INSTRUMENTAL vs. EXPRESSIVE
The professional term for the type of violence that women –
according to the false stereotype – are supposedly incapable of is
“instrumental,” referring to deliberate, premeditated action. ‘Instrumental’ is
opposed to ‘expressive,’ referring to action taken only in a moment of passion or insanity.
Peter Vronsky, in his 2007 book on female serial killers points out and
explains this fallacy of female inability to be calculating, cold-blooded
agents of violence:
“When women
commit violence, the only explanations offered have been that it is either
involuntary, self-defense, the result of mental illness, or hormonal imbalances
inherent with female physiology: postpartum depression, premenstrual syndrome,
and menopause have been included among the named culprits. Women have been
perceived to be capable of committing only reactive or “expressive” violence –
an uncontrollable release of pent-up rage or fear-and that they murder unwillingly
and without premeditation.
‘Instrumental
violence, however, murder for a purpose – political power, rape, sadistic
pleasure, robbery, or some other base gratification – remains the domain of the
male. After all, every male is a potential killer in the form of a warrior –
and he only becomes a murderer when he misuses his innate physical and
socialized capacity to kill for ignoble, immoral, and impolitic reasons. While
the male is built and programmed to destroy, the female nests, creates, and nurtures.
Or so the story goes.” [Peter Vronsky, Female Serial Killers: How and
Why Women Become Monsters, 2009, Berkley Books, p. 6]
Here is a sample “instrumental violence” case from 1889:
FULL
TEXT: Zanesville, O., Sept. 10.— Frank Amos, one of the most prominent citizens
of Morgan county, was murdered at his home in the western part of this county
by Mrs. Hampton, his niece, who literally hacked his face and head to pieces
with a butcher knife which she had carried for weeks avowedly for that purpose.
Amos was picking berries in the field with his wife when the attack was made.
She and a man who was passing on the road were attracted by his cries of m
ardor and reached him only in time to see him breathe his last and to see Mrs.
Hampton and her daughter run away. The trouble grew out of a law suit in which
the testimony of Amos threw the costs on Hampton.
[“Killed
By His Niece - Ohio Comes to the Front with a Most Unnatural Murder.”
syndicated, Fort Worth Daily Gazette (Tx.), Sep. 18, 1889, p. 4]
***
►For an
expansion of this theme, SEE: “The central myth of MISANDRY: ‘the inherent non-violence of women’”
***
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