Image: New York
Times
Tallahassee is the textbook definition of a
college town. Despite being Florida’s state capitol, it doesn’t have much going
on other than that and FSU. Living in Tallahassee is like living in a strange
microcosm, which glorifies nothing above its young, talented athletes. Football
players are raised to a level of apotheosis as we refer to our star quarterback
as “Jameis Christ” and disregard every crime he may commit in the name of his
football stardom. Just as big as the problem of rape itself is the harmful rape
culture perpetuated rhetorically by the media, but even more importantly by students
on social media.
FSU students and fans are biased by definition
when it comes to discussing anything concerning FSU football, but just as in is
typical in most it has proved difficult for them to admit to being so. The
Lazere piece on biasness discusses how difficult it is to “recognize the biases
in ourselves and sources of information that support any group we identify
with- in contrast to how easy it is to recognize biases of other individuals
and supporters of other groups.” Football fandoms are perhaps one of the most ruthlessly
biased groups today, and have found a home within social media.
Florida State University football has a strong
Twitter presence, more so than any other aspect on on-campus culture. There are
several twitter accounts dedicated solely to tweeting FSU football news and
other miscellaneous tweets. The FSU community is united, and informed through
the Twitter world, and during Jameis Winston’s year long sexual assault
investigation, it was a controversial mess of victim shaming slander.
Any person who thought Jameis Winston may be
guilty was a “traitor” to Florida State, a school whose football winnings have
recently constructed an “unconquered” prideful atmosphere. In a city so heavily driven
by not only the cultural, but economic impact of its college football team,
justice often gets lost in the cleat dust.
This controversy has become subject to vast
disagreement across different platforms. This is to be expected however,
because as the Christian Kock and Lisa S. Villadson piece “Rhetorical
Citizenship and Public Deliberation” discusses, “controversies are more
complicated than disagreements between two parties,” the issue of rape culture
on college campuses is without a doubt a complex one.
Image- Phil Sears/associated press
As is customary in many modern rape cases, the
victim was blamed in the Jameis Winston case. The victim of Winston’s sexual
assault case’s name was leaked on an anonymous website called FSUacb, a forum
ran by members of the Greek community. After her name was released, her
sorority received bomb threats, she received death threats and was forced to
transfer universities for her own safety. And Winston was given a trophy and a
national championship. College football is a powerful motivator, which can
drive fans to put somebody in danger for simply reporting a rape case. But this
all is perpetuated and strengthened by social media platforms allowing users to
share information that can potentially harm another student.
In
addition to stealing crab legs, soda cups, and shooting squirrels with a BB gun
ironically enough on a trial popularly known across campus as “the rape trail,”
days before the FSU game against Clemson, Jameis Winston was reported by
several student’s Twitter accounts to have stood up on a table in the student
union shouting “fuck her right in the pussy!” This expression, which quotes a
popular Internet meme, is obviously inappropriate for a person who has been
investigated for rape to shout at all, let alone in such a public area. Due to
the indisputable evidence of his action, Winston was, for the first time in his
entire history of offenses, suspended from a football game. To say the reaction
to Winston’s actions across social media outlets was negative would be an
understatement. The students who tweeted about Jameis’ actions were chastised
by other angry students via various social media outlets such as Facebook,
Twitter, and the newly popular anonymous app Yik Yak. Winston’s actions yet
again contributed to the harmful construction of rape culture across the FSU
campus. Students were outraged at Winston’s suspension, claiming that he’s
“just a normal college student” and that “anybody would have done that.”
Students even popularized the phrase “fuck Clemson right in the pussy” across
social media and made signs referencing it on national television for ESPN’s
College Game Day.
Image: Bjorn Morton/ Tallahassee
Democrat
These
actions construct Florida State’s student body as nothing more than an immature
mass of bumbling football fans, who prioritize football over nearly everything.
As discussed in the Lazere piece on avoiding oversimplification, it is easy to
fall into the habit of overlooking an issue of which one has a strong emotional
investment. “Wishful thinking and authoritarianism block us from developing the
mindset needed to question the validity of our culturally conditioned
assumptions.” In this, football fans are less of a villainous mass and more of
a culturally conditioned body too set in societally implemented prejudices to
see any error in their thinking.
Recently,
social media has erupted with claims from FSU fans that the media (ESPN, New
York Times, USA Today) hates Florida State, Jameis Winston, and is in effect doing
everything in its power to destroy FSU’s image. Considering the teams’ success
on field, and Jameis Winston’s shenanigans off the field, it would be naïve to
believe that the media would leave FSU alone. But this hasn’t stopped fans from
rebelling against any news source that does anything but praise the university.
