Description

Book Synopsis
In 1971, on two separate occasions, Brenda Downing was raped. She was in her final year of primary school. In the immediate aftermath, the shame she harboured, coupled with a failed disclosure the same year, meant she did not risk talking of her experience again until almost thirty years later and did not begin to address the trauma, held frozen in her body, for a further ten years.
In this book, she not only explores her long-term somatic response to the trauma of rape, but also examines the bodily responses of nine other women raped in childhood. Using a combination of somatic inquiry, writing and performance-making, her pioneering reflexive and embodied methodology reveals the raped body as agentic and subversive, with the capacity to express trauma through symptoms not always readily recognized or understood. Her findings have significant implications for the care and treatment of rape victims, for further research into the multiple impacts of sexual trauma, and for materialist knowledge-making practices.

Table of Contents
Contents: Philomela and me – The language and prevalence of sexual violence – What is somatics? – Correspondences – Somatic narratives: Participant somatic inquiry – Somatic narratives and meaning-making – Speaking of and with and through the raped body – Coming to knowing: A methodology of embodiment – Coming to knowing through embodied autoethnography – Coming to knowing through writing-as-inquiry – Coming to knowing through performance-making-as-inquiry – Weaving the warp and weft of the aftermath of childhood rape.

Feeling the Fleshed Body: The Aftermath of

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    A Paperback / softback by Brenda Downing

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 21/12/2015
      ISBN13: 9783034319706, 978-3034319706
      ISBN10: 3034319703

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In 1971, on two separate occasions, Brenda Downing was raped. She was in her final year of primary school. In the immediate aftermath, the shame she harboured, coupled with a failed disclosure the same year, meant she did not risk talking of her experience again until almost thirty years later and did not begin to address the trauma, held frozen in her body, for a further ten years.
      In this book, she not only explores her long-term somatic response to the trauma of rape, but also examines the bodily responses of nine other women raped in childhood. Using a combination of somatic inquiry, writing and performance-making, her pioneering reflexive and embodied methodology reveals the raped body as agentic and subversive, with the capacity to express trauma through symptoms not always readily recognized or understood. Her findings have significant implications for the care and treatment of rape victims, for further research into the multiple impacts of sexual trauma, and for materialist knowledge-making practices.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Philomela and me – The language and prevalence of sexual violence – What is somatics? – Correspondences – Somatic narratives: Participant somatic inquiry – Somatic narratives and meaning-making – Speaking of and with and through the raped body – Coming to knowing: A methodology of embodiment – Coming to knowing through embodied autoethnography – Coming to knowing through writing-as-inquiry – Coming to knowing through performance-making-as-inquiry – Weaving the warp and weft of the aftermath of childhood rape.

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