Multiplicities of Violence: Responses to September 11 from South Asian Women’s Organizations

Soniya Munshi
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

On September 11, 2001, and the period that followed, the author was a full-time staff member at a community-based organization dedicated to ending violence against South Asian1 women. She was also involved in immigrant rights, racial justice, and queer/trans justice work. Being simultaneously positioned in these sometimes overlapping, sometimes distinct, spheres produced unexpected insights into the alliances and fractures that emerged through South Asian community-based responses to September 11 and its impacts on the communities. In this paper, the author explores the limitations South Asian women’s organizations (SAWOs) experienced in holding the complexities of the myriad forms of state, institutional, and interpersonal violence that faced South Asian survivors in the post–September 11 period. These limitations were rooted in the obscurity of the role of structural violence in the everyday lives of South Asian communities, which was made possible through 1) a general emphasis on criminal legal solutions to respond to violence in the interpersonal realm; and 2) the location of SAWOs’ work in discourses of culture and the consequent advocacy for culturally specific needs of survivors.
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暴力的多样性:南亚妇女组织对911事件的回应
2001年9月11日及其后的一段时间,提交人是一个致力于消除对南亚妇女暴力的社区组织的全职工作人员。她还参与了移民权利、种族正义和酷儿/跨性别正义工作。同时处于这些有时重叠,有时不同的领域,使我们对南亚社区对9 / 11的反应及其对社区的影响所产生的联盟和裂痕产生了意想不到的见解。在本文中,作者探讨了南亚妇女组织(SAWOs)在9 / 11事件后南亚幸存者所面临的各种形式的国家、机构和人际暴力的复杂性方面所经历的局限性。这些限制的根源在于结构性暴力在南亚社区日常生活中的作用是模糊的,这是通过1)普遍强调刑事法律解决办法来应对人际领域的暴力;2) SAWOs的工作在文化话语中的位置,以及随之而来的对幸存者文化特定需求的倡导。
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