A Voice for Men founder Paul Elam is so full of it on virtually every subject he opines about โ from domestic violence to women’s spending habits โ that much of what he writes might be best classified as fiction. He would no doubt disagree, but then again he’s not big on self-awareness.
But in addition to writing much inadvertent or unadmitted fiction, Elam has also tried his hand at fiction of the more traditional sort. I ran across one of his short stories the other day, and I’d like to share it with you, because it is quite possibly the most revealing piece I’ve writing I’ve ever seen from him.
As fiction, it is, of course, terrible, written in a clunky, melodramatic style one can only describe, with a shudder, as highly Paul Elam-esque. Elam doesn’t exactly have the skills or the subtlety to create an even vaguely believable fictional world. The story is essentially a polemic in story form โ an extended argument justifying domestic violence against women.
No, really.
The story is called โAnger Management,โ and it ran in something called โThe Oddville Press,” an online journal. A copy of the issue with Elam’s story in it is available through Google books.
As Elam explains in his intro, the story is based on the nearly twenty years he claims to have been a drug and alcohol counselor. He notes that domestic violence was a recurring issue with those he counseled, but then goes on to say that โsometimes the stories were not as predictable or stereotypical as what people hear about.โ
The story he tells, which takes place in some sort of court-ordered Domestic Violence treatment group, purports to be one of these less-stereotypical tales.
In the story, a domestic abuser named Howard Franks reluctantly opens up to the group about the domestic violence incident that landed him in jail, and which is now forcing him to attend the group.
His is a story that could have been ripped from the headlines โ of A Voice for Men.
For Howard, you see, had been living a blameless and seemingly perfect life until six weeks earlier. He was happily married, with two wonderful daughters, and a thriving business. Then his father died, and his wife convinced him it would be best for him to fly alone to Baltimore to attend the funeral.
And that’s when the misandry hit the fan. As Howard tells his rapt audience in the DV group,
Oh no she didn’t! Oh, yes she did.
Arriving home, he finds the house empty. His wife had taken his money, stashed the kids with her mother, and run off with his business partner, who also claimed their joint business as his own, because apparently if you run off with your business partner’s wife you’re just allowed to do that.
He heads to his business partner’s house, where, adding insult to injury, his wife comes to the door โwearing a silk robe I gave her last Christmas.โ
All he can ask is why. And so she tells him what every woman who suddenly and unexpectedly decides to end a 16-year marriage tells her poor, innocent, soon-to-be ex-hubby: because he just wasn’t cutting it in the sack.
Oh, but Howard’s sad tale of sexual humiliation isn’t done quite yet. And ex-wife isn’t done talking:
Because that’s totally something a real woman would say to her husband of 16 years after having unexpectedly left him while he was attending his father’s funeral.
Elam has also answered a long-standing question of mine, which is: what is the proper verb to use when a tear [blanks] down your cheek? The proper verb is โto track.โ
Well, naturally โ naturally! โ our hero Howard has to respond somehow to soon-to-be-ex-wife’s terrible insult. So, like a totally reasonable fellow,
Ah, yes, Howard is just another sad statistic of domestic violence!
Because of course, in Elam’s story, Howard is the real victim here, so cruelly forced to go to jail for totally understandably breaking his wife’s nose. So cruelly forced to sit in a room with other dudes and talk about how he broke his wife’s nose, as if it were a bad thing.
The DV counselor, the aforementioned Ms. Pitts, asks him if his wife deserved a broken nose.
Even the DV counselor is so humbled by the righteousness of Howard’s anger that she sits silently as he details the final indignity of his case: that he’s not allowed to see his daughters until his treatment is done โ just because he broke his wife’s nose with his fist.
There’s nothing subtle about Elam’s story or its message. We are supposed to empathize entirely with Howard and his plight. We are expected to mutter โfucking A, right,โ along with the anonymous man in his audience after Howard explains that his wife deserved more than a broken nose. We are supposed to look with disgust on the โwhite knightโ who interrupts Howard’s narrative to point out that what he did was wrong.
This is, to put it bluntly, a story suggesting that in many cases violence against women is justified, and then some, by their bad behavior โ and that the real victims are the men who are punished for their violence by spending a short time in jail, by having to go to DV treatment, and by prohibitions on contact with their children.
