Violent Intimacy: Family Harmony, State Stability, and Intimate Partner Violence in Post-Socialist China
Autor Tiantian Zhengen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 iul 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350263420
ISBN-10: 1350263427
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350263427
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Wide interdisciplinary appeal including cultural anthropology, political science, gender and sexuality. Also useful for activists, practitioners, and administrators in domestic violence prevention programs, international organizations, and NGOs.
Notă biografică
Tiantian Zheng is SUNY Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the State University of New York, Cortland. She has received two national book awards, and has testified before Congress, UNAIDS, and the United Nations on human trafficking and other issues, and has been a featured guest speaker on NPR, BBC, and NBC.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsIntroductionChapter 1 - A Social and Cultural History of Intimate Partner Violence in ChinaChapter 2 - Worthy vs Unworthy Victims of Sexual Violence in Post-socialist ChinaChapter 3 - The Criminal Justice System and Intimate Partner ViolenceChapter 4 - Male Perceptions and Rationalizations of Intimate Partner Violence in Post-socialist ChinaChapter 5 - Everyday Resistance of Women Against Intimate Partner ViolenceChapter 6 - Activism and Intimate Partner ViolenceAfterwordNotesReferencesIndex
Recenzii
This is an important book that sheds new light on the understudied problem of intimate partner violence in China. Tiantian Zheng has deftly integrated findings from interviews, media sources, and online communities to write a powerful ethnography that tells the stories of Chinese women who experienced intimate partner violence and places them in broader sociocultural, economic, political, and historical perspective.
Domestic violence is endemic in China and is naturalized locally by appealing to a reinvented Confucian ideology bent on preserving domestic harmony at all costs and to conceptions of women's and men's temperaments based on their purported biological differences. The state not only blames violence in intimate relationships on its victims but also criminalizes NGOs that attempt to offer them help. Tiantian Zheng's richly textured ethnography documents, in often harrowing details, the predicaments that Chinese domestic violence survivors find themselves in a context in which so little support is available.
Gender discrimination in Chinese society is real. Tiantian Zheng's keen ethnographic eye is on full display as she probes the way cultural assumptions shape government and the public's response to marital violence. It is a sobering account chock full of insight into the dark corners of marital intimacy.
With great sensitivity and a unique ethnographic eye, Zheng offers a rare glimpse of a hidden harrowing world in which some Chinese women endure constant physical and sexual violence imposed by their intimate partners. Her riveting, poignant ethnography and incisive analysis reveal how such personal experiences are shaped by multiple structural and historical forces that put constrains on women's agency and possible interventions. A timely and important contribution to a deeper understanding of postsocialist complexity and gender politics!
Domestic violence is endemic in China and is naturalized locally by appealing to a reinvented Confucian ideology bent on preserving domestic harmony at all costs and to conceptions of women's and men's temperaments based on their purported biological differences. The state not only blames violence in intimate relationships on its victims but also criminalizes NGOs that attempt to offer them help. Tiantian Zheng's richly textured ethnography documents, in often harrowing details, the predicaments that Chinese domestic violence survivors find themselves in a context in which so little support is available.
Gender discrimination in Chinese society is real. Tiantian Zheng's keen ethnographic eye is on full display as she probes the way cultural assumptions shape government and the public's response to marital violence. It is a sobering account chock full of insight into the dark corners of marital intimacy.
With great sensitivity and a unique ethnographic eye, Zheng offers a rare glimpse of a hidden harrowing world in which some Chinese women endure constant physical and sexual violence imposed by their intimate partners. Her riveting, poignant ethnography and incisive analysis reveal how such personal experiences are shaped by multiple structural and historical forces that put constrains on women's agency and possible interventions. A timely and important contribution to a deeper understanding of postsocialist complexity and gender politics!