“Excuse Me, But Are You Raping Me Now?” : Discourse and Experience in (the Grey Areas of) Sexual Violence
(2018) In NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research 26(1). p.4-18- Abstract
- In feminist research on sexual violence and victimization, the relationship between discourse and experience has often been at the forefront of intense debates. Poststructuralist scholars have emphasized that the discourses used to name sexual violence may in fact perpetuate the very problem they set out to describe, by freezing women into powerless positions of rapability. Others have likened this sort of argument to anti-feminist trivialization of the pervasively gendered experiential reality to which such discourses refer, highlighting that women’s victimization is not a discursive problem. In this article, I seek to carve out a path that cuts through such polarization by exploring the multifaceted dialectical relationship between, on... (More)
- In feminist research on sexual violence and victimization, the relationship between discourse and experience has often been at the forefront of intense debates. Poststructuralist scholars have emphasized that the discourses used to name sexual violence may in fact perpetuate the very problem they set out to describe, by freezing women into powerless positions of rapability. Others have likened this sort of argument to anti-feminist trivialization of the pervasively gendered experiential reality to which such discourses refer, highlighting that women’s victimization is not a discursive problem. In this article, I seek to carve out a path that cuts through such polarization by exploring the multifaceted dialectical relationship between, on one hand, gendered discourses on sex and sexual violence and, on the other, people’s reported experiences of these phenomena and, in particular, of the ‘grey area’ between sex and sexual violence; I do this by analysing autobiographical stories from the influential Swedish campaign #prataomdet (#talkaboutit), which emphasized the need for a new language that can do justice to people’s experiences of sexual violence and the grey area between sex and sexual violence. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/0cd7632e-28d0-42bd-b61b-ee03cc77493e
- author
- Gunnarsson, Lena LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2018
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- continuum of sexual violence, discourse, experience, grey area of sexual violence, men’s unwanted sex, #prataomdet, rape script, sexual violence, #talkaboutit
- in
- NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research
- volume
- 26
- issue
- 1
- pages
- 15 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85041664253
- ISSN
- 1502-394X
- DOI
- 10.1080/08038740.2017.1395359
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0cd7632e-28d0-42bd-b61b-ee03cc77493e
- date added to LUP
- 2017-11-13 12:10:38
- date last changed
- 2022-04-25 03:41:33
@article{0cd7632e-28d0-42bd-b61b-ee03cc77493e, abstract = {{In feminist research on sexual violence and victimization, the relationship between discourse and experience has often been at the forefront of intense debates. Poststructuralist scholars have emphasized that the discourses used to name sexual violence may in fact perpetuate the very problem they set out to describe, by freezing women into powerless positions of rapability. Others have likened this sort of argument to anti-feminist trivialization of the pervasively gendered experiential reality to which such discourses refer, highlighting that women’s victimization is not a discursive problem. In this article, I seek to carve out a path that cuts through such polarization by exploring the multifaceted dialectical relationship between, on one hand, gendered discourses on sex and sexual violence and, on the other, people’s reported experiences of these phenomena and, in particular, of the ‘grey area’ between sex and sexual violence; I do this by analysing autobiographical stories from the influential Swedish campaign #prataomdet (#talkaboutit), which emphasized the need for a new language that can do justice to people’s experiences of sexual violence and the grey area between sex and sexual violence.}}, author = {{Gunnarsson, Lena}}, issn = {{1502-394X}}, keywords = {{continuum of sexual violence; discourse; experience; grey area of sexual violence; men’s unwanted sex; #prataomdet; rape script; sexual violence; #talkaboutit}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{4--18}}, publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}}, series = {{NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research}}, title = {{“Excuse Me, But Are You Raping Me Now?” : Discourse and Experience in (the Grey Areas of) Sexual Violence}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08038740.2017.1395359}}, doi = {{10.1080/08038740.2017.1395359}}, volume = {{26}}, year = {{2018}}, }