From "SSC" and "RACK" to the "4Cs": introducing a new framework for negotiating BDSM participation.
Williams, D.J. ; Thomas, Jeremy N. ; Prior, Emily E. 等
Background and Introduction
From the time of Richard von Krafft-Ebing's (1886/1978) text
Psychopathia Sexualis, BDSM has commonly been assumed to be motivated by
an underlying psychopathology. Although biases and misinterpretations
among professionals still remain (see Hoff & Sprott, 2009; Kolmes,
Stock, & Moser, 2007; Wright, 2009), researchers have consistently
shown that BDSM cannot be explained by psychopathology (i.e., Connelly,
2006; Cross & Matheson, 2006; Powls & Davies, 2012; Richters, de
Visser, Rissel, Grulich, & Smith, 2008; Weinberg, 2006). Some
scholars have recognized that not only is BDSM participation not
associated with psychopathology, but that it may be associated with
desirable psychological states that are often associated with healthy
leisure experience (Newmahr, 2010; Taylor & Ussher, 2001; Williams,
2006, 2009; Wismeijer & van Assen, 2013). Indeed, a widespread shift
in understanding seems to be occurring wherein consensual BDSM
participation is believed to be an acceptable expression of sexuality
and/or leisure.
In light of this shift and in combination with the development of
community-based research as a methodological strategy across the social
sciences generally, an exciting recent development is the formal
collaboration between scholars and communities of people with
alternative sexual identities, including BDSM. The Community-Academic
Consortium for Research on Alternative Sexualities (CARAS) was formed in
2005 and combines the knowledge and strengths of scholars and community
members to produce high-quality knowledge that can directly benefit the
community (Sprott & Bienvenu II, 2007). We welcome this development,
and it is in the spirit of mutual benefit that we write the present
paper. In fact, we are both scholars and also members of the BDSM
community. Hopefully, our discussion here will generate insights among
both academics and nonacademics.
In this paper, we summarize the popular BDSM community mottos of
Safe, Sane, and Consensual (SSC) and Risk-Aware Consensual Kink (RACK)
before proposing what we think is an improved approach, which we call
the Caring, Communication, Consent, and Caution (4Cs) framework. Since
each framework explicitly includes the precise concept of consent, we
will discuss a few of the thorny issues surrounding the notion of
consent within the 4Cs model a little bit later in the paper, rather
than in our summary of SSC and RACK. We do this simply as a matter of
retaining a consistent overall structure for readers.
Social Context for the Development of SSC and RACK
Acceptable BDSM, of course, is predicated on careful negotiation
among participants. Ortmann and Sprott (2013) reminded us that the
concept and practice of consent among participants is what
differentiates BDSM from abuse, and they added that "similar to the
terms acquiescence and permission, consent is the process by which
approval or acceptance of what is planned (often by another) is
acceptable or agreeable" (p. 75). They also discussed the
development of SSC as a reaction to common beliefs that BDSM is
associated with pathology around sadism and masochism. Furthermore,
Tuscott (cited in Downing, 2007) suggested that the most frequent
accusation toward BDSM practitioners from outsiders is that such
practitioners are violent. It is important to note that explanations of
violence are also primarily rooted in popular social discourses of
psychopathology. Thus, it is not surprising that the starting point for
negotiating BDSM possibilities has centered on discussions of
psychological stability, consent and safety, hence the birth of SSC. SSC
constructs have remained the focus of discussions concerning BDSM
negotiation for a long time (Henkin & Holiday, 1996; Miller &
Devon, 1995; Taorimino, 2012; Wiseman, 1996). According to Henkin and
Holiday (1996), the "commandments" of healthy BDSM are being
truthful while playing safely, sanely, consensually, and
non-exploitatively.
