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Speaking about rape and societal discourses of rape in Johannesburg: a narrative analysisGatonby, Ciara Ann January 2016 (has links)
A report submitted to the University of Witwatersrand in partial fulfilment of the
requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Sociology by Coursework and Research
Report
The Department of Sociology
The Faculty of Humanities
March 2016 / Rape is an important topic of enquiry in South Africa due to the high incidences of rape and
the underreporting of the crime to legal authorities. This research is exploratory in nature and
is concerned with how the four women interviewed employ specific narratives to aid or
inhibit their ability to speak about their experience of being raped, and the ways in which
rape survivors position themselves within their own stories and societal discourses of rape. A
detailed analysis was done of the research available on hegemonic masculine power, societal
discourses and myths about rape, silencing and personal and public narratives. Through this
analysis rape is placed within a framework of patriarchy and control. Four female rape
survivors living in Johannesburg were found using targeted sampling, and were interviewed
using a recording devise and unstructured, one-on-one interviews. These interviews were
transcribed and coded, and then analysed using Thematic Narrative Analysis. Great care was
taken throughout the research process to ensure that it is ethical and that no harm was done to
any of the interviewees or anyone else. It was found that each of the interviewees came to
represent three distinct narratives, namely the stranger rape narrative, the date/acquaintance
rape narrative and the child rape narrative. These narratives appear to sometimes be in
tension and conflict with one another, creating confusion in the positionality and believability
of the rape survivor. It was also found that narratives are often employed as ways of defining
the experience of rape and challenging rape myths and public narratives of rape. The women
interviewed for the purposes of this paper drew attention to various themes within their
narratives, such as tensions between their own experience of rape and societal discourses of
rape, empowerment, safe spaces to talk about trauma, education, consent and control. Further
research could be conducted to explore this topic in greater detail and expand upon the
knowledge that was gathered and investigated in this research report. / MT2017
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Law's Erotic Triangles: A Conversion, Inversion, and SubversionSwan, Sarah Lynnda January 2016 (has links)
The erotic triangle, in which two men compete for a desired woman, is a foundational archetype of Western culture. This dissertation, through its three separately-published articles, examines how this cultural archetype is manifested in law and legal structures, and the relationship between law’s erotic triangulations, gender inequality, and third-party responsibility. Each of the three articles of this dissertation focuses on a different manifestation of third-party responsibility, and each offers its own self-contained argument. At the same time, the “graphic schema” of the erotic triangle analytically enriches each of them. The erotic triangle is a “sensitive register […] for delineating relationships of power and meaning,” and using it in this context illuminates the shifting ways gender, power, and legal responsibility circulate in these male-female-male legal structures. Together, the articles suggest that law both replicates and reproduces erotic triangulations in ways that contribute to gender inequality, but also that it may be an important site for their renegotiation.
The first article, A New Tortious Interference with Contractual Relations: Gender and Erotic Triangles in Lumley v. Gye, explores how the tort of interference with contractual relations was created out of a factual scenario involving an erotic triangle (two rival opera-house managers competing for the services of a renowned chanteuse). The court converted past regulations of erotic triangles (in particular, criminal conversation, which allowed a husband to bring an action against a man for sexual interference with his wife) into a new cause of action, one which removed a triangulated woman’s responsibility for breaching a contract, and instead assigned responsibility to the man who induced her to breach. While this first iteration involves the removal of responsibility from a triangulated woman, the second article, Home Rules, involves an inversion of this responsibility allocation: here responsibility is removed from a usually male wrongdoer and instead imposed upon a triangulated woman. Home Rules examines how, through a series of ordinances, local governments are imposing responsibility on female heads of household for the wrongful actions of their typically male household members. In so doing, local governments disrupt kinship structures and assert the state’s dominance over the family and intimate life. The third article, Triangulating Rape, evidences a more positive shift in responsibility. It traces the transformation of rape law as a progression from a tradition of erotic triangulation to a subversion thereof. Unlike the historical rape law triangle, in which rape is legally constructed as a wrong that one male does to another through the body of a woman; and unlike the criminal rape law triangle, in which rape is legally constructed as a wrong that one man does to the state through the body of a woman; civil actions in which women bring claims against both perpetrators of sexual assault and the third-party entities that facilitate or fail to prevent those assaults allow harmed women to assert their own subjectivity and climb out of their traditionally passive role in the erotic triangle. In so doing, this reconfigured triangulation ultimately challenges the gender status quo that produces sexual harms, and suggests that subverting the usual functioning of triangulated patterns may hold promise as a tool of social change.
