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Rape and Attractiveness I

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The study investigated how a rape victim's physical attractiveness and resistance affected perceptions of responsibility for the crime. Subjects' pretrial empathy toward victims and rapists also influenced their perceptions.

Subjects' pretrial empathy toward rape victims and rapists, as assessed by a Rape Empathy Scale, was predictive of their perceptions of the rape victim, defendant, and incident.

Male subjects and subjects with low empathy toward the victim were more influenced by manipulations of victim resistance and attractiveness. Victim resistance and attractiveness had significant effects, with subjects responding least favorably to an unattractive victim who resisted by fighting.

Sex Roles. Vol. 10. Nos. 3/4.

1984

Attribution of Responsibility for Rape:


The Influence of Observer Empathy, Victim
Resistance, and Victim Attractiveness'
Sheila R. Deitz,- Madeleine Littman,^
and Brenda J. Bentley
Colorado State Universitv

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the influence of a rape
victim's physical attractiveness and resistance to rape on subjects' attributions of responsibility for the crime, certainty of the defendant's guilt, and
social perceptions of the rape victim and defendant. Subjects' pretrial empathy toward rape victims and rapists was assessed by scores on the Rape
Empathy Scale (RES). In addition to significant sex differences in attributions of responsibility for the incident, subjects' pretrial empathy toward
rape victims and rapists was predictive of their perceptions of the rape victim, the defendant, and the rape incident. Victim resistance and attractiveness effects were significant in that subjects responded least favorably to
the unattractive rape victim, particularly when she resisted the rape by
fighting with her attacker. Male subjects and subjects who exhibited low
empathy toward the rape victim were more responsive to subtle manipulations of victim resistance and attractiveness than were females and high
RES subjects. Several explanations for these results focus on the cognitive
and affective responses of subjects. The implications of the study are
discussed in relation to societal attitudes toward rape and the role of sexrole stereotyping, which fosters these attitudes.

'The present research was supported by National Institutes of Health Biomedical Research
Support Grant #5-SO7-RRO7127-09 and National Science Foundation Grant #SES-80I2316
to Sheila R. Deitz. The authors express their appreciation to Nancy Williams, Joanne Moran,
Bill Willging, David Small, David Waldman, and Robert Kingsley for their assistance in
data collection and analysis.
Correspondence should be sent to Sheila R. Deitz, now ai Insiituic of Law, PsNchiatry, and Public
Policy, University of Virginia, Box 1(X), Blue Ridge Hospital, Charlottesville, N'irginia 22901.
Copies of the Rape Empathy Scale and an extended report on the reliability and validity of
scale are a\ailable from this author.
'Present address: Herbert Lipton Community Mental Health Center, Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
261
0360-0025/84 0200-0261S03.50-0

1984 Plenum Publishing Corporaiion

262

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

Since the publication of Jones and Aronson's (1973) provocative article,


which reported that observers viewed "respectable" rape victims as more
responsible for their victimization than less "respectable" victims, a major
focus in the rape literature has concerned extraevidential characteristics of
rape victims that may influence observers' perception of the incident. Investigations have included the influence of a rape victim's "respectability"
(Feldman-Summers & Lindner, 1976; Fulero & DeLara, 1976; Kahn,
Gilbert, Latta, Deutsch, Hagen, Hill, McGaughey, Ryen, & Wilson, 1977;
Kanekar & Kolsawalla, 1977; Kerr & Kurtz, 1977; Luginbuhl & Mullin,
1981), social role (Smith, Keating, Hester, & Mitchell, 1976),
"vulnerability" (Howitt, 1977), and prior acquaintance with the rapist
(Calhoun, Selby, & Warring, 1976; Smith et al., 1976). A second group of
studies has examined the role of legally relevant aspects of rape incidents
and has included the influence of probability of victim consent (Borgida,
1980; Borgida & White, 1978), victim provocation (Ellison, 1976;
Penhallow, 1978; Scroggs, 1976), and damage to the victim resulting from
the rape (Davis, Kerr, Stasser, Meek, & Holt, 1977; Kerr & Kurtz, 1977;
Scroggs, 1976).
Considering the importance assigned to the rape victim's resistance by
the judicial system in this country (Wood, 1975) and the consistent finding
that an individual's physical attractiveness affects observers' perceptions of
the individual (Berscheid & Walster, 1974), it is revealing that the
psychological literature contains few empirical investigations of the impact
of a rape victim's physical attractiveness and resistance style on others'
perceptions of her responsibility for the crime. Deitz (1980) reported that a
rape victim's resistance style affected Colorado jurors' ratings of the
seriousness and aftermath of a rape incident. Jurors rated the psychological
impact of rape and the seriousness of the crime as greater when the rape victim was described as passive than when she was described as either verbally
or physically resisting the rape. Scroggs (1976) reported that male subjects
were more lenient in sentencing the rapist of a passive rape victim than the
rapist of a victim who physically resisted the assault, but female subjects imposed harsher penalties for the rapist of a passive rape victim. Scroggs
(1976) interpreted these findings as providing evidence that females may
identify readily with a victim who is so terrified that she cannot resist, but
males may view a rape victim's passivity as implicit consent to the crime.
Krulewitz and Nash (1979), providing evidence that females may not always
identify readily with rape victims, reported that female subjects attributed
greater responsibility for a rape incident to the rape victim and less blame to
the assailant than did male subjects. In accord with Scroggs' (1976) study,
however, Krulewitz and Nash (1979) also found that males attributed
greater fault to a passive rape victim than to a victim who verbally or