In Elam’s notorious post advocating โbeat a violent bitch month,โ his excuse for justifying violence against women was that the โviolent bitchesโ he was talking about had started the violence โ even though the extreme retribution he suggested was justifiable went far beyond simple self-defense.
In this story, though, there is no question of self-defense; he is suggesting that violence towards women is an appropriate form of retribution for women who โdo men wrongโ by leaving them for other men. It’s striking that the trigger for Howard’s violence is sexual jealousy and humiliation โ specifically, the thought of his wife, even after she’s left him, fellating another man.
And yet Elam convinces himself โ and tries to convince his readers โ that Howard is the real victim here. I scarcely have to add that this is how actual abusers think. And that no one who thinks this way can conceivably be considered a โhuman rightsโ advocate of any kind.
LBT – ::applauds:: Yeah, the claim that a man grabbing a woman’s earbuds might be having health problems is so full of nonsense (and I’m putting it kindly).
grumpycat – I didn’t know most of the names in Jezebel’s list, but yep, love their number one names!
There was a piece on Sir Ian and Sir Patrick in The Age this week. Didja know that Sir Ian was the celebrant at Sir Patrick’s wedding? Someone asked him before it happened, “What are you doing this week?” and he answered, “Marrying Patrick Stewart.” ๐
Okay, the weirdest thing ever has happened to my keyboard – when I try to type a double quote, the @ shows instead, and vice versa. Has anyone had that happen – symbols suddenly going from different keys???
Have Mads or Fribs been playing with the computer? The Furrinati do enjoy messing with computers.
http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/b9/22/d1/b922d1f6827cb777f9608be5b2a83e0d.jpg
LOL I love that pic. Makes me think, now, of the bits in the Joe Grey books where Joe and Dulcie make anonymous tip-offs to the police.
Mads and Fribs are innocent, in this case, unless it was their superior cat brain beams doing it. It happened between one comment and the next. Apparently it is a thing – I found other people asking about it via Google. Fixing the region settings and restarting the computer has cleared it, for the moment.
Such a weird thing to happen, and why those keys?
Who knows? Computers are the one thing that love screwing with people’s minds more than the Furrinati.
Looks like your keyboard layout got switched from US to UK. And for the rest of the thread, and the OP, what everyone else said, and argh! as appropriate.
RE: Kittehs
I mean, sure, for just about any scenario under the sun, you can think of some unusual exception. She could be born with it… or maybe it’s Maybelline! That kind of shit.
The thing is… those are UNUSUAL scenarios. That’s kinda the whole point! Like sure, maybe that person waving a gun around is actually suffering some kind of episode and the gun is totally unloaded and harmless… but a lot of people aren’t going to take that chance.
Owen – yeah, that’s what I thought, but it was still on UK settings. It’s still working after a couple of restarts.
Now if only I could find a way to permanently delete that *&$#%^ Homegroup icon from my desktop. Zombie thing keeps coming back however often I kill it.
My ex-boss’s rude remarks about Bill Gates and gumboots come to mind at the moment.
Not terribly related:
Was administered a survey today (one rather clumsily and transparently designed to lead the survey-taker to whichever brand of Christianity the surveyors were representing, but I did my bit anyway) by a man who was the spitting image of Paul Elam. Bloke seemed nice enough but it was tricky to not look at him and think “scumbag” through no fault of his own.
Was scary going from “oh wow, that guy looks just like Paul Elam” to “oh shit, he’s talking to me.”
lowquacks, long time no see! How are you?
Gad, an Elam look-alike taking surveys?
@kittehs
I’m doing pretty well! Have just been doing a lot less online MRA-mocking. Two new members of the Furrinati in the household now; housecat in a suburb up north had had a litter, so they’re sisters (neuter your pets, everyone!) . They’re teeny-tiny little whitey-gingery-tabby shorthairs, which is a change from the enormous fluffy dark-tabbies we’ve had before, and they’re adorable (and very spoiled). They’re a little delicate and pale-skinned to be outside cats but we’ve made them a little run out the back with catgrass and a ramp and a hanging toy and all the usual benefits of being outside. Beautiful cats. Still play with each other, groom each other and fall asleep cuddling each other.
Dessie’s still not sure about them but there’s a truce of sorts in which she’s recognised as Top Cat and she can always go outside or into her designated sanctuary in my room so she’s not too unhappy.