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Grounds for Hope and Disappointment: Victims/Survivors Perceptions of South Australia Police Responses to RapeMcLachlan, Katherine Jane, katherine.mclachlan@flinders.edu.au January 2007 (has links)
Internationally, there have been few studies examining the attitudes of people who have been raped towards police (Jordan, 2001a; Lievore, 2005; Temkin, 1997, 1999). Little research in Australia (particularly South Australia) has examined the experiences of victims/survivors of rape with police. Existing data do show that women who have been raped rarely report assaults to police. This has been attributed by researchers to a range of reasons, both personal and systemic, including the influence of stereotypes and myths about rape on victims/survivors decision-making. Rape myths often reflect community attitudes, social norms and police responses. For example, victims/survivors may blame themselves and also expect police will blame or disbelieve them. Such expectations (or subsequent experiences) of negative police responses undermine victims/survivors faith in police. However, this is not the whole story. In reality, police responses to rape are complex and inconsistent, influenced by both individual and organisational factors.
I initiated this study to explore victims/survivors expectations of, and experiences with, police in a transparent and accessible forum. Based on semi-structured, in-depth interviews with 11 women who had been raped in South Australia, my findings illustrated the diversity of South Australia Police responses to victims/survivors of rape and suggested that South Australia Police practices were similar to those of other Australian and English-speaking jurisdictions. Overall, interactions with South Australia Police simultaneously provide grounds for hope and are disappointing (Lievore, 2005: 59; emphasis added). In many cases police responses were disappointing, through service provision that was partly or wholly negative. Specific individual and organisational factors were associated with satisfactory or unsatisfactory police practices. Poor service provision was evident in individual police officers apathy and dismissive or disbelieving responses, and through low prioritisation and limited resourcing of sexual violence at an organisation level. However, my findings indicated that there was also much to be hopeful about when considering South Australia Police responses to rape. The participants in my study often reported exemplary service from individual officers. At the reporting and investigation stages, good practices were based on procedural justice rather than outcome justice: characterised by strong communication, empathy and professionalism at an individual level and consistency at an organisational level.
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Attentional bias effects following trauma exposure comparison of emotional Stroop and emotional lexical decision task paradigmsCox, Michelle, shelleyjcox@hotmail.com January 2005 (has links)
Attentional bias effects for threat and emotional words were investigated, using both the emotional Stroop and emotional lexical decision paradigms. Twenty-eight controls and twenty-eight survivors of sexual assault participated in this study, which comprised three key comparisons. First, key predictions of the threat and emotionality hypotheses were compared, in particular specific and general threat effects, and positive and negative emotionality effects. Second, two separate group comparisons were conducted, specifically controls versus survivors of sexual assault overall, and a matched subset of controls versus PTSD positive survivors of sexual assault versus PTSD negative survivors of sexual assault. Third, performance on the emotional Stroop task and emotional lexical decision task paradigms were compared directly. Slowed colour naming responses (i.e. interference) were observed for both threat effects and emotionality effects in the emotional Stroop task. For the emotional lexical decision task, slowed lexical decisions (i.e. interference) were observed for threat effects, whereas speeded lexical decisions (i.e. facilitation) were observed for emotionality effects. The findings of the current study indicate that threat and emotionality effects may co-exist in both control and survivor populations. The relationship between the presence or absence of PTSD symptoms and threat and emotionality effects requires further investigation with larger sample sizes. There may be a relationship between the presence of PTSD symptoms and specific threat effects, however the findings of the current study for general threat information were inconclusive. No relationship was evident between the presence of absence of PTSD symptoms and positive or negative emotionality effects. The current findings suggest that the emotional Stroop task may be better suited to quantifying threat effects but not emotionality effects, whereas the emotional lexical decision task appears to be able to quantify both threat and emotionality effects.
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Consequences of gender based violence on reproductive health : a case study of female patients in Lemera Hospital.Zihindula, Theo G. January 2010 (has links)
This study was conducted in order to explore the experiences of survivors of gender based violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The aim was to determine the impact of gender based violence on the reproductive health of women. The study was carried out at a hospital in the eastern province of the country. In-depth interviews were conducted with women survivors of rape and informant interviews with staff at the hospital. A total of twenty one participants participated in the study. The findings show that women suffered humiliation, physical and psychological torture during their rape. Some women were raped by a number of men. The rape also had serious consequences for their sexual and reproductive health. Some of the effects of their rape were long-term: it resulted in an unwanted pregnancy or HIV/AIDS. Many of the women expressed their fears for the future. They were particularly worried about their children, especially those who were divorced following their rape and those who lived with HIV/AIDS. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2010.
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The experiences of help received by children in the aftermath of rape.Itabor, Lindelani Lynette. January 2007 (has links)
The aim of the study was to explore and describe the experiences of children who have
been raped. It is a known fact that children are raped every day in South Africa, but how
the consequences are experienced by the child victims of rape is another matter.
Specifically, the researcher wanted to determine whether these children receive the
support that is their constitutional right and whether or not they are subjected tc
secondary victimization.