Victim Resistance and Attractiveness

263

physically resisted the assault; in contrast, females attributed greater fault


to the victim who resisted than to the passive rape victim. These results illustrate the existence of important sex differences in perceptions of victim
resistance to sexual assault and suggest the need for further investigation into the variables which increase or decrease identification with rape victims.
Dion, Berscheid, and Walster (1972) noted that a physical attractiveness stereotype exists in our society, a stereotype that associates "good"
personal qualities with physically attractive individuals. In support of this
notion, Seligman, Paschall, and Takata (1974) reported that physically attractive individuals were perceived to be more responsible for good outcomes than for bad ones, while physically unattractive individuals were attributed less responsibility for good outcomes with which they were
associated, Dermer and Thiel (1975) argued, however, that in some social
settings, physical attractiveness may not be advantageous. In their research,
a physically attractive woman was perceived not only as sociable, heterosexually alluring, and professionally competent but also as conceited,
adulterous, and bourgeois. Dermer and Thiel (1975) noted that these latter
qualities might place a physically attractive rape victim at a disadvantage in
successfully prosecuting her assailant. In support of this contention,
Calhoun, Selby, Cann, and Keller (1978) reported that a physically attractive victim was perceived by subjects as "playing a greater role in her own
rape" (p. 191) using a combined rating of the victim's contributory
behavior, character, and appearance than was a less attractive victim. On
the other hand, Thornton (1977) found that subjects' assessments of the victim's responsibility for a rape incident were not affected by the victim's attractiveness; and Seligman, Brickman, and Koulack (1977) reported that an
unattractive rape victim was perceived as more responsible for provoking a
rape incident than was an attractive victim.
The conflicting results are intriguing in light of the findings reported
for victims of crimes other than rape (e.g., Landy & Aronson, 1969; Shaw,
1972; Stephan & Tully, 1977), in which mock jurors consistently responded
more favorably to the physically attractive victim than to the unattractive
one. The lack of comparability of victim attractiveness results across studies
may reflect the fact that rape is a unique crime, which, by definition, includes both violence and sexual contact. Sigall and Ostrove (1975) presented
evidence supporting the differential effects of attractiveness across crimes,
reporting that defendant attractiveness interacted with the type of crime
committed (burglary vs. swindle) in determining the penalities assigned by
subjects to the defendant. When the crime was perceived to be attractiveness related (swindle), the attractive defendant was assigned a harsher
sentence than was the unattractive defendant. When the crime was
unrelated to attractiveness, subjects assigned more lenient sentences to the

264

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

attractive defendant than to the unattractive one. In view of societal


assumptions that link rape with sexuality, and sexuality with attractiveness
(see Schwendinger & Schwendinger, 1974), observers may attribute special
significance to the rape victim's appearance in determining responsibility
for the crime. As suggested by the results of Calhoun et al. (1978) and
Seligman et al. (1978) and Seligman et al. (1977), subjects may perceive rape
as an "attractiveness-related" crime in which the victim's physical appearance contributes to her victimization. Under some circumstances, a
physically attractive rape victim may be judged as a more likely target for
the assailant's aggression and, thus, as more responsible for the rape; in
other contexts, a less attractive victim may be perceived as seducing or provoking the assailant.
Contributing to the complex role of victim attractiveness in rape cases
is the possibility that attractiveness may not always operate as a main effect
(see Berscheid & Walster, 1974); rather, it may interact with other victim
characteristics to determine observers' judgments about rape incidents. Kerr
(1978) reported that victim attractiveness and victim "precautiousness" interacted in influencing the likelihood that subjects would convict a defendant charged with auto theft. He discovered that subjects were more likely
to convict the defendant when the victim was presented as physically attractive, but only when the victim was perceived as both attractive and as
relatively blameless for the offense against her. Within the context of rape,
legal standards have traditionally required that the victim prove her
"blamelessness" (nonconsent) by evidence indicating that she actively
resisted the crime against her. Kerr's (1978) "beautiful and blameless" findings suggest the possibility that the physical attractiveness and resistance
style of a rape victim may interact in determining mock jurors' perceptions
of the victim and defendant in the case. However, these relationships remain to be investigated empirically.
In addition to victim characteristics, research has revealed that
characteristics of observers (mock jurors) may influence their perceptions
of rape victims and defendants. Investigators have reported that subjects'
attitudes toward rape (Feild, 1978), attitudes toward feminism (Krulewitz &
Payne, 1978), belief in a "just world" (Kerr & Kurtz, 1977), and gender
(Calhoun, Selby, & Warring, 1976; Kerr & Kurtz, 1977; Rumsey & Rumsey,
1977; Selby, Calhoun, & Brock, 1977; Seligman et al., 1977; Smith et al.,
1976) may influence their judgments in a rape case. In addition, Deitz (1980)
identified an important predictor of jurors' responses to rape cases their
pretrial empathy toward rape victims and rapists. She reported that jurors
who scored high on the Rape Empathy Scale (RES) indicating relatively
greater empathy for a rape victim sentenced the defendant in a hypothetical
rape case to a longer prison sentence, expressed greater certainty about the

