In rape culture, misogynistic men and their defenders will commonly debate what rape and sexual assault "are." We see this appear in the public sphere through the idiotic ramblings of mostly Republican politicians, such as their make believe debates about "legitimate rape." Of course, all of this is more about protecting men and restricting a woman's right to an abortion than it really is about assault or about women. That much is clear.We have to call the media and other similar institutions to account for their role in this too though. We have to recognize that the way in which sexual assaults are portrayed in fictionalized narratives on television and in movies, and as such as they are often also imagined by too many people, is only one variant on assault. The media would have us believe that assault always looks like either a drug being slipped into a drink and then a woman being shuffled to a car or a man lurking in the shadows pouncing on an unsuspecting woman. While such incidents do happen, and far too often, this is not the only way in which assault might take place.

Furthermore, while we debate what it "looked like," we are further objectifying the body of the survivor. The survivor is telling you what happened, but by debating the appearance one is saying, "I don't really believe you. I must observe your body, your trauma, casually and with disinterest because you cannot be trusted. You are a thing, an object, to which something was done: the question is, what was done? You, as the thing, cannot be trusted to answer that question for yourself because the important part is what it looked like, 'objectively,' not what you say happened." This is deeply objectifying and forces the survivor to relive their trauma in detail. Furthermore, it has the side effect of making survivors less likely to come forward. If they are not believed, if they will be further objectified, and forced to relive their trauma then the survivor is less likely to feel safe to come forward. How fucking convenient for rapists, misogynists, and those who would defend them...

All of this is especially important because our imaginings of assault are a part what allow us to question claims of assault in the first place. Once we recognize that rape and assault can have a lot of different looks to it, it becomes far harder to deny that a rape or assault took place or to question the "legitimacy" of a claim of assault.
And if y'all would just fucking believe survivors, then I wouldn't even have to write a post like this...