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MRA founding father Warren Farrell responds to questions about his incest research with evasive non-answers. And a smiley.

Watch out: He has a Ph.D!
Watch out: He has a Ph.D!

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And now back to our regularly scheduled post:

Warren Farrell, whose 1993 book The Myth of Male Power essentially set the agenda for the Men’s Rights movement we know (and don’t love) today, did an “Ask Me Anything” on Reddit yesterday.

Most of the questions he chose to answer were pretty much softballs, and his answers largely reiterated things he’s said before many times. But he was also asked some pointed questions about his views on incest which he chose to answer. Well, sort of. Instead of clearing up the issue, he dug his hole a little deeper.

[TRIGGER WARNING for incest/child abuse apologia.]

Some backstory: As longtime readers of this blog know, Farrell spent several years in the 1970s researching a book about incest, which ultimately never appeared. In 1977, Farrell gave an interview to, of all things, Penthouse magazine, in which he tried to explain his “findings” and his views on the topic generally. The interview revealed that Farrell at the time had some exceedingly creepy views on incest and child sexual abuse.

If you haven’t read my post on the subject, going through the interview in detail, I suggest you take a few moments to read it now. (Here’s a transcript of the entire Penthouse article; in my post you can find links to high-quality scans of the original magazine pages – in case anyone still doubts he said what he indeed said.)

In short, Farrell believed there were “positive” aspects to incest that weren’t being talked about because society deemed the topic “taboo.” Indeed, the working title of Farrell’s book was The Last Taboo: The Three Faces of Incest.

In the past, Farrell has been, to say the least, a bit evasive when it comes to clarifying what he meant by some of the most troubling comments in the Penthouse interview, and would seem to prefer that all evidence of his interest in the issue of incest vanish down Orwell’s famous memory hole.

On Reddit, Farrell was presented with a perfect opportunity to set the record straight, both on his views on incest and child sexual abuse generally as well as on a number of specific quotes. (Note: as you’ll see, most of the first quote listed is the Penthouse author’s paraphrase, but the rest are all directly from Farrell.)

RDwfQuest

In his response, Farrell addresses none of the quotes directly, and his comments raise more questions than they answer.

RDwfAns

“Excellent questions,” he says, before going on to answer none of them. Let’s break down his non-answer.

bottom-line, i did this research when my research skills as a new Ph.D. were in the foreground and my raising two daughters was in the future. had i and my wife helped raise two daughters first, the intellectual interest would have evaporated. life teaches; children teach you more. 🙂

He starts off by mentioning his Ph.D., though he doesn’t mention that it was in political science and not psychology. Moreover, his discussions of his research in the Penthouse interview suggest that his methodology was anything but scientific.

His reference to his daughters seems to suggest that if he had had children he would have realized that there really was no “positive” aspect to incest. One might have assumed he would have picked up on this when the overwhelming majority of the women he interviewed “admitted to having negative attitudes toward their incest,” as the Penthouse article delicately puts it.

Farrell ends this paragraph with a smiley, as if the years he spent trying to find examples of “positive” incest were all just a harmless misunderstanding.

now, for some depth. i haven’t published anything on this research because i saw from the article from which you are quoting how easy it was to have the things i said about the way the people i interviewed felt be confused with what i felt.

This is completely disingenuous. It’s not uncommon to find sexual abusers who’ve convinced themselves that the abuse they inflicted upon children was a good thing for their victims, and most people who write about the subject have no problem distinguishing their views from the abusers and abuse apologists they report on.

No, the really disturbing things about Farrell’s interview are the statements in which he expresses his own opinions on the subject. For example, this quote (referenced in the questions on Reddit), in which he describes some of what he evidently sees as the negative aspects of the incest “taboo.”

[M]illions of people … are now refraining from touching, holding, and genitally caressing their children, when that is really a part of a caring, loving expression, are repressing the sexuality of a lot of children and themselves. Maybe this needs repressing, and maybe it doesn’t. My book should at least begin the exploration.