V ictim Resistance and Attractiveness

265

defendant's guilt, perceived the victim as less responsible for the assault,
viewed the victim as less likely to have encouraged the rape, and expressed
more positive feelings toward the rape victim than did jurors who scored low
on the RES. Moreover, high RES jurors rated the defendant as more responsible for the rape, expressed less positive feelings about the defendant, identified less with him, and rated the psychological impact of the rape and
seriousness of the crime as greater than did low RES jurors. In addition,
Deitz (1980) reported significant interactions between juror empathy and
victim resistance on three dependent measures, the extent to w hich the defendant was responsible for the rape, jurors' certainty about the guilt of the
defendant, and their ratings of the seriousness of the crime. In each case,
jurors who scored high on the RES were consistently supportive of the rape
victim, regardless of her resistance or nonresistance to the assault; in contrast,
low-scoring RES jurors differentiated among the three victim resistance conditions (passive, assertive, and aggressive). In all three interactions, lowscoring RES jurors responded least positively to the rape victim who attempted to verbally resist the assault against her.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the influence of subjects' pretrial empathy toward rape victims and rapists, and the physical attractiveness and resistance style of the rape victim on mock jurors' attributions of responsibility for the crime, as well as these jurors' social perceptions
of the rape victim and defendant. Using the results of earlier studies (Deitz,
1980; Deitz & B\Tnes, 1981), the authors h>pothesized that subjects' pretrial
empathy toward rape victims and rapists would be predictive of their perceptions of the victim and defendant in a specific sexual assault case. It was
predicted that subjects who exhibited greater pretrial empathy toward rape victims would attribute less responsibility for the specific incident to the victim and
would perceive her more positively than would subjects who exhibited less
pretrial empathy toward rape victims.
In accordance with the attractiveness literature cited, it was further
hypothesized that subjects would express more positive feelings toward, and
greater identification with, the attractive rape victim than the unattractive victim. Moreover, as suggested by the results of Kerr's (1978) study, it was
predicted that the physical attractiveness and resistance style ofthe rape victim would interact in influencing observers' judgments about the victim and
defendant in the case. In contrast to Kerr's (1978) crime description, it was
noted that both victim "blamelessness" (resistance) and attractiveness might
have different implications for subjects presented with a rape incident than
for subjects judging an automobile theft case. Therefore, specific predictions
about the nature of these interactions between victim attractiveness and
resistance were not advanced. Finally, using the results reported by Krulewitz
and Nash (1979) and Scroggs (1976), the authors predicted that male and

266

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

female subjects would differ in their reactions to the rape victim's resistance
style; therefore, interactions between victim resistance and subject gender
were predicted.

METHOD
Subjects
Subjects were 97 female and 93 male undergraduates enrolled in introductory psychology courses at Colorado State University. All subjects
received credit toward a course requirement in exchange for their participation in the study.

Experimenters
All subjects were tested by one male and one female experimenter, both
graduate students in psychology who were familiar with the general experimental design ofthe study, but unaware of any specific hypotheses. The
two experimenters were present at both testing sessions and shared equally in
distributing test materials, presenting instructions to subjects, answering
questions, and providing debriefing information.

Instruments
The Rape Empathy Scale (RES). In order to assess subjects' pretrial empathy toward rapists and rape victims, the Rape Empathy Scale (RES; Deitz,
Blackwell, Daley, & Bentley, 1982) was used in this study. The RES is a
20-item scale, with each item consisting of two statements designed to represent empathy with either the rape victim's position or that of the rapist.
Sample items follow:
6. a. In a court of law, I feel that the rapist must be held accountable for his behavior
during the rape,
b. In a court of law, I feel that the rape victim must be held accountable for her
behavior during the rape.
16. a. I feel it is impossible for a man to rape a woman unless she is willing.
b. I feel it is possible for a man to rape a woman against her will.

