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https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12985
Record ID: 0ff32c4b-b3a0-43ed-ae9c-129c69a27fe7
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.21039/jpr.3.1.62 |
Type: | Journal Article |
Title: | #MeToo under Colonialism: Conceptualising Responsibility for Sexual Violence in Australia |
Authors: | Rjiswijk, Honni van |
Year: | 2020 |
Publisher: | Winchester University Press |
Citation: | Vol 3 Part 1 |
Abstract: | One of the most provocative and productive applications of Michael Rothberg’s concept of ‘the implicated subject’ is the way it provides a framework to think through #MeToo intersectionally. The ‘implicated subject’ provides a way to think responsibility for sexual violence laterally—beyond the limited figures of victim, perpetrator and bystander; and also temporally—connecting the contemporary sexual harms with the legacies of colonialism and slavery. The concept of the ‘implicated subject’ opens up a field of nuanced responsibility: ‘it both draws attention to responsibilities for violence and injustice greater than most of us want to embrace and shifts questions of accountability from a discourse of guilt to a less legally and emotionally charged terrain of historical and political responsibility’. This is a very rich concept to use as we develop schemas of responsibility in relation to #MeToo, especially for those who may be interpellated by #MeToo as survivors of sexual violence, but who may be implicated by other structural and historical processes—including colonialism, historical slavery, and other processes of structural racism. |
URI: | https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12985 |
Appears in Collections: | Journal Articles |
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