For decades, the media have frequently been instrumental in framing rape cases by linking the deed with the place. This study demonstrates that law courts are not innocent of such social framing; on the contrary, they are significant agents. We argue that courts, by shaping the plot in rape cases, participate in an ongoing cultural production of meaning, although in a more subtle and ambivalent way than the media. In a narrative analysis of three contemporary rape cases in Sweden, we bring together feminist research on place with the concepts of vulnerability and agency. We argue that place is framed as ambivalent in relation to vulnerability and agency, and dependent on the positioning of plaintiff and defendant. In court narratives, geographical places are made relevant, including the locations where the alleged rapes took place. Court narratives of rape include highly ambivalent connotations with place in relation to vulnerability and agency, distinguished by different narratives and outcomes in the various instances. The legal and social implications of our work should include an awareness of the relevance of place in relation to rape.
Abstract This article explores and analyses narratives in social report-books in the context of structural rationalization during the 1960s and 1970s in Sweden, which entailed large movements of people both in Sweden and Finland (as it did in other countries of Western Europe). The characteristics of the report-books are that they claim to depict the truth and to give voices to marginalized people with the aim to contribute to social change. The analysis dwells not only on the content of the books, but also on the narrative techniques employed. It is discussed how the authors were tied to their political context and the general discourse of social critique in their rendering of voices. The main questions of this article are: whose voices were paid attention to and how was home narrated and represented? One kind of narrative content links home attachment to roots in a rural context, where home centres on reproduction of families, territorial claims and nature hugging. It is established through rhetoric of nature and timelessness, fathers passing inheritance on to their sons and a desire for a non-alienated existence in an archaic landscape. The narrative techniques used are based on an invisible narrator and on a travel narration with questions and answers. It is mainly male voices that are paid attention to. Female voices are to some extent heard but marginalized. Female bodily practices and habits are connected to positions as wives and daughters. The fisherman, the hunter, the woodlander and the farmer, are (re)presented as threatened male positions and therefore male bodies will in a near future be out of place. These narratives are framed by a patriarchal discourse where bodies are naturalized and made straight. Quite another kind of narrative content is forward-looking, dealing with voices in a suburban context. The montage as a narrative technique is systematically used there, combining text and image. The didactic montage is intended to be educational, to enlighten people with the aid of pointers. This calls for activity on the part of the reader/observer, who is supposed to be given the impression of having interpreted the meanings independently. It is based on consciousness-raising as a feminist method for change. This narrative of home is about societal participation and resenting and resisting patriarchal distinctions such as public/private. It is framed by a feminist discourse where bodies are denaturalized and orientated at finding space for the displaced body to expand.
This article deals with feminist research on narratives of sexual violence. The selection of research for the discussion rests on two themes. One is about the problematic distinction between victim and perpetrator and the other about discourses based on the distinction between us and them. On an individual level there is always a victim but on a structural level the victim and perpetrator need to be contextualised and disconnected from normative understandings in order to grasp the full complexity of power and resistance. The article demonstrates, by examples from different genres, that our understanding of sexual violence is dependent on historical discourses. Narratives of sexual violence can, since they are dependent on historical discourses, stage the social contradictions which they in fact themselves are part of. Rape discourses might therefore be overdetermined by racism and nationalism. Narratives of experiences of sexual violence consequently rely on available discourses. A historical perspective reveals what was possible to articulate in a certain time and a certain place, how experiences differ and how subjectivity changes.
Recension.
This article explores the establishment of a population policy in Sweden in the eighteenth century. Swedish population policy, making use of systematic church registers, became the basis for a new system of knowledge built on gender and sexual differences. In order to increase the population rate, the Swedish state promoted motherhood, thus qualitatively binding the state and its nation's inhabitants. Parliament's foundation of a Department of Public Economics was the cornerstone of a national discourse on population, laden with references to "the common good." In the mercantile era, when people were viewed as resources and more people meant an increased capacity to compete in the international economy, new forms of knowledge were created to manage and promote population growth. Children were regarded as the hope of the future. This discourse colonized women's bodies by giving women a national task to become child bearers, child carers, and, accordingly, guardians of the nation. Carl Linnaeus, one of the most well-known scientists of the time, championed the importance of the biological mother's milk for children and the strengthening of "natural" motherhood in general. Nevertheless, population growth and workforce reproduction were of such a high priority to the state that even unwed mothers had a role in growing the nation. Poor relief regulations offered economic compensation to mothers, including those who were sole providers. Motherhood as a national resource and as a symbol in nationalistic projects incorporated women into the state as mothers, not as individuals.
Recension av: Joan Wallach Scott, Parité! : sexual equality and the crisis of French universalism, Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0-226-74108-7
Recension av: The Politics of the Veil Joan Wallach Scott Princeton University Press, 2007
Skam och skuld har följt våldtäktsoffer genom århundraden, men deras berättelser om dessa känslor är inte individuella. De bygger på förväntningar hos lyssnare, på platsbundna konventioner, på patriarkal makt och är historiskt specifika. Hjälpverksamheters individperspektiv där traumamotivet är centralt är därför problematiskt eftersom de skalar bort det samhälleliga sammanhanget. Utgångspunkten för denna undersökning är att analyser av berättelser om våldtäkt måste sättas i ett historiskt och kontextuellt perspektiv som visar hur våldtäkter begripliggörs och berättelser vinner erkännande i det samhälle där de äger rum. Upplevelser av våldtäkt har tolkats på skilda sätt genom historien. Känslan trauma introducerades i sammanhang med våldtäkt med radikalfeminismens framväxt. Utifrån kunskapsteoretiska och feministiska perspektiv diskuteras i denna artikel hur traumamotivet kopplats till sexuellt våld, samt närläses ett våldtäktsfall där traumamotivet används i bevisprövningen. Undersökningen visar att målsäganden gestaltar en kropp som svarar mot beskrivningen av trauma. Skamkänslan görs central genom att gestaltningen följer hjälpverksamheters manualer för omhändertagande av våldtäktsoffer. Förutom att frammana skam privilegierar traumamotivet negativa känslor som förminskar, försvagar och skapar hjälplöshet och i förlängningen bidrar till underordning av i synnerhet kvinnliga positioner.
Redaktionellt förord till Tidskrift för genusvetenskap. Tema Feministiskt skrivande