Subjects were instructed to read each set of statements, to choose the


one statement from each pair that they preferred, and to indicate their
degree of preference for one statement over the other (ranging from strong
preference to no preference for either statement). Subjects' responses were

Victim Resistance and Attractiveness

267

coded on a 7-point scale, resulting in a potential range of RES scores from 20,
indicating extreme empathy toward the rapist, to 140, indicating extreme
empathy toward the rape victim.
Alpha coefficients for the RES, calculated for five samples of
undergraduates at Colorado State University (total N = 769 males and 716
females), have ranged from .80 to .86. Alpha coefficients calculated for two
samples of prospective jurors in Larimer County, Colorado (total N = 174
males and 202 females) ranged from .86 to .89. Validity data (Deitz et al.,
1982) revealed that the RES differentiated between male and female subjects'
empathy toward rape \iaims and rapists; between women who ha\e either been
raped or successfully resisted rape and those who have had no exposure to
rape; and between subjects who imposed a harsh sentence for the defendant
in a hypothetical rape case and those who imposed a more lenient sentence. In
addition, subjects' RES scores correlated significantly (r = .28 to .43)
with their scores on the Attitudes Toward Women Scale (Spence, Helmreich,
& Stapp, 1973), but not significantly {r = .08 for males and - .10 for females)
with their scores on the Marlowe-Crowne Social Desirability Scale (Crowne &
Marlowe, 1964). Furthermore, Deitz et al. (1982) reported that jurors who
scored high on the RES, indicating greater empathy toward rape victims, expressed greater support for the enactment of a marital rape law in Colorado,
as well as greater support for the Equal Rights Amendment and the Women's
Movement, than did jurors whose RES scores indicated a greater tendency to
empathize with the rapist.
The Rape Responsibility Questionnaire (RRQ). Based upon the
previous attribution research dealing with responsibility for sexual assault
(Calhoun et al., 1976; Feldman-Summers & Lindner, 1976; Jones & Aronson,
1973; Smith et al., 1976), 12 dependent measures were selected to assess subjects' responses to a hypothetical rape case. The 12 items were scored on
11-point Likert scales and included the sentence (in years) subjects would impose for the defendant (ranging, in accordance with Colorado law, from less
than 1 year to greater than 40 years); the certainty subjects felt about the guilt
of the defendant (ranging from "not at all sure" to "very sure"); the degree of
identification subjects felt with the rape victim and defendant (ranging from
"none at all" to "very much"); and the personal feelings subjects held for both
parties (ranging from 'Very negative" to "very positive"). Additional items
assessed the degree of responsibility attributed to the defendant and rape \ ictim (ranging from "not at all responsible" to "very responsible"); the extent to
which the victim's involvement was due to chance (ranging from "not at all
due to chance" to "totally due to chance"); the likelihood that the victim did
something which encouraged the rape (ranging from "highly unlikely" to
"highly likely"); the severity of the psychological impact of the rape for the
victim (ranging from "not at all severe" to "very severe"); and the seriousness
of the crime of rape (ranging from "not at all serious" to "very serious").

268

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

Procedure
All subjects attended one of two experimental sessions, during which
they received the following questionnaires: the Rape Empathy Scale, one of
six written rape vignettes, and the Rape Responsibility Questionnaire. The
physical attractiveness and resistance style of the rape victim were varied
across the rape vignettes, resulting in descriptions of the rape victim as an attractive or unattractive rape victim who responded passively, assertively, or
aggressively. The description of the rape victim was varied as follows:
The victim is a physically (attractive/unattractive) 20-year old Caucasian female, 5 feet
4 inches in height, and weighing 125 pounds. She has brown hair, brown eyes, and was
wearing a tailored denim pantsuit at the time of the attack. The victim was extremely
frightened during the attack, (and was unable to either verbally or physically resist the
sexual assault against her/but tried to talk the rapist out of sexually assaulting her/but
tried to physically resist the sexual assault by kicking the rapist in the shins and punching him in the face).

The description of the defendant was held constant across conditions. In


each case, he was described as a 25-year-old Caucasian male, 5 feet 10
inches in height, and weighing 175 pounds. Similarly, the description ofthe
rape incident remained constant across variations of victim attractiveness
and resistance. In each description, the incident was depicted as having occurred on the campus of Colorado State University, following a night class,
when the victim walked from a classroom building to her car, which was
parked in a nearby parking lot. Subjects were informed that less than a
block from the victim's car, a man accosted the victim, and a struggle
resulted in which the victim was stripped and forced to engage in sexual intercourse with her assailant. In addition, subjects were told that a passerby
had phoned the police, who arrived and apprehended the defendant minutes
after the sexual assault had been completed. Finally, subjects were informed
that the defendant had been arrested and charged with forcible rape and
were asked to put themselves in the place of jurors hearing the case in
responding to the 12 items of the RRQ.

