Schools, sexual violence, and safety: Adolescent girls and writing resistance at an afterschool program in suburban Mumbai

IF 0.3 Q4 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Writing & Pedagogy Pub Date : 2019-12-03 DOI:10.1558/wap.35680
Usree Bhattacharya, Kathleen R. McGovern
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Abstract

Two and a half million adolescent girls have experienced some form of sexual violence in India; significantly, they make up a quarter of all rape cases, despite being a small percentage of the population (Raj and McDougal, 2014). Parents and girls’ fears about safety contributes to their high dropout rates within Indian education, but thus far there has been little research on this topic. Focusing on underprivileged adolescent girls at an afterschool site in Mumbai, India, this qualitative study investigates how within this landscape of sexual violence, writing serves as a medium to name, resist, and transform it. Specifically, we scrutinize the articulation of resistance which attempts to contest social norms, cultural conventions, and other forms of everyday hegemony. We examine data extracts from essays written by three adolescent girls participating in the afterschool program as part of a pilot study that took place in December 2016. The analysis of these extracts illuminates how the girls, through their writing, articulate their vulnerabilities about their own and others’ personal safety. Furthermore, it reveals how it is connected to their ability to access education. Moreover, it highlights the ways in which the girls resist parental and other socio-cultural pressures. Finally, the analysis sheds light on the complex and powerful ways in which the girls assert their independence, demand autonomy over their lives, and exercise agency. Ultimately, this investigation offers a path forward for Indian educators to reimagine girls’ education in light of girls’ safety issues, using writing as a space to articulate a literacy of resistance and hope.
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学校、性暴力和安全:孟买郊区一个课后项目中的少女和写作抵抗
在印度,250万少女经历过某种形式的性暴力;值得注意的是,尽管他们只占人口的一小部分,但他们占所有强奸案件的四分之一(Raj和McDougal, 2014)。父母和女孩对安全的担忧导致了她们在印度教育中的高辍学率,但到目前为止,关于这一主题的研究还很少。这项定性研究聚焦于印度孟买一个课后场所的贫困少女,探讨了在性暴力的背景下,写作如何作为一种媒介来命名、抵制和改变性暴力。具体地说,我们仔细研究了试图对抗社会规范、文化习俗和其他形式的日常霸权的抵抗的表达。作为2016年12月进行的一项试点研究的一部分,我们研究了三名参加课后项目的青春期女孩所写文章的数据摘录。对这些摘录的分析说明了这些女孩是如何通过她们的写作,表达出她们对自己和他人人身安全的脆弱性。此外,它还揭示了这与他们接受教育的能力之间的关系。此外,它还突出了女孩抵抗父母和其他社会文化压力的方式。最后,分析揭示了女孩们维护自己的独立性、要求生活自主权和行使代理权的复杂而有力的方式。最终,这项调查为印度教育工作者提供了一条前进的道路,可以根据女孩的安全问题重新构想女孩的教育,利用写作作为一个空间来表达抵抗和希望的素养。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Writing & Pedagogy
Writing & Pedagogy EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
33.30%
发文量
16
期刊最新文献
Writing and identity: Promoting critical discourse amidst double consciousness Writing as resistance in an age of demagoguery Making sense of resistance in an afterschool tutoring program: Learning from volunteer writing tutors Stray dogs: Interviews with working-class writers, edited by Daniel M. Mendoza Schools, sexual violence, and safety: Adolescent girls and writing resistance at an afterschool program in suburban Mumbai
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