Despite the popularity of SSC, some BDSM practitioners eventually
began to realize that SSC may exclude edgier forms of play that involve
higher physical and/or psychological risk, which may be part of the
motivation for participation. Risk, of course, is relative and can vary
tremendously across individuals. While Danica Patrick or Jimmy Johnson
can easily handle driving a car at triple-digit speeds, most of the rest
of us cannot do so nearly as safely. Similarly, BDSM participants vary
extensively in their physical and psychological capacities and
preferences. According to Downing (2007), such a realization shifted a
move from SSC to RACK, coined by Gary Switch. Indeed, it is noteworthy
that not only was the term safe replaced with risk-aware, but that the
term sane (or a similar term) was omitted. In BDSM communities, the term
sane seems to assume some standard of psychological health. However,
sane (versus insane) is technically a forensics designation, rather than
a psychological term, that is applied in assessing causality of a severe
mental disorder to the commission of a crime (see Roesch, Viljoen, &
Hui, 2003), thus its applicability to BDSM negotiation is of little
practical use.
Introducing the 4Cs Framework
While SSC and RACK focus on two shared, essential, concepts
(consent and safety/risk awareness), the 4Cs approach retains these
general concepts and adds the interrelated dimensions of caring and
communication. Of course, any BDSM negotiation framework, which can then
be represented as a motto, should be brief and easy for new participants
to remember. Like SSC and RACK, the 4Cs of caring, communication,
consent, and caution are brief and very easy to memorize. We now provide
a brief overview of the 4Cs framework before examining each component in
more depth later in the paper. Because consent is emphasized and
commonly discussed in both SSC and RACK, we will not address it here in
the overview, but will devote some in-depth conversation to it as an
essential dimension of the 4Cs.
While there seem to be different levels and intensities of caring
that vary between people across their various social relationships, we
can commonly acknowledge a basic and inherent caring of people simply
for being fellow human beings. Indeed, (alternative) communities often
form because of a basic caring, personal identification with, and place
to support its members.
The inclusion of caring in a BDSM negotiation motto reflects an
ethical stance while acknowledging individuals as unique human beings.
The form of caring (i.e., level of trust and intimacy of relationships
among participants in a scene) also shapes the qualitative experiences
of BDSM. Communication, while often rightly discussed by BDSM authors
under consent, is also strongly connected to caring and caution.
Although presented separately, these concepts in BDSM are all tightly
interwoven. Emphasizing communication should lead to a better
understanding among participants regarding individuals' unique
identities, needs, and motivations, and thus more fulfilling BDSM
experiences. In short, communication as its own entity allows for
participants to better understand the subjective realities of those with
whom they play.
The reframing of safety/risk awareness to caution appears to be
somewhat subtle, but perhaps carries less discursive baggage. We think
that this possibility is important because it may be more inclusive of
people who embrace a broader range of social discourses concerning how
they utilize different forms of knowledge. Currently, we have observed
that many BDSM participants seem to defer, knowingly or not, to somewhat
strict medical discourses concerning discussions of risk and safety. In
this sense, RACK seems preferable to SSC, yet we still realize that SSC
has become more restrictive and perhaps codified than was originally
intended (see Downing, 2007). We agree with Ortmann and Sprott (2013)
that specific BDSM activities may not necessarily be commonly perceived
to be safe, yet people may be aware of the risks and consensually engage
in such activities. However, the word risk remains somewhat situated
within powerful restrictive discourses of medicine and public health,
whereas caution seems to be broader, still relevant, yet it is perhaps
less embedded in such discourses. We are by no means advocating that
BDSM participants simplistically discard important medical knowledge.
Such knowledge should be appreciated and carefully considered
side-by-side with a variety of other discourses and perspectives.
Our preference of the word caution is an acknowledgement of
longstanding politics concerning bodies and sexuality (Foucault, 1977,
1978), and allows for a wide range of meanings and motivations for
engaging in various possible forms of BDSM. At the same time, people who
espouse a positivist epistemological perspective can certainly interpret
"caution" from medical and scientific discourses. The point
here is not simply one of changing words, but to create more discursive
space to allow for differing epistemological perspectives. Given this
overview, we will now further discuss each component of the 4Cs and the
underlying importance of each for consideration in a BDSM negotiation
framework.
Taking a Closer Look at Each Dimension
Because consent is essential in SSC, RACK, and the 4Cs, we will
focus on it first in this section. We will then move to explorations of
communication, caring, and caution.