As a result of the hyper-focus on FSU the media has been showing, FSU fans
launched the “Blame Jameis” hashtag, which was regarded as many on social media
as “the funniest thing I’ve ever seen.” The joke in the hashtag essentially
claims that Jameis Winston, a person was in fact responsible (or allegedly
responsible) for every single incident he’s been criticized for, is unfairly
blamed for everything. Thus launched the viral meme which included jokes
further trivializing rape such as “got a D on my chemistry final #blamejameis”
or “ebola #blamejameis.” What obviously was intended at a joke is more than
anything a reflection on the misinterpretation FSU students have about severity
of sexual assault.
FSU recently discontinued a campaign called
“FSU Men Measure Up” which drew its statistics from a voluntary online survey
of FSU’s men about sexual consent. The campaign proudly plastered posters
showcasing statistics like “91% of FSU men believe that if a woman has her
clothes off, she still has the right to say no to sex.” To put this into
perspective FSU was essentially bragging that amongst its student body of
40,000+ students, which is about half men, only 9% of those 20,000 or so men
might rape somebody. That’s 1800+ students, and that number is terrifying.
What’s even more frightening is the appropriation of this as a brag-worthy
fact.
Image: original FSU Men
Measure Up campaign
In October, FSU’s Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity
(PIKE) was suspended due to several reports of sexual assault within the frat
house. This wasn’t the first time a frat at FSU has been subject to
investigation of sexual assault, and when the suspension was announced it
seemed that perhaps the climate was changing for the university’s treatment of
these cases. This hope was promptly shattered when the fraternity was
reinstated after less than a week of suspension and no charges were filed
against any brother. There was however, an eruption of discourse concerning the
Pike fraternity on social media outlets such as Twitter, Facebook, and the
newly popular anonymous app Yik Yak. Unfortunately most of this discourse was
more focused around the hatred of the fraternity itself, rather than the allegations
towards them.
Victim blaming is by far the biggest issue facing the
detrimental culture of rape culture. We live in a society that teaches women
how to not be raped, rather than teaching men not to rape. We shrug off the
notion of sexual violence, saying “well boys will be boys,” or “she was asking
for it,” and even make jokes about rape, tweeting things like “Noles are gonna
fuck Clemson right in the pussy.” Rape culture in a college environment is
rapidly perpetuated through the misinterpretation of what constitutes assault
as well as the harmful rhetoric used not only by the media but also by
individuals on social media. When discussing a sexual assault case we ask “Was
the victim drunk?” “What was she wearing?” “Did she give off signs?” And more
often than not we get into a Twitter argument over it. This is not okay. If
somebody’s house was robbed, it wouldn’t matter if the owner was drunk, left
the door open, or even had a sign on the front door reading “I’m not home.” It
would be a crime, regardless of the circumstance that it was committed. So why
isn’t sexual assault looked at with the same objectivity? Rape jokes, as a
whole have become a popular and even appropriate way to express one’s football
allegiances. Rape is therefore locally trivialized as nothing more than a punch
line on the way to Florida State University’s next National Championship. This
is a detrimental cultural flaw of not only this university, but also colleges
nationwide who continue to prioritize football winnings over justice. This
culture is perpetuated to an incredibly worrisome extent on social media
platforms, wherein rape is constructed rhetorically as a minor offence, fit for
jokes and victim blaming. Until universities can show that rape culture is
unacceptable, it will be in turn very difficult for students to rhetorically do
the same.
Works Cited:
1. Bogdanich, Walt. "Errors in Inquiry on Rape Allegations Against FSU’s
Jameis Winston." The New York Times. The New York Times, 15 Apr. 2014.
Web. 24 Oct. 2014.
2. Brennan, Christine. "Florida State Gives Way to 'Jameis State'"
USA Today. N.p., 15 Oct. 2014. Web.
3. Kook, Christian, and Lisa S. Villadson, eds. "Rhetorical Citizenship
and Public Deliberation." Rhetoric and Democratic Deliberation (n.d.): n.
pag. Print.
4. Lazere, Donald. "Avoiding Oversimplification and Recognizing
Complexity." Reading and Writing for Civic Literacy (n.d.): n. pag. Print.
5. Lazere, Donald. "Viewpoint, Bias, and Fairness: From Cocksure Ignorance
to Thoughtful Uncertainty." (n.d.): n. pag. Web.
6. Mcintire, Mike, and Walt Bogdanich. "At Florida State, Football Clouds
Justice." The New York Times. The New York Times, 11 Oct. 2014. Web. 27
Oct. 2014.