You can see that whole quote in context in the original article here. Farrell now claims that he didn’t say “genitally” but “generally,” though if you replace that one word in that quote it’s scarcely any better.

The Penthouse article also contains this astounding quote from him:

“When I get my most glowing positive cases, 6 out of 200,” says Farrell, “the incest is part of the family’s open, sensual style of life, wherein sex is an outgrowth of warmth and affection. It is more likely that the father has good sex with his wife, and his wife is likely to know and approve — and in one or two cases to join in.”

And this:

“Incest is like a magnifying glass,” he summarizes. “In some circumstances it magnifies the beauty of a relationship, and in others it magnifies the trauma.”

In some circumstances it magnifies the beauty. Farrell gives absolutely no indication here that he is explaining someone else’s views; it seems to be what he himself believes. And until and unless he specifically addresses this quote it is hard to read it any other way.

Let’s go back to Farrell’s “answer.”

i have always been opposed to incest, and still am … .

That’s true, at least to an extent. In the Penthouse article, even though he seems to agree with many of the abusers’ rationalizations for their abuse, he does state specifically that he’s

not recommending incest between parent and child, and especially not between father and daughter.

But then he goes on to say this:

The great majority of fathers can grasp the dynamics of positive incest ‘intellectually’. But in a society that encourages looking at women in almost purely sexual terms, I don’t believe they can translate this understanding into practice.

As far as I can figure it, he’s saying that he’s opposed to father-daughter incest because in today’s sexist society it’s … hard for fathers to do incest properly?  If that can be seen as being “opposed to incest” I guess he is opposed. I would love some clarification from Farrell on this point.

Back to Farrell’s answers on Reddit. After sort of, kind of, suggesting maybe his research was a bad idea (in that part above about his daughters) he returns to defending it:

but i was trying to be a good researcher and ask people about their experience without the bias of assuming it was negative or positive.

Really? Seeing abuse as abuse is “bias?” Would you consider it reasonable to study, say, murder, or violent assault, or even someone falling to their death off a mountain “without the bias of assuming it was negative or positive?” Or is it just sexual abuse of young girls and boys that merits such “objectivity?”

And yes, though Farrell now portrays himself as an advocate for both men and boys, he told the Penthouse interviewer that “boys don’t seem to suffer” from sexual abuse — sorry, incest. (That quote is a paraphrase of Farrell’s views from the Penthouse author.)

And then comes this amazing bit, in which he suggests that his interest in challenging the “taboo” of incest was in some ways inspired by the gay liberation movement of the 1970s – because on some level the sexual abuse of children is roughly similar to gay sex between consenting adults?

i had learned this from the misinformation we had gotten about gay people by working from the starting assumption of its dysfunction.

Amazing, just amazing.

You might think that Reddit’s Men’s Rightsers would be appalled by Farrell’s creepy non-answer. Nope. Most of them seem to think he addressed all possible concerns with the issue, with one poster getting dozens of upvotes for suggesting that MRAs bookmark “Dr Farrell’s response to the incest (mis)quote …  for easy reference!”

It wasn’t a misquote, and his “response” was worse than no response at all.

The apologies for Farrell’s non-answer aren’t surprising. Other MRAs who are familiar with the interview have also gone to great lengths to explain it away; indeed,  one of Farrell’s fans went as far as suggesting that “Penthouse was not always “pornographic” and to characterise it as that is just to demonise and imply that the article as being far more overtly sexual that it was.”

I will repeat what I said last time I wrote about Farrell: if he disagrees with any of my conclusions here, or feels he wishes to clarify or explicitly repudiate anything or everything in the Penthouse article, I’m offering him a chance to explain himself here in a post on this blog — in his own words, unedited.

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CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

It would be hard to top Farrell’s comment about how odd he found it that the victims of incest/child abuse didn’t view the incest as positively as the abusers did for sheer “WTF is wrong with you imbecile?” value.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

Like, let’s change the scenario to clarify the logic.

