Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Intimate Oppression:A Study on Domestic Violence


Affiliations
1 Department of English, Sri Ramakrishna College of Arts and Science (Autonomous), (Formerly S.N.R. Sons College), Coimbatore – 641 006, Tamil Nadu, India
 

The women writers of the current era allocate ample space in their works to discuss the problems of women, especially, the sufferings of women at home, which have been marginalized for centuries. In general, not only the society but the family also turns a woman into a victim. Gender disparity plays a critical role in placing a lot of challenges in front of women which result in deteriorating their physical and mental health. The women, though they are pushed towards a state of devastation, rather than raising their voice against the violence, remain silent as it occurs in the intimate circle. The oppression does not take place directly; society, man-made custom and defined traditional roles help men to oppress women indirectly. Oppression by the family members, gender disparity practiced at home and various forms of domestic violence and abuse complicate a woman’s life. The present paper focuses on a few works of African American and Indian Women Writing and analyses the forms of domestic violence that deteriorate the life of women and victimize them.

Keywords

Domestic Violence, Gender Disparity, Incessant Abuse, Oppression, Suppressed Emotions.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Wook Lee Jong. World Health Organization. Intimate Partner Violence. Web. 2012 14 Jan.
  • Morrison Toni. The Bluest Eye. New York: Holt MacDougal. 1970. Print.
  • Walker Alice. The Color Purple. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich. 1982. Print.
  • Costino Kimberly A. Weapons against Women - Compulsory Heterosexuality and Capitalism in Linden Hills. Kelley. 39-55.
  • Naylor Gloria. Linden Hills. New York: Ticknor and Fields. 1985. Print.
  • Homans Margaret. The Women in the Cave: Recent Feminist Fictions and the Classical Underworld. Contemporary Literature. 1988; 29.3:369-402. Print. https://doi.org/10.2307/1208453
  • Roy Arundhati. The God of Small Things. Delhi: India Ink.1997. Print.
  • Deshpande Shashi. That Long Silence. India: Penguin. 1988.Print.
  • De Beavouir Simone. The Second Sex. Trans. and Ed. Parshley.New York: Vintage Books. 1974. Print.
  • Divakaruni Chitra Banerjee. Sister of My Heart. Calcutta: Blackswan. 1999. Print.

Abstract Views: 451

PDF Views: 291




  • Intimate Oppression:A Study on Domestic Violence

Abstract Views: 451  |  PDF Views: 291

Authors

R. Karunambigai
Department of English, Sri Ramakrishna College of Arts and Science (Autonomous), (Formerly S.N.R. Sons College), Coimbatore – 641 006, Tamil Nadu, India

Abstract


The women writers of the current era allocate ample space in their works to discuss the problems of women, especially, the sufferings of women at home, which have been marginalized for centuries. In general, not only the society but the family also turns a woman into a victim. Gender disparity plays a critical role in placing a lot of challenges in front of women which result in deteriorating their physical and mental health. The women, though they are pushed towards a state of devastation, rather than raising their voice against the violence, remain silent as it occurs in the intimate circle. The oppression does not take place directly; society, man-made custom and defined traditional roles help men to oppress women indirectly. Oppression by the family members, gender disparity practiced at home and various forms of domestic violence and abuse complicate a woman’s life. The present paper focuses on a few works of African American and Indian Women Writing and analyses the forms of domestic violence that deteriorate the life of women and victimize them.

Keywords


Domestic Violence, Gender Disparity, Incessant Abuse, Oppression, Suppressed Emotions.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.15613/hijrh%2F2017%2Fv4i2%2F167543