RESULTS
Manipulation

Checks

Manipulation checks obtained from an independent sample of 95 student subjects indicated that both the Attractiveness and Resistance
manipulations were successful. As noted in Table I, the attractive victim
was rated as significantly more beautiful, more attractive, more sociable,

V iciim Resistance and Attractiveness


Table I. Mean Values for Manipulation Checks on the Levels of Victim Attractiveness and Victim Resistance
Victim Attractiveness

Attractive

Unattractive

P<

5.19
2.45
5.15
4.79
3.81
3.11

3.52
4.73
4.46
4.25
4.60
3.63

64.71
83.92
8.79
5.36
10.53

.0001
.0001
.005

Ugly-beautiful
Attractive-unattractive
Unpleasant-pleasant
Sociable-unsociable
Seducti\e-not seductive
\\'arm-cold

.05

.005

5.51

.05

P<

Victim Resistance

Passi\ e

Asserti^e

Aggressive

Aggressive-passive
Passi\e-acti\e

5.39
2>^0

4.59
3.94

3.72
4.69

13.14
13.23

.0001
.0001

more pleasant, and warmer than was the unattractive rape victim. Interestingly, the attractive rape victim was also rated as more seductive than
was the unattractive rape victim. This result provides support for Dermer
and ThiePs (1975) contention that physical attractiveness may be disadvantageous for a rape victim in court, in that jurors may view a "seductive" victim as lacking credibility.
Data Analyses
Two separate 2 x 3 x 2 analyses of variance, with regression solution
to correct for unequal cell ns, were used to analyze the data. In the first
ANOVA, the Attractiveness of the Victim, Resistance Style of the Victim,
and Sex of Subject served as independent variables; in the second analysis
of variance, high and low levels of Rape Empathy replaced the Sex of Subject variable. The two levels of Rape Empathy were formed by selecting
subjects in the upper and lower thirds of the RES distribution within each
sex. F tests for simple main effects (Kirk, 1968) and Newman-Keuls Multiple Range Tests (at the .05 level) were used in post hoc comparisons in interactions and main effects, respectively.
Victim Resistance and Attractiveness
Main effects for victim attractiveness were found for the degree of
identification subjects felt with the victim, and subjects' feelings about the
victim. As predicted, subjects identified more with the physically attractive
rape victim and expressed more positive feelings about her than they did
about the unattractive victim. These results are reported in Table II.
A main effect for the victim's resistance style was found for subjects'
feelings about the defendant. Subjects expressed more positive feelings

Deitz, Littman, and BenCley


Table I I . Main Effects for Victim Attractiveness and Victim Resistance
Victim Attractiveness

Attractive

Unattractive

6.68
8.38

5.72
7.12

5.30
17.70

Identification with victim


Feelings about victim
Victim Resistance

io<

05
001

Passive

Assertive

Aggressive

P<

2.38

1.68

2.47

3.54

.05

Feelings about defendant

about the defendant who was charged with raping either a passive or aggressive rape victim than about the defendant accused of raping a woman
who resisted by attempting to talk the assailant out of raping her (see Table
II).
An Attractiveness x Victim Resistance interaction was revealed for
subjects' certainty about the guilt of the defendant, F(2, 178) = 3.21, p <
.05. Post hoc tests indicated the presence of a simple main effect for Attractiveness when the victim physically resisted her assailant, F{\, 178) = 4.49,
p < .05 and a simple main effect for Resistance when the victim was
described as unattractive, F(2, 178) < .01. Thus, subjects were more certain
that the defendant charged with raping an attractive aggressive victim was
guilty than was the defendant charged with raping an unattractive aggressive victim. Although subjects did not differentiate among the three
resistance levels when the victim was described as attractive, they did so
when the victim was described as unattractive. These data are presented in
Figure 1.
A second Attractiveness x Victim Resistance interaction was found
for subjects' feelings about the rape victim, F{2, 178) = 3.44, p < .05. Post
hoc analyses revealed simple main effects for attractiveness in both the

10-

ATTRACTIVE

z
o
UL

UJ

h e
UNATTRACTIVE
I
ASSERTIVE

I
AGGRESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

V\o. I. X'ictim

Attracti\eness

Victim

Rcsistancc intcraction for subjects' certainty

about the euilt of the defendant.

271

Victim Resistance and Attractiveness

ATTRACTIVE

o
a
0>
o
5 7
-I

liJ

Fig. 2. \ictim Attractiveness x Victim


Resistance interaction for subjects' expressed
feelings about the rape \ ictim.

