南非强奸幸存者对羞耻、自责和内化耻辱的表述

IF 4.1 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Samantha Willan , Nwabisa Shai , Thobeka Majola , Mpumelelo Mabhida , Sinqobile Mngadi , Tholsie Gounden , Rachel Jewkes , Naeemah Abrahams , Mercilene Machisa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

强奸后的研究和支持通常侧重于外部耻辱,但许多强奸幸存者经历了明显的羞耻、自责和内化耻辱。尽管有越来越多的文献描述了这些情绪对幸存者情感健康的影响,但在南非,这方面的研究却很少,而南非每年平均报告的强奸案件达 40,000 起。为了加强我们对强奸案女性幸存者在羞耻感、自责感和内化耻辱感方面的经历和看法的了解,我们对南非 eThekwini 的 16 名幸存者进行了定性研究。她们参加了 2-3 次深度访谈和生活史访谈,目的是让她们表达自己如何看待强奸后内化的耻辱感、羞耻感和自责感,以及这些如何影响了她们对强奸的心理反应。本文描述了这些妇女的经历和对强奸的反应,并思考了她们的描述如何对羞耻、自责和内化耻辱的理论观点做出贡献。妇女们表达了羞耻感、自责感和内化耻辱感,并将这些感觉描述为不同的,但又相互关联的。这些感受是对家庭、社区成员和服务提供者所表达的观点、她们与施暴者的关系、有关事件的流言蜚语程度以及性别规范和强奸神话的反应。此外,虽然成见是个人层面的感受,但它是由人际和结构/社区层面的外部成见驱动的。经历过不止一次强奸的妇女通过 "可能被强奸 "这一内部污名化概念来解释这一点。这项研究填补了一个重要的知识空白,可以改善南非强奸后的护理服务和干预措施,特别是对幸存者的心理支持。最后,虽然应支持强奸幸存者解决其自身的羞耻、自责和内部污名化问题,但外部污名化问题需要在人际和结构层面加以解决。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
South African rape survivors’ expressions of shame, self-blame and internalized-stigma

Post-rape research and support often focuses on external stigma, yet many rape survivors experience appreciable shame, self-blame and internalized-stigma. Despite a growing literature describing the impact of these feelings on survivors' emotional wellbeing, there has been little research on this in South Africa, where an average of 40,000 rape cases are reported annually. To strengthen our understanding of female rape survivors' experiences and perceptions of shame, self-blame and internalized-stigma, we undertook qualitative research with 16 survivors in eThekwini, South Africa. They participated in 2–3 in-depth and life history interviews, that sought to enable them to express how they made meaning of post-rape internalized-stigma, shame and self-blame, and how these may have influenced their psychological reactions to rape. The paper describes the women's experiences and reactions to the rape and reflects on how their descriptions contribute to theoretical perspectives on shame, self-blame and internalized-stigma. The women expressed feelings of shame, self-blame, and internalized-stigma, describing these as distinct, yet inter-connected. These feelings were a reaction to views expressed by family, community members and service providers, their relationship to the perpetrator, the extent of gossip about the incident and gender norms and rape myths. Furthermore, while the stigma was felt at an individual level, it was driven by external stigma enacted at interpersonal and structural/community levels. Women who had experienced more than one rape, explained this through the internally-stigmatizing notion of being ‘rape-able’. This study addresses a significant knowledge gap which could improve contextually appropriate post-rape care services and interventions in South Africa, particularly psychological support for survivors. Finally, while rape survivors should be supported to address their own shame, self-blame and internalized-stigma, external stigma needs to be addressed at interpersonal and structural levels.

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来源期刊
SSM. Mental health
SSM. Mental health Social Psychology, Health
CiteScore
2.30
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118 days
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