E-Book Overview
During the late 1970s and 1980s speaking out about the traumatic reality of incest and rape was a rare and politically groundbreaking act. Today it is a ubiquitous feature of popular culture and its political value uncertain. In Violence and the Cultural Politics of Trauma, Jane Kilby explores the complexity and consequences of this shift in giving first-hand testimony by focusing on debates over recovered memory therapy and false memory syndrome, the spectacle of talkshow disclosures, discourses of innocence and complicity as well as the aesthetics and affect of shock. In counterpoint to the frequently cynical readings of personal narrative politics, Kilby advances an alternative reading built around the concept of unrepresentability. Key to this intervention is the stress placed by Kilby on the limits of representing sexually traumatic experiences and how this requires both theoretical and methodological innovation. Based on close readings of survivor narratives and artworks, this book demonstrates the significance of unrepresentability for a feminist understanding of sexual violence and victimisation. The book will of interest to those working in the areas of Cultural, Literary, Media and Women's Studies as well as Memory and Trauma Studies.Features: Provides a topical discussion of the debates generated by a mass culture of speaking out about violence and victimization. Offers an interdisciplinary case-study analysis of survivor testimony. Applies cutting-edge developments in trauma and testimony theory to a feminist analysis of women's incest testimony.Makes accessible the significance of unrepresentability for a cultural politics of trauma.
E-Book Content
Violence and the Cultural Politics of Trauma
Jane Kilby is a lecturer in the School of English, Sociology, Politics and Contemporary History at the University of Salford.
VIOLENCE AND THE
CULTURAL POLITICS of Trauma Jane Kilby
Violence and the
Cultural Politics of Trauma
Jane Kilby
Edinburgh University Press 22 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LF ISBN 978 0 7486 1816 3
Cover image: “Hope” by Regina Lafay Cover Design: Barrie Tullett
Edinburgh
www.eup.ed.ac.uk
Jane Kilby
During the late 1970s and 1980s speaking out about the traumatic reality of incest and rape was a rare and politically groundbreaking act. Today it is a ubiquitous feature of popular culture and its political value uncertain. In Violence and the Cultural Politics of Trauma, Jane Kilby explores the complexity and consequences of this shift in giving first-hand testimony by focusing on debates over recovered memory therapy and false memory syndrome, the spectacle of talkshow disclosures, discourses of innocence and complicity as well as the aesthetics and affect of shock. In counterpoint to the frequently cynical readings of personal narrative politics, Kilby advances an alternative reading built around the concept of unrepresentability. Key to this intervention is the stress placed by Kilby on the limits of representing sexually traumatic experiences and how this requires both theoretical and methodological innovation. Based on close readings of survivor narratives and artworks, this book demonstrates the significance of unrepresentability for a feminist understanding of sexual violence and victimisation. The book will be of interest to those working in the areas of Cultural, Literary, Media and Women’s Studies as well as Memory and Trauma Studies.
Violence and the Cultural Politics of Trauma
Violence and the Cultural Politics of Trauma Jane Kilby
Edinburgh University Press
© Jane Kilby, 2007 Edinburgh University Press Ltd 22 George Square, Edinburgh Typeset in 11/13pt Ehrhardt MT by Servis Filmsetting Ltd, Manchester, and printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddles Ltd,