UNATTRACTIVE
MSSIVE

ASSERTIVE

AGGRESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

assertive and aggressive resistance conditions, F(l, 178) = 3.34 and 16.09,
respectively, p < .01. Subjects expressed more positive feelings about the
attractive rape victim who exhibited some form of resistance than about her
unattractive counterpart. This effect was particularly striking when the victim was described as physically resisting the rape, a finding that is supported
by the presence of a simple main effect for Resistance in the unattractive
victim condition, F(2, 178) = 3.27, p < .05. These data are depicted in
Figure 2.
An Attractiveness x Subject Sex interaction was found for subjects'
ratings of the psychological impact of the rape for the victim, F(l, 178) =
4.69, p < .05. A simple main effect for attractiveness for male subjects
(F(l, 178) = 4.87, p < .05) and a simple main effect for subject sex in the
unattractive victim condition {F{\, 178) = 14.06, p < .01) indicated that
male subjects rated the psychological impact of the rape for the victim as
greater when the victim was described as attractive than when she was
described as unattractive; and female subjects rated the psychological impact of the rape as greater for the unattractive victim than did the males.
Female subjects did not differ in their ratings ofthe psychological impact of
the rape for attractive and unattractive rape victims.
Marginal support for the predicted Victim Resistance x Subject Sex
interactions was revealed. On two dependent measures, subjects' attributions of responsibility to the defendant and their ratings of the
psychological impact of the rape for the victim. Resistance x Subject Sex
interactions approached significance {p < .06) (see Figures 3 and 4). In both
cases, female subjects were consistent across levels of victim resistance in
their ratings of the defendant's responsibility for the crime and the
psychological impact of the rape for the victim, but male subjects differentiated among the three levels of victim resistance.

272

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

II

FEMALES

10-

MALES

4PASSIVE

ASSERTIVE

AGGRESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

Fig. 3. Victim Resistance x Subject Sex interaction for


subjects' attributions of responsibility to the defendant.

Main Effects for Sex of Subject


Consistent with the results of earlier attribution studies (e.g.,
Calhoun et al., 1976; Feldman-Summers & Lindner, 1976; Smith et al.,
1976), main effects for subject sex were found for 7 of the 12 dependent
variables. Male subjects believed that the victim was more likely to have
done something to encourage the rape, identified less with the victim, identified more with the defendant, and had less positive feelings about the rape
victim than did female subjects. In addition, male subjects felt that the
psychological impact of the rape was less severe, perceived rape as a less
serious crime, and were less certain about the guilt of the defendant than
were the females in the present study. These data are presented in Table III.

IIL)
Q.

FEMALES

z
5

o
X

9-

u
(0

MALES

a
1.

1
mSSIVE

ASSERTIVE

-H

AOORESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

Fig. 4. Victim Resistance x Subject Sex


intcraction for subjects' ratings of the
psychological impact of the rape on the
victim.

273

V ictim Resistance and Attractiveness

LOW RES

z
UJ

o
<
Q:
3
o
u
z
UJ

2-HIGH RES

ATTRACTIVE

UNATTRACTIVE

VICTIM ATTRACTIVENESS

Fig. 5. Victim Attractiveness x


Rape Empathy (RES) interaction for
subjects' ratings of the extent to
which the rape victim encouraged
the sexual assault.

Main Effects and Interactions for Rape Empathy


As predicted, main effects for rape empathy were revealed on 10 of the
12 dependent variables. Subjects who scored high on the RES, indicating
greater pretrial empathy with the rape victim, e.xpressed greater certainty
about the defendant's guilt and attributed greater responsibility to him for
the rape, expressed more negative feelings about the defendant, and identified less with him than did subjects who scored in the lower third of the
RES distribution. Similarly, high-scoring subjects expressed more positive
feelings about the rape victim and greater identification with her, felt that the
victim was less likely to have done something to encourage the rape, felt that

Table III. Main Effects for Sex of Subject


RRQitcm
Victim encouragement
Feelings about \ ictim
Psychological impact
of rape
Seriousness of rape
Identification with
victim
Identification with
defendant
Certainty about
defendant guilt

Males (.V)

Females iX)

P<

2.89
7.40

2.04
8.10

10.85
5.52

.001
.02

9.34
9.91

10.04
10.67

9.11
10.50

.005
.001

5.41

6.97

14.06

.001

2.60

1.36

11.35

.001

8.66

9.43

5.27

.05

274

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley


Table IV. Main Effects for Rape Empathy
RRQitem

HighRLS(A')

Low RES (A)

