成为幸存者?暴力后的身份创造

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Sociological Perspectives Pub Date : 2023-10-14 DOI:10.1177/07311214231195340
Meghan Olivia Warner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近几十年来,倡导人士一直在努力打破对性暴力和受害者的刻板印象。这一努力包括用“幸存者”取代“受害者”一词,但研究人员对经历过暴力的人如何理解这些术语知之甚少。通过对30名遭受过性暴力的被性别边缘化的年轻人的深入采访,我发现很少有人强烈认同这两个标签。受访者对受害者和幸存者进行了相互对照的描述,创造了两种连续存在的暴力后反应类型。受访者将“受害者”描述为一个包罗万象的标签,传达出整体的软弱和被动。大多数人远离受害者的标签,渴望成为幸存者的标签。然而,大多数人都不认为自己是幸存者。他们说,成为幸存者是一个漫长过程的结果,这个过程是为了成为坚强、有道德价值的人,他们已经“向前看”,并准备好为他人辩护。受访者对幸存者的描述构成了我所认为的“完美幸存者叙事”,这是一种文化剧本,使样本中的大多数人难以确定自己是幸存者,这对他们的种族化和性别化的自我认知产生了影响。研究结果表明,使用新语言对抗主流叙事的自由和限制。
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Becoming a Survivor? Identity Creation Post-violence
In recent decades, advocates have sought to combat stereotypes about sexual violence and victims. This effort included replacing the term “victim” with the term “survivor,” but researchers have little understanding of how people who have experienced violence understand these terms. Drawing on in-depth interviews of 30 young people marginalized by gender who have experienced sexual violence, I find that few strongly identified with either label. Respondents described victim and survivor in contrast with each other, creating two typologies of response post-violence that exist along a continuum. Respondents described “victim” as an all-encompassing label that communicated overall weakness and passivity. Most distanced themselves from the victim label and aspired to the survivor label. However, most did not identify as survivors. They described being a survivor as the result of a long process toward becoming strong, morally worthy people who had “moved on” and were ready to advocate for others. Respondents’ descriptions of survivors constitutes what I theorize as the “perfect survivor narrative,” a cultural script that made it difficult for most people in the sample to identify as a survivor, with implications for their racialized and gendered self-perceptions. The findings demonstrate the freedoms and constraints of using new language to combat dominant narratives.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
4.20%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: Established in 1957 and heralded as "always intriguing" by one critic, Sociological Perspectives is well edited and intensely peer-reviewed. Each issue of Sociological Perspectives offers 170 pages of pertinent and up-to-the-minute articles within the field of sociology. Articles typically address the ever-expanding body of knowledge about social processes and are related to economic, political, anthropological and historical issues.
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