The sampling strategy employed was purposive sampling. This type of sampling wai
selected, as the researcher was looking for a particular type of participant, that is,
children who had disclosed rape. The sample consisted of six female children between the
ages of 5 and 17years. Participants' parents were consulted for their consent at c
counseling centre for abused children in Durban, where participants attended group
counseling and individual sessions.
The data were collected by means of semi-structured interviews and analyzed usin^
thematic analysis. Unstructured interviews were tape recorded and transcribed. Thesi
transcriptions were coded for descriptive themes and were analyzed using thematic conten
analysis.
The research findings suggest that children have mixed views regarding the quality of the
help they receive; some had positive experiences and some had negative experiences.
Despite the fact that most participants experienced a sense of being interrogated and had
feelings of being not involved during discussions, two participants reported that although
rape is an atrocious experience there were positive consequences for them. For example,
getting attention from significant people in their lives was one of their positive experiences.
It was the experience of the researcher that there is a lack of research pertaining to the
experiences of children who are rape victims, especially research focusing on the quality
of support that rape victims ought to receive. Further research is recommended to clarify
and measure the prevalence of typical feelings and experiences of children who have been
raped / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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Patterns of rape in PietermaritzburgJanuary 2007 (has links)
The study investigates the profile of rape in Pietermaritzburg and surrounding area. The data were generated by retrospective review of 691 rape survivors' records from October 2002 to December 2004. Numerous variables were analyzed using frequencies, chi-square and multiple regression. Patterns that emerged from the data help to describe rape as recorded by staff at the local Rape Crisis Centre where the administration of anti-retroviral and Postexposure Prophylaxis medication following rape is monitored. The mv status of the survivors was analyzed and incidence found to be comparable to UNAIDS (2006) statistics. Many patterns were identified in the data. For example, survivor age was associated with other variables including; race of the perpetrator, day of the week, type of violence used, location and relationship between survivor and perpetrator. Furthermore, relationship to perpetrator was found to impact on time delay before reporting, location and number of perpetrators. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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The state and the phallus: intersections of patriarchy and prejudice in the Jacob Zuma rape trial.Kakhobwe, Yumba Bernadette. January 2009 (has links)
The intention of this dissertation is to expose the gendered experiences of rape victims, based on the notion that while it should be the purpose of rape laws to protect victims of rape, in many circumstances the legal process results in disempowering experiences for victims, particularly women. Therefore, I suggest that the courtroom, a supposedly just space, is one which is laced with patriarchal undercurrents that work specifically against women. Rape is a complex and multi-faceted subject that is fast becoming an epidemic. In relation to HIV/AIDS and sexuality, the issue of rape certainly becomes compounded. Deconstructing the historical and cultural experiences of women is not only necessary in attempting to understand rape, but also the reasons why the justice system, which is dominantly a male domain, may still cling to patriarchal principles. One reason for the marginalization of rape victims may be the continued regard of women as second class citizens. The rape trial, in which Jacob Zuma was the alleged rapist, is a starting point, and by referring to this case, I intend to reveal and discuss weaknesses with regard to rape law within the South African context. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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Investigation of post-traumatic stress symptoms and physical health status in sexual assault survivorsEadie, Erin MacKenzie 03 March 2010 (has links)
This study investigated links between sexual assault experiences, posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), and adverse physical health outcomes among adult women. Existing models in which posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) mediate the relationship between trauma exposure and physical health outcomes have been established within a variety of trauma populations, but had yet to be specifically tested with the trauma of sexual assault. Through the use of structural equation modelling (SENT), support was found for a model in which posttraumatic stress symptom (PTSS) severity partially mediates the association between sexual assault exposure and physical health problems. While PTSS severity served as a partial mediator, it was revealed that depression symptoms did not A multivariate multiple regression was conducted to test whether the three PTSD symptom clusters (i.e., reexperiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal symptoms) were differentially related to physical health outcomes, but it was found that no single symptom cluster explained the association between PTSD and adverse physical health outcomes. It was revealed, however. that reexperiencing symptoms and avoidance symptoms had unique associations with health care utilization and health perceptions, respectively. Finally. A unique relationship between sexual assault exposure and reproductive and sexual health problems was revealed, suggesting that this is a particularly important area of health concern among sexual assault survivors.
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The relationship between sex role orientation and rape victim blame among police officers in the Cape Peninsula.Stephanus, Farahdiba January 2006 (has links)
<p>Despite community policing interventions, rape incidence in South Africa reflects a consistent increase over the past decade. Victim blame continues to be a pervasive aspect of this trauma - where society blames the victim more than the perpetrator for the rape. In unpacking the complexities of victim blame, research has identified sex role orientation of the observer as an important variable. Given that the polic service is often the first contact a rape victim has with the criminal justice system, this study investigated how sex role orientation impacts on rape victim blame in a sample of police officers.</p>
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