1.89
8.20

2.73
7.39

6.60
5.75

.02

6.59
9.65

5.62
8.77

3.92
5.63

.05
.02

10.35
10.80
1.61

8.98
9.59
2.81

22.52
19.23
9.27

.001
.001
.005

1.47
10.79

2.56
10.16

11.39
10.68

.001
.001

7.95

.01

Victim encouragement
F c c l i n g s a b o u t \ ictim
Identification with

victim
Attribution to chance
F^sNchological impact
of rape
Seriousness of rape
Feelings about defendant
Identification with
defendant
Defendant responsibility
Certainty about
defendant guilt

9.74

P<

.02

her involvement in the rape was more likely to be due to chance factors, and
rated the psychological impact and seriousness of the rape as greater than did
low-scoring subjects. These data are presented in Table IV.
Two significant interactions between Rape Empathy and Victim Attractiveness and Resistance were revealed. An Attractiveness x Rape Empathy interaction for subjects' ratings of victim encouragement indicated
that although subjects who empathized with the rape victim did not differentiate between levels of victim attractiveness, subjects who scored low
on the RES rated the unattractive victim as more likely to have encouraged
the rape than the attractive rape victim, F(l, 118) = 4.68,/? < .05. These
data are depicted in Figure 5.

UNATTRACTIVE
ATTRACTIVE

z
UJ

ATTRACTIVE

e+
HIGH RES
I
PASSIVE

ASSERTIVE

AGGRESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

PASSIVE.

4ASSERTIVE

AGGRESSIVE

VICTIM RESISTANCE

Fig. 6. Victim Attractiveness x Victim Resistance x Rape Empathy interaction for low
and high RES subjects' certainty about the guilt of the defendant.

Victim Resistance and Attractiveness

275

A three-way interaction between Victim Attractiveness, Victim


Resistance, and Rape Empathy was revealed for subjects' certainty about
the guilt of the defendant, F(2, 118) = 3.47, p < .05. Once again, subjects
who scored high on the RES did not differentiate between levels of Victim
Attractiveness or Victim Resistance, while low-scoring subjects were less
certain that the defendant charged with raping an unattractive aggressive
rape victim was guilty than the defendant charged with raping an attractive
aggressive victim. Furthermore, high RES subjects were more certain that
the defendant charged with raping an unattractive aggressive victim was
guilty than were low RES subjects judging the same defendant. These
findings are supported by post hoc tests which indicated the presence of a
significant simple main effect for victim attractiveness in the low empathy/aggressive victim condition (F(l, 118) = 8.31,/?< .01) and a simple
main effect for rape empathy in the unattractive/aggressive victim condition (F(l, 118) = \3.\\,p<
.01). These data are presented in Figure 6.

DISCUSSION
The results of the present study reveal that, in general, subjects exhibited considerable svTnpathy toward the rape victim and were quite certain that the defendant in the case was guilty. The extreme means on several
dependent variables support this assertion. Although subjects were informed that the rape victim was "extremely frightened during the attack,"
they responded differentially to both the victim and defendant on the basis
of the victim's resistance style and physical attractiveness. Legal standards
for consent would dictate that the victim who physically resisted her
assailant was exhibiting clear nonconsent to the crime, but subjects applied
different standards to attractive and unattractive nonconsenting victims.
Subjects expressed the least positive feelings about the unattractive rape victim who physically fought with her assailant, and they were least certain
about the guilt of the defendant charged with raping her. Rather than consistently supporting the "beautiful and blameless" victim, as suggested by
the findings of Kerr (1978), subjects appeared to discriminate against the
unattractive "blameless" (aggressive) victim.
Several explanations for these intriguing results, focusing on subjects'
cognitive judgments and affective reactions, are possible. Supporting the
cognition that rape is an attractiveness-related crime, subjects may have
found it difficult to believe that an assailant would persist in attacking an
unattractive victim who physically resisted the assault (see Figure 1). They
may have viewed the unattractive aggressive rape victim as contributing to
her own victimization and, thus, may have been less certain that her alleged
assailant was guilty. On the other hand, as suggested by Figure 2, subjects

