This book draws on interviews carried out over a period of eight
years, as well as novels, films, and domestic violence literature,
to explain the role of storytelling in the history of the battered
women s movement. The author shows how cultural contexts shape how
stories about domestic abuse get told, and offers critical tools
for bringing psychology into discussions of group dynamics in the
domestic violence field.
The book enlists psychoanalytic-feminist theory to analyse
storytelling practices and to re-visit four areas of tension in the
movement where signs of battle fatigue have been most acute. These
areas include the conflicts that emerge between the battered women
s movement and the state, the complex relationship between domestic
violence and other social problems, and the question of whether
woman battering is a special case that differs from other forms of
social violence. The volume also looks at the tensions between
groups of women within the movement, and how to address differences
based on race, class or other dimensions of power. Finally, the
book explores the contentious issue of how to acknowledge forms of
female aggression while still preserving a gender analysis of
intimate partner violence.
In attending to narrative dynamics in the history of domestic
violence work, Hard Knocks presents a radical re-reading of the
contribution of psychology to feminist interventions and activism.
The book is ideal reading for scholars, activists, advocates and
policy planners involved in domestic violence, and is suitable for
students of psychology, social work, sociology and criminology.
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