Consent
The notion of consent has almost always been a core consideration
at the heart of both popular (e.g., Miller & Devon, 1995; Taorimino,
2012; Wiseman, 1996) and more academic discussions of BDSM (e.g, Baldwin
2003; Langdridge & Barker, 2007; Weiss, 2011). Whether utilized as a
kind of defense of BDSM or whether simply being beat into the heads (or
preferably other body parts) of newbie practitioners, consent has often
been thought of as a key element that distinguishes BDSM from violence
and other types of abuse (Newmahr, 2011; Ortmann & Sprott, 2013).
Yet, in spite of this central role of consent--a role that is clearly
articulated within the acronyms of both SSC as well as RACK--we suggest
that the notion of consent suffers from considerable ambiguity and
deserves some much-needed clarity. Although others have certainly
pointed out some of these same ambiguities (e.g., Barker, 2013; Newmahr,
2011; Tsaros, 2013), we propose that as part of our new acronym of the
4Cs, the BDSM community would do well to strive for a more sophisticated
and nuanced understanding of consent.
The problem as we see it, is that when many people talk about
consent, they do it so flippantly and easily that it obscures the
complications implicit to the notion. This is especially the case in the
vanilla world, where, for example, much of the advocacy surrounding
sexual violence prevention regularly proclaims simplistic slogans such
as "no means no" and "yes means yes." Corresponding
to this, and seemingly impeding any further conversation, it seems like
there is an almost immediate pushback against anyone who dares to
question the supposedly-obvious nature of the distinction between yes
and no. One has only to look as far as popular music and Robin
Thicke's recent hit single, "Blurred Lines," and the
repetition of its controversial chorus, "I know you want it."
The popular backlash was quick and unwavering in its portrayal of this
song as epitomizing an assumedly-ubiquitous "rape culture."
We suggest, however, that one of the complications here is that
while perhaps it might be helpful if people said exactly what they
wanted--if they were direct, clear, and obvious all the time and in
every way--this is just not the nature of reality. While frequent and
direct communication is desired, there is always more that is left
unsaid. This is especially the case with BDSM, where much of the
eroticism and allure of BDSM hinges on blatantly playing with and often
purposefully obscuring consent. Whether that's the explicit
specifications of consensual non-consent, or whether it's the use
of even the most minimal type of bondage, or whether it's merely
the top telling the bottom what to do--in all of these scenarios, BDSM
is clearly blanketed in the trappings of non-consent. Experienced BDSM
practitioners know this, and they know that navigating this tricky edge
of consent is the balancing act that brings BDSM alive.
Yet, that being said, we recognize that most BDSM practitioners
have little interest in their consent actually being violated. But this,
of course, raises all kinds of questions regarding what exactly is
consent and how do I know if my consent has been violated? For example,
is consent a verbal agreement? Is it a body posture? A knowing look? A
written out contract? In response, then, to these kinds of ambiguities,
we suggest that one of the ways to move beyond such questions is to take
a step back from the mechanics of consent and instead consider a broader
approach. In particular, we propose that BDSM practitioners--both new
and experienced alike--might benefit from learning to conceptualize
consent according to three distinct levels.
The first of these is what we might call surface consent. In many
ways, surface consent mirrors the kind of consent that is exemplified in
the phrases "no means no" and "yes means yes." When
you are at a play party and someone asks you whether you would be
interested in participating in some kind of scene, you might answer
according to this kind of surface consent: "yes, I'm
interested" or "no, I'm not."
A second level of consent and probably the level that is most often
associated with BDSM might be called scene consent. Here consent entails
the top and bottom discussing and negotiating what is going to occur in
the scene, and especially how the bottom might communicate to the top
that he or she is (in the middle of the scene) withdrawing consent,
typically through the use of some kind of safeword or gesture. Something
to be aware of here, however, is that even though these techniques of
consent may be relatively straightforward and clear, the fact that these
kinds of obfuscating mechanics are used at all continues to point to the
reality that BDSM largely operates on the basis of "blurred
lines."
