Publication
Title
Moral spaces and sexual transgression : understanding rape in war and post conflict
Author
Abstract
When it comes to rape in war, evocative language describing rape as a 'weapon of war' has become commonplace. Although politically important, overemphasis on strategic aspects of wartime sexual violence can be misleading. Alternative explanations tend to understand rape either as exceptional - a departure from 'normal' sexual relationships - or as part of a continuum of gendered violence. This article shows how, even in war, norms are not suspended; nor do they simply continue. War changes the moral landscape. Drawing on ethnographic research over 10 years in northern Uganda, this article argues for a re-sexualization of understandings of rape. It posits that sexual mores are central to explaining sexual violence, and that sexual norms - and hence transgressions - vary depending on the moral spaces in which they occur. In Acholi, moral spaces have temporal dimensions ('olden times', the 'time of fighting' and 'these days') and associated spatial dimensions (home, camp, bush, village, town). The dynamics of each help to explain the occurrence of some forms of sexual violence and the rarity of others. By reflecting on sexual norms and transgressions in these moral spaces, the article sheds light on the relationship between 'event' and 'ordinary', rape and war.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Development and change. - Beverly Hills, Calif.
Publication
Beverly Hills, Calif. : 2019
ISSN
0012-155X [print]
1467-7660 [online]
DOI
10.1111/DECH.12499
Volume/pages
50 :4 (2019) , p. 1009-1032
ISI
000474372600006
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
PEGASUS-2: [PEGASUS]², giving wings to your career
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 01.08.2019
Last edited 12.12.2024
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