems to be pretending to a kind of innocence belied by his previous behavior. The Howard Roark I was getting to know would have said something a little more honest: “I didn’t want to play your game, Miss Francon. If you’re interested in me the way I’m interested in you, drop the pretense.” On the other hand, maybe he didn’t know. Maybe he’s so self-absorbed that her real motives and desires are a mystery to him. In which case, what did he think he was doing?
As I said, I’m still reading (hey, Donald and Teresa, no worries, I'll finish it; fascinating book, yeah?). I do think Dominique’s nihilism severely limits her openness to sexual fulfillment. I think Rand masterfully describes Dominique’s psychology throughout the scene. It's a gripping and horrific scene. I just don’t understand why Roark the hero hadda get himself involved in Dominique’s psychosis, when he’d been able to eschew every madness that he’d encountered up to that point. Love makes you do crazy things I guess. I dare say, if Ms. Rand hadn't written in the preface that Roark was some kind of flawless hero, we wouldn't be having this conversation in the first place. Fascinating book, yeah?
-Kevin
(Edited by Kevin Haggerty on 9/03, 1:27pm)
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