This, in turn, takes us to a third and even more ambiguous level of
consent, what we might call deep consent. Here we are talking about
something beyond just a bottom's ability to use a safeword or
gesture. For instance, when a bottom is crying and sobbing and in
obvious distress and perhaps full into some kind of subspace--but
hasn't yet called "red"--we might wonder to what extent
the scene is affecting the thinking of the bottom and affecting the
bottom's mental capacity to yell out "red" or to engage
in cognitive consent at all? In addition, even if the bottom is still
able to think, the bottom may not actually know whether he or she is
consenting. In such cases, it seems like the question of consent is
something that almost has to be considered after the fact. As the bottom
plays back the scene in the hours and days and weeks that follow, he or
she might come to some kind of conclusion: "I consented" or
"no I didn't" or perhaps "I guess I just don't
know." In addition, it is important to be aware that aftercare and
later conversations (especially between the top and bottom) may actually
change the bottom's interpretation of a scene and his or her
consequent view of consent.
Thus, while acknowledging that more sophisticated philosophical
analyses of consent could certainly be provided, we suggest that the
basic takeaway here is for BDSM practitioners to recognize and be
cognizant of the fact that consent is a messy business. This, of course,
is not at all to downplay the significance or importance of consent, or
to make light of the potential emotional and psychic costs of having
one's consent violated. Indeed, just as in every relationship
people get hurt from time to time, we suspect that there are few BDSM
practitioners among us who have not on occasion had our consent violated
at least in part. That being said, some of us play on the safe side of
consent, and some of us like to dangle over the cliff. Some of us go so
far as to secretly long for our consent to be violated mid-scene in the
hope that our retrospective analysis will lead us to conclude that at
some deeper and more meaningful level, we really did consent. These--for
better or worse--are the ambiguities of consent. Instead of denying
these ambiguities, we recommend that BDSM practitioners embrace them,
talk about them, negotiate with them, and continually and constantly
reassess.
Communication
BDSM participants realize the obvious importance of good
communication in negotiating personal limits within scenes. Scott (1997)
discussed how people have different types of limits, and these limits
may change depending on variables like time, current situation and mood,
exposure to activities, who they are playing with, and so forth.
Communication is important before, during, and after a scene. Such
communication is inextricably linked to the concepts of caring, consent
and caution, thus it deserves to be included in a basic framework of
negotiation.
Many scholars have found that good communication is one of the most
important factors for having a positive BDSM relationship (Cutler, 2003;
Williams, 2012). Cutler (2003) interviewed 33 individuals that were
actively participating in BDSM leisure practices and 19 of the 33
individuals identified communication as the number one most important
skill for having a "good" BDSM relationship. Cutler said that
his participants asserted that the need for good communication is more
significant in BDSM practices (compared to "vanilla"
practices) to prevent unintended physical or emotional harm. These
individuals valued clarity and transparency in all BDSM exchanges. An
important tenet of BDSM practice is to mutually create a power exchange.
It is essential for all practitioners involved to communicate about the
structures and processes involved in this exchange so that BDSM
experience is mutually pleasurable and safe (Kleinplatz & Moser,
2006).
Because there is no unifying theory in understanding BDSM and
people can vary tremendously in their overall physiologies,
psychological make-up, past experiences, spirituality, erotic
preferences, and motivations for participation; thorough communication
contributes to a fuller understanding of participants, their subjective
realities, and how to express care and support. Communication
facilitates a richer personal knowledge, caring and intimacy, which then
allows participants to explore, if they like, edgier forms of play that
may complicate consent. Communication, then, is an essential bridge
between caring and caution, which potentially may lead to the deep
consent that we described above.
Caring
Sexuality is a complex, holistic, multi-layered phenomenon that
permeates all aspects of a person's existence. We believe that
engaging an ethic of care (caring attitudes and behaviors) is beneficial
for understanding and enjoying sexuality and BDSM practices. Utilizing
an ethic of care when we are intent on exploring, engaging, or
understanding sexuality creates safety, trust, and respect for our
partners (Orme, 2002; Parton, 2003). This practice also conveys a level
of competence that affirms the individual expressions and/or cultural
mores of the people with which a person interacts (Vikan, Camino, &
Biaggio, 2005).