Imagine that you interviewed both people who break into houses and rob them and people who’d had their houses broken into and their stuff stolen, and you found that the robbers had mostly positive feelings about the whole robbery thing, while the victims did not. Would you then wonder if the victims might be lying to you and secretly have enjoyed having their TV and stereo stolen?

It’s just an incredibly dumb thing for him to have said. There’s no way you could reach the conclusions he did without having walked into the research already having decided what you hoped to hear.

Abnoy
Abnoy
11 years ago

Every person is a product of their time and place and you have to realize that the ’60’s and ’70’s in America were such a different era so as to be like another planet. I mean, didnt anybody watch the tv show Life on Mars?

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

Also, let’s say that Dworkin did have some messed up ideas about incest (it’s been 20 years since I read that book so I don’t remember much of it). Does that make Farrell’s views from the same era OK, or make it OK that he still refuses to really renounce them?

hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Oh, Brz can’t read and still pretending to be French. Awesome.

Brz
Brz
11 years ago

“Does that make Farrell’s views from the same era OK, or make it OK that he still refuses to really renounce them?”

As for me no, that doesn’t make Farrell’s views OK, that makes me wondering how many people can agree with them on the “incest is good when it’s just touching and non sexist”.
It makes me wondering even more about the origin of such a crazy idea.

Brz
Brz
11 years ago

Anyway, I have to recognize that the blog’s owner, to the contrary of almost everyone here, can show a minimum of intellectual integrity.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

Anyone else hear a buzzing sound? I think we have a fly trapped inside the car again.

pecunium
11 years ago

I loved this comment on /mensrights, which lays it all out.

Hypergamy is important in the MRM because once you understand it you understand the through social destruction that Bureaugamy creates. It’s also important because it leads to true men’s rights (rather than the red-herring of egalitarianism) as you will quickly understand why egalitarianism leads to yet another system of female supremacy.

The curtain is pulled back, and the desire to dominate is revealed.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

Bureaugamy sounds like it should mean a burning desire to fuck civil servants.

ellex24
ellex24
11 years ago

I’m just really…mystified that sexual relations (of any type, not just basic fucking) between parent and child is being referred to as incest. To me, anything sexual involving a child is pedophilia. Incest is sexual relations between consenting adults of any blood relation. If one of the adults is not consenting, it’s rape.

Am I being too strict in my definitions?

I definitely believe that pedophilia is wrong. There’s also a huge difference between teaching a child about their body and engaging in sexual relations with them. And I feel that Farrell’s phrase about “genital caresses” is creepy whether you change it to “general” or not. It’s the word “caresses” that’s creeping me out. It’s not a word I associate with appropriate physical contact between parent and child. I’d give him the benefit of the doubt if not for the rest of the things he says.

I feel that incest is not necessarily wrong. However, the frequency with which one of the people involved is in a position of having been coerced, or one or both of the people involved is engaging in incest as a symptom of other problems, is such that it’s rarely going to be a healthy behavior mentally or emotionally. And of course there’s the potential for serious genetic problems in the case of the children from an incestual relationship.

Reading Farrell, all I’m getting is a lot of words, words and more words, some of which I find vaguely creepy (because he never really entirely comes right out and says anything definite that I can point out as creepy), while he never actually addresses the topic at hand.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

I get the sense that he’s extra wordy in the hopes that people won’t notice the creepy stuff if he buries it in enough vague, meandering bullshit.

Brz
Brz
11 years ago

Damn, it’s even worst when we read the “woman hating” section on incest in extenso:

“The parent-child relationship is primarily erotic
because all human relationships are primarily erotic.
The incest taboo is a particularized form of repression,
one which functions as the bulwark of all the other repressions.
The incest taboo ensures that however free
we become, we never become genuinely free. The incest
taboo, because it denies us essential fulfillment with the
parents whom we love with our primary energy, forces
us to internalize those parents and constantly seek them,
or seek to negate them, in the minds, bodies, and hearts
of other humans who are not our parents and never
will be.
The incest taboo does the worst work of the culture:
it teaches us the mechanisms of repressing and internalizing
erotic feeling—it forces us to develop those
mechanisms in the first place; it forces us to particularize
sexual feeling, so that it congeals into a need
for a particular sexual “object” ; it demands that we
place the nuclear family above the human family. The
destruction of the incest taboo is essential to the development
of cooperative human community based on
the free-flow of natural androgynous eroticism.”