Rest of my family is actually heading down your way week after next, but I’m staying back to do my last week of uni and look after the house/kitties.
I do find it a bit of a pity that Patrick Stewart is sooo gendered always wrt DV but I still love him with all my heart. He is downright angry about DV and that just gives him a special place for me; he also shares my brand of cynicism (wrote a foreword for Transmetropolitan, which if you know what it’s about you’ll get), is super openly anti bigotry in general, and seriously just seems like a cool person.
Squeeeeeeeeeeeee new kitties!
I hope (she said in her best school principal voice) there will be
citationsphotos.Wants kitten pics.
@Kittehs
I don’t really have anything that properly captures the pure kinetic energy of the pair, but here’s Kishie, the bigger of the pair. She’s also the biggest fraidy cat, but is highly protective if she thinks her sister’s in danger, which is often, because she’s a little bit of a paranoid puss. She’s got one pink pawpad and was going to be called Kochka, which is Russian (basically) for a lady cat, but then Mum decided it’d be shortened to Kochie and that’d just be unfortunate.
This one‘s Billie, named in homage to the Belgian cartoon. She’s a little louder and more inquisitive and has just about every type of fur colour or pattern you can imagine in a cat at least somewhere on her (no blue) and nose and pawpads in both dark and light colours.
Both have incredible deep strong thrumming purrs and looking into their little shared tent-bed thing while they’re cuddled up purring together is pretty incredible.
The link with “Belgian cartoon” should point to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_the_Cat.
For international readers: Kochie, in Australia, calls up visions of a particularly corny breakfast-TV host.
::collapses into puddle of squee::
They are ADORABLE! So pretty! Bille’s torbie colours are very much like Maddie’s.
You’ll notice Bill’s got some attention-seeking makeup on. Different eyeliner on each eye! And a male-sounding name. Such a misandristic kitty cat.
Kitties are the best at misandry.
Beeeeautiful kitties, lowquacks. <3
Cute kitties. Dracarys also has black eyeliner on one eye like the misandering trollop she is ๐
For Hrovitnir (and anyone else): Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen play “The Newlywed Game”
Okay, coming super-late to this thread, and responding to a derail, at that, but…
This is eerily identical to my experience, right down to concluding “overreaction” thus failing to find treatment until things got much, much, worse. I wonder if this is a common thing come of general societal gaslighting of women as a whole. I know when I contracted a kidney infection in high-school I was treated as a hypochondriac by actual doctors for a good week reporting non-specific abdominal pain before I managed to spike a fever and look legit enough for treatment, and something tells me that attitude regarding female pain is not uncommon, nor unnoticed by women in general (/rant)
As for the headphones thing (attempting to atone for my derailment sins with on topic stuff), not only are creepers prone to using ‘disability’ as an excuse for shitty behavior, but it is totally possible for the disadvantaged (either physically, mentally or pharmacutically) to be assholes too, because that’s just a chance with all humans. The last person on the train that seriously invaded my boundaries obviously had something off with his speech (although I’m inclined to think it was probably drug related, but that’s neither here nor there) but that was no excuse for grabbing me and letting me know about his personal foot fetish and what he wanted to do to my pretty shoes, then chasing me around the station yelling “pretty feet” until I felt so unsafe in the (very crowded) station that I ran into the first (wrong) train that showed up as the doors shut. The fact bystanders saw this as either funny or not enough of a problem to intervene underlines the point that women’s feelings of personal safety are not often taken seriously, and over time this does lead to a bit of touchiness when we are asked to consider the other party in any way as a response to expressing feeling unsafe.
P.S. – Patrick Stewart is amazing ๐
KITTENS! ๐ I WANT TO SQUISH THEM!!! (in a loving, not harmful way). You are a lucky servant of the furrinati to be so blessed with tiny fuzzy overlords.
@emilygoddess: That video is pure perfection! I love those two together!
@lowquacks: Those kitties are the most squeeable misandrist things!
@chimisaur
If you don’t mind me asking (ignore if this bugs you) how bad did yours get? I had them for ages and never did anything about it, until I was incapacitated for a whole day because of them. ๐ Which I’d hope isn’t common, but I’m guessing not.
I’m pretty sure it is common thing in society. but idk how to put in words why.
@lowquacks
your kittens are so adorable! :3