Feminist scholars developed the philosophy and practice of an ethic
of care in response to a patriarchal/positivist view of morality and
justice (Beecher & Stowe, 1971; Buhle & Buhle, 1978; Gilligan,
1982; Wollstonecraft, 1988). Western thought has historically posited
that justice and morality should be grounded in observable, empirical
truths that are applicable to all people, places, and things (Buhle
& Buhle, 1978; Gilligan, 1982; Wollstonecraft, 1988). A morally
evolved individual is self-reliant, independent, and able to make moral
judgment devoid of emotional persuasion (Kohlberg, 1971). An ethic of
care asserts that morality is a subjective, relational way of making
decisions (Gilligan, 1982). Decisions based upon an ethic of care
explore the interpersonal and communal ramifications of a decision,
rather than how the decision would impact "objective"
understandings of justice.
Feminist scholars (Jaggar, 1992; Tong, 2013; Vikan, Camino, &
Biaggio, 2005) assert that an ethic of care is a grounded in the belief
systems of many people, of all genders, throughout the world. Seeing the
world through the lens of an ethic of care brings diverse voices and
perspectives into the decision-making processes. "A dialogical
approach to moral problems would involve discussing and observing from
an attitude of caring - that includes attentiveness, responsibility,
responsiveness, and a commitment to see issues from different
perspectives" (Orme, 2002, p. 810). Conveying empathy, consent, and
responsiveness when we negotiate, plan, or practice our sexuality are a
few of the attitudes connected with an ethic of care.
In alignment with an ethic of care, philosophers and social
scientists have developed the concept of intersubjectivity (Benjamin,
2013; Gillespie & Cornish, 2010). Scholars have created multiple
definitions of the term: a) an agreed upon definition created by
individuals in a given situation; b) a community created definition that
is reinforced through attitudes and behaviors that the community can use
to understand a given phenomenon; c) a shared feeling or thought
experienced by one person that influences the experiences of others, for
example, a shared feeling of care and affection influences that feeling
for others (Benjamin, 1995; 2013; Gillespie & Cornish, 2010).
An intersubjective perspective embraces the belief that all
individuals have unique lived experiences and as a result, unique
understandings about given phenomena, for example, sexuality and BDSM
activity. "Broadly speaking, we take intersubjectivity to refer to
the variety of possible relations between people's
perspectives" (Gillespie & Cornish, 2010, p. 19).
Intersubjectivity asserts that individual understandings are fluid,
relational, and ever-changing depending upon the context in which a
phenomenon is experienced. This point of view is in contrast to
positivist (objective) definition about social phenomenon, which asserts
that scientific knowledge can only be derived from rigorous experiments
that can be verified and replicated (Ponterotto, 2005). By contrast,
intersubjectivity states that every individual embodies unique
experiences, abilities, and identities, thus it is impossible to distill
all possible understandings into an objective truth. Intersubjectivity
requires us to reflect upon our individual beliefs about sexuality,
communicate our beliefs, and embrace every person's unique
understandings.
Embracing our multiple understandings is in tandem with using an
ethic of care within sexuality practices (Allegranti, 2013; Benjamin,
2013). If all individuals have unique desires and concerns, it takes
great care to honor the diverse wishes and needs of others with the same
importance we give our own. Finding the intersection between our sexual
desires and another's sexual desires can create tension because we
are not sure how to judge, prioritize, and connect another person's
desires with our own. Utilizing an ethic of care allows us to honor the
other as having an equivalent sexual life.
Practitioners, educators, and scholars that wish to embrace
intersubjectivity and an ethic of care in how they navigate sexuality in
their professional lives can do so through several practices (Brown,
2011). Engage in self-awareness exercises regarding your sexuality and
BDSM preferences. Define your own sexual values and behaviors and within
this definition, and explore any biases, prejudices, or potential
discriminations you might have regarding sexual practices with which you
are unfamiliar. Realize that sexuality and BDSM are social constructs on
which cultural values and attitudes have been placed, which can deem
some behaviors as acceptable and others as deviant. Allow the people
with whom you interact to describe their own definition of
"good" BDSM, and remain conscious that it is acceptable to
have multiple definitions of "good" BDSM experiences. If
someone discloses to you that she or he engages in edgier or
unconventional BDSM practices, allow this person to explain her or his
values and attitudes about why these practices are personally enjoyable.