There’s just everything in here : the final goal, the final step, the abolition of the last “repression”, of the last thing which forces us to “particularize sexual felling”, the last barrier to complete freedom, to complete immersion in the human family.
That’s just that which lies behind every call for a “united humany where there will no difference between humans beings anymore”.

pecunium
11 years ago

And the oddly wrong (but not in a Romance language way) english is suddenly back.

Immediately followed by a perfect use of complex english tense structure.

If you want us to believe you, (probably too late) you need to spend more time on the effort. Phoning it in like this is just embarrassing.

pecunium
11 years ago

Brz: You are either dense, or disingenuous.

Dworkin doesn’t mean “sexual”, when she says, “erotic”. It’s a poor choice of words, IMO, but what she means is more akin to, “intimate”. So, in the context of that nonce-structure, she is decrying the ways in which society divorces the child from the parent in a sense of comfortable interpersonal intimacy.

That it creates a tension, distance. and hostility, which aren’t needed. I think, in that, she was too much influence by the strong tenor of Freudian thought which still had a strong dominance in psychological thought in the time (his fall from grace didn’t, and to some degree still doesn’t, remove the second order effects that the people who were working on psychoanalysis having been trained with his ideas caused).

But go on, keep fucking the chicken.

titianblue
titianblue
11 years ago

Quite a good derailing attempt, though. Attack is so frequently the best form of defence …

pecunium
11 years ago

Well, Brz does a lot of just plain ignoring, and then dialing up the, “bad grammar”, while having such a “solid” grasp of arcane, and abstruse, language in works of feminist theory.

It’s almost as if he were a native speaker, and not a frenchman.

titianblue
titianblue
11 years ago

And back at the OP, I am so bugged by the assymmetry of Farrell’s questioning of the truthfulness of the repsonses he received on incest. He questions the truthfulness of the daughters who found the experience negative. No questioning of the truthfulness of anyone finding it positive, I note. Or even of the sons who found it negative. Creepy as hell.

Brz
Brz
11 years ago

“Dworkin doesn’t mean “sexual”, when she says, “erotic”. It’s a poor choice of words, IMO, but what she means is more akin to, “intimate””

Nah, I’ve perfectly understood that she didn’t mean “sexual”, on the contrary, she seems to want to banish every “sexual felling” for a “particular sexual object” and replace it with a “natural androgynous eroticism” for all the “human family”.

I’ve perfectly understood that she’s “decrying the ways in which society divorces the child from the parent”, that she’s against every form of “tension, distance and hostility” between humans.

That’s exactly what I saw, the refusal of every barrier, of everything that creates distance between the members of the human family and this refusal lead to the will to destroy the first barrier, the first taboo : incest.

pecunium
11 years ago

So if you admit it’s not sexual, and that it’s about removing emotional distance from parents/children, what’s the beef?

pecunium
11 years ago

BTW, I see that you have, again, spot perfect use of English in that last comment.

titianblue
titianblue
11 years ago

His beef is that it has to bad so that he can bash feminists over the head with it and call them hypocrites for objecting to Farrell.

titianblue
titianblue
11 years ago

“to be bad” damnit. Hate it when my brain types faster than my fingers.

ellex24
ellex24
11 years ago

I’m having difficulty understanding what Dworkin is trying to say, but I can see that there’s some serious differences in the words she uses as she understands them and the words as I would normally understand them. Clarification is certainly needed. This sounds like a text which needs to be read in its entirety, and pulling snippets of it out of context leads to massive misunderstanding.

As for Brz, I generally don’t understand much of anything zie says. Zie is just wandering all over the map here, and usually off-topic in a just off-center way that makes me think that zie is also not understanding the purpose or nature of the discussions going on here.

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