Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2014
DOI
10.1086/676979
Publication Title
Signs
Volume
40
Issue
1
Pages
81-99
Abstract
This thematic cluster of essays, titled “Gendered Violence: Continuities and Transformation in the Aftermath of Conflict in Africa,” focuses on the continuities between regimes of violence during organized political conflict and persisting violence against women in the postconflict era of democratic governance. The genesis for this collection evolved out of an international symposium organized by the first author of this introduction, in August 2011. The aim of the symposium was to explore African women’s experiences in the aftermath of mass violence and genocide—both in terms of their victimhood and their agency—and their positioning in the broader context of their social, cultural, and political engagement after the official ending of hostilities. In this introduction, we consider the multiple violations that women have suffered in recent conflicts and genocide on the African continent, and which they continue to suffer long after the violent conflict has ended. We explore the plurality of women’s experiences in the wake of political violence and in its aftermath—their simultaneous experiences of trauma and victimhood, their agency and empowerment, and their solidarity in standing together in their woundedness to rebuild their communities.
Original Publication Citation
Gobodo-Madikizela, P., Fish, J., & Shefer, T. (2014). Gendered violence: Continuities and transformation in the aftermath of conflict in Africa. Signs, 40(1), 81-99. doi:10.1086/676979
Repository Citation
Gobodo-Madikizela, P., Fish, J., & Shefer, T. (2014). Gendered violence: Continuities and transformation in the aftermath of conflict in Africa. Signs, 40(1), 81-99. doi:10.1086/676979