Be sure to listen with a caring attitude, try to understand how these
practices fit within the person's larger subjective reality, convey
responsiveness, and allow multiple sets of values and beliefs to
coexist.
Caution
For us, caution is tightly interconnected with caring,
communication, and consent. For example, the willingness to engage in
edgier BDSM activities often reflects an understanding, caring, and
respect of the identities and intersubjective realities of those who may
also participate. Thorough communication is an essential part of that
process, not to mention an understanding of what exactly will take place
in a particular scene.
As we suggested earlier, we like the term caution in large part
because it implies a need to be aware of risk, the possibility of
danger, and an admonition to proceed carefully; yet it does not seem to
be quite as attached to normalizing medical and psychiatric discourses
to the same degree as safe, or risk. For some, this may be trivial, but
for others it may offer a better fit within their preferred lexicon.
Acknowledging the historical regulatory power over bodies by the
institutions of religion and medicine and psychiatry as explained by
Foucault (1977, 1978) and subsequent postmodern and poststructural
theorists, some participants may enjoy certain forms of BDSM as
resistance to, or freedom from, such discourses. Perhaps other
participants, for their own reasons, may follow various other macro or
micro narratives.
It is important that a BDSM negotiation framework allows for
personal variation and potential change that is an inherent part of
people's dynamic intersubjective realities. Baber and Murray (2001)
discuss the importance of recognizing personal sexual scripts that
develop from unique experiences, knowledge and education, and exposure
to events. These scripts seem to be fluid and changing, and personal
sexual scripts that include BDSM as an important theme undoubtedly
impact desires for specific BDSM activities of various levels of risk.
These personal scripts would also seem to help motivate participants to
develop the skills to navigate risk to the degree to which they are
comfortable. Our main point here is that risk and safety levels for
specific BDSM activities; along with participants' motivations,
interpretations and subjective meanings; vary tremendously not only
across participants, but also may shift substantially within individual
participants. Whether safe, risk-aware, or caution is used to reflect
this dimension of negotiation, we should be attuned to the need to
accommodate considerable flexibility and variation.
Conclusion
In this paper, we have discussed important contextual issues for
the development of SSC and RACK as basic frameworks for BDSM
negotiation. While SSC has been, and still is, a useful approach for
those wanting to participate in BDSM activities, RACK was formed in
response to the recognition of a few problematic aspects of SSC,
specifically the realization that BDSM participants' motivations
for specific activities can vary considerably and that risk is relative
among participants. At the same time, sane, as a forensics technical
term, has little actual relevance to BDSM activity. We can understand
the preference of RACK over SSC for many BDSM community members.
Despite the helpfulness of both SSC and RACK, we see some
advantages in a new BDSM negotiation framework, which we have labeled
the 4Cs. Each dimension (caring, communication, consent, and caution)
warrants separate identification and emphasis, yet these constructs are
all necessarily interwoven. The 4Cs framework is easy to remember and it
moves beyond SSC and RACK in acknowledging the diverse ways of knowing,
expressing, and relating. It provides an important negotiation
structure, yet also seems to allow, and perhaps promote to some degree,
flexibility for BDSM participants.
Finally, an additional valuable advantage of this new framework is
that the 4Cs directly counters, via the inclusion of the dimensions of
caring and communication (in addition to consent), lingering
misperceptions from outsiders that BDSM participation is somehow
inherently abusive, violent, or rooted in psychopathology, which
directly contributed to the development of a common negotiation
framework in the first place (SSC). The 4Cs, as a whole, emphasizes that
BDSM participation is, or at least should be, quite the contrary.
Despite progress in recent years in reducing marginalization of BDSM
participation, much more improvement is needed.
D J Williams, PhD
Center for Positive Sexuality (Los Angeles) and Idaho State
University
Jeremy N. Thomas, PhD
Idaho State University
Emily E. Prior, MA
Center for Positive Sexuality (Los Angeles) and College of the
Canyons
M. Candace Christensen, PhD
University of Texas at San Antonio
Contact Information: Dr. D J Williams
Department of Sociology
Idaho State University
Campus Box 8114
Pocatello, ID 83209-8114
Email: willdj@isu.edu
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