The topic of incest began to emerge in the early 1990s,
producing a spate of television specials and providing the material
for a surging industry of talk shows as well as an anti-feminist
campaign against incest survivors and their therapists. The
validity, reality, and readability of recovered memories of incest
has become a highly contested and difficult subject.
This heightened interest has benefited incest survivors,
according to Rosaria Champagne, by allowing them to speak up and
make political their experiences. Victims, formerly entwined in
their own abuse by remaining silent, have learned to voice their
protest and to challenge the societal order that allows incest to
occur.
In The Politics of Survivorship Champagne explores a range of
cultural representations of incest, from the writings of Mary
Wollstonecraft Shelley to mother-daughter incest in contemporary
true crime novels, to Oprah Winfrey's television special Scared
Silent, in order to examine expressions of survivorship. In the
process, Champagne attempts to level the disparity and the
hierarchy of value among theory, literature, popular culture and
social movements. Champagne makes a powerful argument that
community and academic feminists should embrace survivorship as a
potential site of feminist political intervention into patriarchy
and heterosexism. She concludes with a critical look at the way in
which the False Memory Syndrome Foundation has conducted an
anti-feminist campaign against incest survivors and their
therapists.
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