Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) J. Woodiwiss , William Paul Cockshott , Greg Michaelson , Katerina Kolozova
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Huddersfield
ANO 2024
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 3
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 729FE42C60CD1E5D05671AF4650070B6
MD5 ae426fc44c42a4575e68426ccd66bf6e

Resumo

This article draws on research exploring adult women's engagement with narratives of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) and identifies implications for both child and adult victims. As this research showed, any single story cannot accommodate all experiences. When that single story becomes dominant those whose experiences are not acknowledged are at risk of being silenced and left without a narrative framework to make sense of their experiences, which in turn risk being unrecognised as abuse by others. The article looks at contemporary understandings of CSA and argues for the need to move beyond a single damage narrative in which victims are constructed as sexually innocent, weak and passive and seen to be inevitably damaged by their experiences. The article argues for the need to separate wrongfulness from harm and (sexual) innocence from childhood. This would enable us to recognise sexual abuse in all sexually abused children, including those who do not conform to sexual innocence, and to recognise that CSA is wrong irrespective of psychological damage. In doing so, it is argued, we would all be better equipped to recognise sexual abuse and victims would be better able to tell their own stories which may, but may not, include psychological damage.

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