Repository | Book | Chapter

181275

Routine unrecognized sexual violence in India

Namrata Mitra

pp. 183-200

Abstract

This chapter responds to the following question: how does a long history of unrelenting sexual violence that wrecks lives and produces lifelong harms for survivors seem invisible to so many others? Focusing on the specific context of India, I explore the chasm between the articulations of harm by survivors of violence, on the one hand, and the dominant scripts of sexuality and political identity since colonial British India to the present, on the other. I show that the asymmetrical relation between the two renders routine sexual violence unrecognizable in the public sphere in general, and in the law and courtroom practices in the particular.

Publication details

Published in:

Fischer Clara, Dolezal Luna (2018) New feminist perspectives on embodiment. New York, Palgrave Macmillan.

Pages: 183-200

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-72353-2_10

Full citation:

Mitra Namrata (2018) „Routine unrecognized sexual violence in India“, In: C. Fischer & L. Dolezal (eds.), New feminist perspectives on embodiment, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 183–200.