The social and cultural circumstances we live today, especially for individual women, continue to perpetuate the culture of rape that spreads in our lives. As a feminist thinker, Ann Cahill commits to changing this by challenging the present definition of rape as an attack, and tackles the question of why rape exists and how to start a preventive process. Cahill's book "Rethinking Rape" approaches the theme of rape by analyzing the work of contemporary feminist theorists like Judith Butler who believe that the body of a woman is a potential place to resist gender-based oppression It is. "Larger sexual behavior system" control (cahir)
The body is interested in me, but the body of Lopate is in "portrait of my body" - not that much. I admit that I have (or do not own) their bodies in many ways than men's bodies because of their interest in the body of a woman, or experience of a woman's body. I have read Sallie Tisdale and Judith Ortiz Cofer, Pam Houston, Judith Hooper and Unforgettable Lucy Grealy. Over the years I have assigned Margaret Atwood's "Female Body" to the first year student essay student. And even if the female student is frank, I assigned Sally Tisdale's "A Weight Women Carry". I acknowledge Tisdale is not reliable as she acknowledges 14 bodies that are satisfied with her figure.
Male body images are also often misunderstood than women's body images. Men are mainly thought to be interested in "lack of muscle", but in reality male body figures may be more complicated (see the first page of male body figures). On the other hand, the assumption of concern for women is not the same: weight. A woman's body image that looks unhealthy is more general than an unhealthy male body image, but this may be just a mere recognition. Some researchers claim that women are more exposed to social situations. The figures reflect that women are more dissatisfied than men (Brennan, Lalonde, & Bain 2010). This clarifies the reason why the body image of a woman is so common and the male body image is rarely recognized