By Terri Schlichenmeyer
The grab was savage.
You yelped because you werenât expecting it. Because it shouldnât have happened. It was rough enough to leave marks on your skin, little round marks like fingertips; for sure, it left marks on your self-confidence but complain, and itâll all be denied. You know the truth, though, and when you read âBelievingâ by Anita Hill, youâll know someone else does, too.
Twenty-five percent of American women today âexperience intimate partner violence…â Thirty-three percent say theyâve endured harassment at work. The rateâs higher for women of color, highest in the LGBTQ community. Similar statistics were available in 1991 when Anita Hill testified before Congress about the harassment sheâd said sheâd experienced from then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, testimony that later contributed to Hillâs becoming one of the countryâs leaders in the fight against sexual harassment and gender violence.
Before the Thomas hearing, Hill says, courts routinely dismissed most complaints about lewd comments, unwelcome advances, and unwanted touch from harassers. Some judges couldnât âunderstandâ why a woman might be frightened by intimidation from a man; others believed the complaints to be overwrought. Such things were said to be âânot that bad,ââ says Hill, words she likens to a knife.
Millennial and GenZers are believed to be intolerant of harassment and inequality, but Hill says they may still be affected by entrenched attitudes that havenât been completely erased. She had hoped that #MeToo mightâve changed things, but while the movement helped to open a major conversation about the issues, the frequency of sexual harassment and gender violence has not lessened. She points to misogyny from the last administration and the Kavanaugh confirmation hearing as proof, as well as gun violence (often caused by bullying) and ongoing problems with harassment, homophobia, and gender inequality in many schools, from elementary school all the way through college.
We can do better but, as Hill indicates, America has a long way to go.
Itâs hard to nail down one single fix for issues of gender violence from the pages of âBelieving.â Dive in, dig around, surface for air, and dive in again â truth is, the whole entire book is one long roadmap, with dozens of possible patches.
And yet, you may ask yourself if what author Anita Hill quietly suggests is enough. Takeaways from the stories she shares are that gender violence and sexual harassment can be like a long game of Whack-a-Mole: once an incident is dealt with, another will pop up somewhere else, relentlessly, endlessly. Using the Thomas hearings as scaffolding here, she seems to show that while politics absolutely plays a part in the presence of harassment and gender violence in America, the prevalence can be found everywhere and costs us more than just psychologically.
Discouraging? Yes, and even Hill admits that such information can be triggering if youâve been a victim, so read âBelievingâ with caution and deep-breathing room. Itâs powerful, deep, and raw, but itâs also highly informative. If you want to know where weâre heading on this subject, itâs the book to grab.
The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was 3 years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a prairie in Wisconsin with one man, two dogs, and 16,000 books.