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Rape Culture
ISBN/GTIN

Rape Culture

BookPaperback
Ranking63366inPsychologie
CHF26.90

Description

The revelations and allegations of sexual harassment and assault in the Australian Parliament have prompted furious responses. Political leaders have attempted to limit the damage by referring to the lack of criminal charges, resisting a discussion of entrenched misogyny. Advocates for survivors of abuse see this as a continuation of the long history of normalising the abuse of woman, perpetuating it through legal mechanisms and the exercise of power. This impasse represents the workings of a 'rape culture' where the abuse of women is accepted as commonplace. Psychological theories of repression have been misused, contributing to the recycling of the so-called theory of 'false memories' whereby the recall of trauma is seen as invented, perhaps implanted by therapists. It is concerning that this complex issue is being ventilated by journalists, politicians, and lawyers without any clinical understanding of trauma, memory, and the implications for support. Women must not be represented as mentally unstable, untrustworthy, or ruled by their hormones while their abusers take refuge in legalisms, obfuscations, and the dark art of political calculus.
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-1-922464-65-1
Product TypeBook
BindingPaperback
Publishing date01/10/2021
Pages96 pages
LanguageEnglish
SizeWidth 175 mm, Height 112 mm, Thickness 12 mm
Weight82 g
IllustrationsIllustrations, unspecified
Article no.43703684
CatalogsBuchzentrum
Data source no.36009878
Product groupPsychologie
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Series

Author

Louise Newman AM is a Professorial Fellow in Psychiatry at the University of Melbourne, and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at Newcastle University and Monash University. She has held senior leadership positions in mental health training and research including director of the NSW Institute of Psychiatry, and director of the Monash University Centre for Developmental Psychiatry and Psychology, and is currently Director of the Melbourne University BEAR (Building Early Attachment and Resilience) research unit.

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