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Sexual Violence Against Children in Britain Since 1965: Trailing Abuse: Genders and Sexualities in History

Autor Nick Basannavar
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 dec 2022
This book investigates the changes and continuities in the ways in which sexual violence has been interpreted and represented in Britain since 1965. It explores the representational trail of the Moors murders and subsequent trial of 1966, the emergence of age of consent abolitionism in the 1970s, Cleveland’s child sexual abuse crisis of 1987-8, and 2010 and 20s contemplations on the Jimmy Savile scandal. Harnessing research into popular media forms and a huge range of personal, political and professional records, Nick Basannavar carefully parses and illustrates the ways in which journalists, medical workers, politicians, lobbyists and other groups assembled and animated their narratives, revealing complex rhetorical and emotional processes. This book challenges problematic conceptual dichotomies such as silence/noise or ignorance/knowledge. It shows instead that although categories such as ‘child sexual abuse’ and ‘paedophilia’ may be relatively recent linguistic value-constructs, sexual violence against children has existed and been represented across historical moments, in changeable and challenging ways.
  
  
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030831509
ISBN-10: 3030831507
Pagini: 327
Ilustrații: XVII, 327 p. 8 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2021
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Genders and Sexualities in History

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

One – Introduction: Trailing Abuse.- Part I: Landscapes.- Two – Attraction/Violence.- Three – Perpetrator/Victim.- Part II: Moorland.- Four – ‘No Adjective’: Reading the Moors Murders.- Five – Sixties Ellipses.- Part III: Borderland.- Six – PIE and the ‘Radical Case’.- Seven – Speaking About PIE, Speaking About Paedophilia.- Part IV: Cleveland.- Eight – The Steel River.- Nine – Concerning Children.- Ten – ‘When the State Abuses Children’.- Part V: Hinterland.- Eleven – ‘Good While it Lasted’.- Twelve – Epilogue: Speaking.

Recenzii

“This book is an ambitious work that, like all innovative scholarship, opens up more questions than it answers. … This book is important because it helps us see how people have spoken about child sexual abuse without speaking directly. It also allows us to see more clearly that policies and procedural structures to prevent sexual abuse and care for children who have experienced it have failed in part because of linguistic holdovers from earlier eras.” (Julia B. Haager, The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, Vol. 16 (3), 2023)

Notă biografică

Nick Basannavar is a historian specialising in the cultural, social and sexual history of postwar Britain. He is an Honorary Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London, UK, where he also completed his doctoral research and has taught modern British history. 


Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book investigates the changes and continuities in the ways in which sexual violence has been interpreted and represented in Britain since 1965. It explores the representational trail of the Moors murders and subsequent trial of 1966, the emergence of age of consent abolitionism in the 1970s, Cleveland’s child sexual abuse crisis of 1987-8, and 2010 and 20s contemplations on the Jimmy Savile scandal. Harnessing research into popular media forms and a huge range of personal, political and professional records, Nick Basannavar carefully parses and illustrates the ways in which journalists, medical workers, politicians, lobbyists and other groups assembled and animated their narratives, revealing complex rhetorical and emotional processes. This book challenges problematic conceptual dichotomies such as silence/noise or ignorance/knowledge. It shows instead that although categories such as ‘child sexual abuse’ and ‘paedophilia’ may be relatively recent linguistic value-constructs,sexual violence against children has existed and been represented across historical moments, in changeable and challenging ways.

Nick Basannavar is an historian specialising in the cultural, social and sexual history of postwar Britain. He completed his doctoral research at Birkbeck, University of London, UK, where he has also taught modern British history.

Caracteristici

Charts the shifting representational history of sexual violence against children in Britain since the 1960s Draws on a highly diverse body of cultural, professional and personal documentation Challenges problematic assumptions, myths and anachronisms related to sexual violence narratives