276

Deitz, Littman, and Bentley

may have perceived the unattractive rape victim who actively resisted her
assailant as violating sex-role stereotypes associated with femininity. When
the victim was described as physically unattractive, subjects expressed increasingly negative feelings toward her as her resistance to the rape increased. In the present study, subjects may have perceived the unattractive aggressive rape victim as being farthest from the subjects' ideal of femininity. As
a result of this assessment, subjects might have been less positive in their
evaluations of her and more lenient in judging her alleged assailant. In support of this explanation, Costrich, Feinstein, Kidder, Maracek, and Pascale
(1975) reported that subjects penalized aggressive women confederates for
violating traditional stereotypic expectations, with male subjects penalizing
sex-role norm violations to a greater extent than females.
Further support for a cognitive sex-role stereotyping explanation is
provided by the marginally significant Sex of Subject x Victim Resistance
interactions, which suggest the existence of important subject sex differences in perceptions of victim resistance. Female observers appeared to
be unaffected by subtle manipulations of the victim's reaction to the assault,
but males tended to rate the defendant as less responsible and to rate the
psychological impact of the rape as less when the victim was described as
physically resisting her assailant than when she was described as resisting
less actively. These results reveal a pattern opposite to that reported by
Krulewitz and Nash (1979), who discovered more positive judgments of the
victim by males when the victim actively resisted her assailant, and by
Scroggs (1976), who found that males assigned harsher penalities to the
defendant when the victim exhibited active resistance. One explanation for
these conflicting results can be found in the contrasting definitions of high
resistance in the present and previous studies. The high victim resistance
manipulations in both the Krulewitz and Nash (1979) and Scroggs (1976)
studies included not only physical resistance (i.e., kicking and struggling)
but also screaming on the part of the victim. In the present study, the
absence of screaming in the description of high victim resistance may well
have caused subjects to focus on the physical elements of her resistance and
to judge the victim as less "feminine" than they might have judged a victim
who also screamed for help.
An alternative explanation for the present findings focuses on the affective reactions of subjects to the rape victim. Several writers (FeldmanSummers & Linder, 1976; Fulero & DeLara, 1976; Metzger, 1976; Russell,
1975) have hypothesized that an observer's ability to empathize or identify
with a rape victim can substantially affect the individual's decisions concerning the guilt or innocence of the defendant in a rape case, as well as his or
her perceptions of the victim, the defendant, and the rape incident. As sug-

Victim Resistance and Attractiveness

277

gested by Figures 3, 4, 5, 6, and the main effects for rape empathy and subject sex, subjects who most strongly empathized or identified with the rape
victim (female and high RES Ss) may have felt greater sympathy and concern for her than did male and low RES subjects. The former group of subjects was consistently positive in their ratings of the rape victim and certain
of her alleged assailant's guilt, regardless of her resistance style or physical
attractiveness. In contrast, subjects who exhibited less identification with
and empathy toward the rape victim may have scrutinized the victim for
evidence that she encouraged or consented to sexual relations. Further support for an affective explanation is suggested by Figures 1 and 2. Overall,
subjects expressed the least positive feelings toward the aggressive unattractive victim and were least certain that the defendant charged with raping her
was guilty. Perhaps the subjects' negative emotional reactions toward the
unattractive victim who fought with her assailant mediated their certainty
of the defendant's guilt or innocence. Further research, designed to clarify
the mechanisms underKing subjects' reactions to rape victims of var>ing
physical attractiveness and resistance style, is clearly in order. Such research
might focus on (1) subjects' perceptions of the rape victim's "femininity";
(2) subjects' attitudes toward passivity, assertiveness, and physical aggression as "acceptable" reactions of rape victims; and (3) assessment and
manipulation of subjects' emotional involvement with rape victims and
defendants.
The present findings suggest that subject characteristics, as well as
those of the victim and defendant, may be predictive of the outcome of a
rape trial. The sex differences reported are consistent with those of previous
investigators (Calhoun et al., 1976; Deitz, 1980; Deitz & Byrnes, 1981;
Feldman-Summers & Lindner, 1976; Smith et al., 1976) in that female subjects consistently responded more positively toward the rape victim and
were more certain that the defendant was guilty than were males. Moreover,
the main effects for rape empathy provide initial support for Feild's (1978)
contention that objective measurements of subjects' perceptions of rape
might be useful in screening potential jurors for a rape case. In the present
study, high and low RES scores differentiated subjects' certainty about the
guilt of the defendant perhaps the most important consideration in obtaining a guilty verdict in a court of law. RES scores were also predictive of
subjects' ratings of defendant responsibility, victim encouragement, and
seriousness and psychological impact of the crime, as well as of subjects'
social perceptions of rape victims and defendants. Because college students
were used as subjects in this investigation and they were presented with only
a short written description of a rape case, as opposed to an entire trial, care
must be taken in generalizing the results of this study to jurors hearing an

278

Deilz, Lillman, and Benlley

actual rape case. Additional research, incorporating more realistic trial


materials presented to eligible jurors, will address the utility of the RES in
predicting jurors' decisions in sexual assault cases.
Both Hilberman (1976) and Russell (1975) have advocated the need for
e.xtensive restructuring of societal values and attitudes, and ultimately the
elimination of stereotypic sex roles as a means of abolishing sexual assault
in our society. The present study, in highlighting the importance of victim
resistance and attractiveness, as well as the subject variables of gender and
rape empathy, lends support to this assertion. Perhaps, as Hilberman (1976)
stated, "only when the sex roles of both men and women are defined by individual needs and talents rather than by stereotypic expectations based on
sex and power motives will there be an end to rape" (p. 437).

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