Literature DB >> 18266171

"Injuries are beyond love": physical violence in young South Africans' sexual relationships.

Kate Wood1, Helen Lambert, Rachel Jewkes.   

Abstract

South Africa's complex social and political history has produced conditions for interpersonal violence of multiple kinds to flourish. Violence experienced by girls and young women, including within their sexual relationships, has become an area of intense research and policy interest since the end of apartheid. Drawing on a long-term ethnographic study of young people in an urban township, this article explores how violent practices are variously construed, differentiated, and legitimated, in particular through the assignment of blame and the significance accorded to bodily marking. Pointing to the cultural embeddedness of disciplining techniques in this setting, the article examines local understandings of gender hierarchy and power, young men's vulnerabilities in relation to their partners' actions, and the links between disciplining action and notions of anger, love, and shame. Violence is shown to configure lives and subjectivities and to be productive of relationships, in particular playing a part in the organization of inequality within sexual relationships.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18266171     DOI: 10.1080/01459740701831427

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  10 in total

1.  Experiences of forced sex among female patrons of alcohol-serving venues in a South African township.

Authors:  Melissa H Watt; Kathleen J Sikkema; Laurie Abler; Jennifer Velloza; Lisa A Eaton; Seth C Kalichman; Donald Skinner; Desiree Pieterse
Journal:  J Interpers Violence       Date:  2014-06-30

2.  Alcohol-serving venues in South Africa as sites of risk and potential protection for violence against women.

Authors:  Melissa H Watt; Frances M Aunon; Donald Skinner; Kathleen J Sikkema; Jessica C Macfarlane; Desiree Pieterse; Seth C Kalichman
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2012-06-28       Impact factor: 2.164

3.  A Ugandan Parenting Programme to Prevent Gender-Based Violence: Description and Formative Evaluation.

Authors:  Daniel Wight; Richard Sekiwunga; Carol Namutebi; Flavia Zalwango; Godfrey E Siu
Journal:  Res Soc Work Pract       Date:  2022-01-31

4.  Intimate partner violence among rural South African men: alcohol use, sexual decision-making, and partner communication.

Authors:  Abigail M Hatcher; Christopher J Colvin; Nkuli Ndlovu; Shari L Dworkin
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2014-06-18

5.  Gender and sexuality: emerging perspectives from the heterosexual epidemic in South Africa and implications for HIV risk and prevention.

Authors:  Rachel Jewkes; Robert Morrell
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2010-02-09       Impact factor: 5.396

6.  Relationship between single and multiple perpetrator rape perpetration in South Africa: A comparison of risk factors in a population-based sample.

Authors:  Jewkes R; Sikweyiya Y; Dunkle K; Morrell R
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2015-07-07       Impact factor: 3.295

7.  The Conundrums of Counselling Women in Violent Intimate Partner Relationships in South Africa: Implications for Practice.

Authors:  Anne Fleischack; Catriona Macleod; Werner Böhmke
Journal:  Int J Adv Couns       Date:  2019-06-08

8.  Patriarchy and gender-inequitable attitudes as drivers of intimate partner violence against women in the central region of Ghana.

Authors:  Yandisa Sikweyiya; Adolphina Addoley Addo-Lartey; Deda Ogum Alangea; Phyllis Dako-Gyeke; Esnat D Chirwa; Dorcas Coker-Appiah; Richard M K Adanu; Rachel Jewkes
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2020-05-13       Impact factor: 3.295

9.  Masculinities and violence: using latent class analysis to investigate the origins and correlates of differences between men in the cross-sectional UN Multi-country Study on men and violence in Asia and the Pacific.

Authors:  Rachel Jewkes; Esme Jordaan; Henri Myrttinen; Andrew Gibbs
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 4.413

10.  'It's not good to eat a candy in a wrapper': male students' perspectives on condom use and concurrent sexual partnerships in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Authors:  Maroyi Mulumeoderhwa
Journal:  SAHARA J       Date:  2018-12
  10 in total

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