Sokoloff Natalie J, Dupont Ida
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York, USA.
Violence Against Women. 2005 Jan;11(1):38-64. doi: 10.1177/1077801204271476.
This article provides a comprehensive review of the emerging domestic violence literature using a race, class, gender, sexual orientation intersectional analysis and structural framework fostered by women of color and their allies to understand the experiences and contexts of domestic violence for marginalized women in U.S. society. The first half of the article lays out a series of challenges that an intersectional analysis grounded in a structural framework provides for understanding the role of culture in domestic violence. The second half of the article points to major contributions of such an approach to feminist methods and practices in working with battered women on the margins of society.
本文对新兴的家庭暴力文献进行了全面综述,采用了种族、阶级、性别、性取向交叉分析以及由有色人种女性及其盟友倡导的结构框架,以了解美国社会中边缘化女性遭受家庭暴力的经历和背景。文章前半部分阐述了基于结构框架的交叉分析在理解文化在家庭暴力中的作用方面所带来的一系列挑战。文章后半部分指出了这种方法对女权主义方法以及在与处于社会边缘的受虐妇女合作中的实践所做出的主要贡献。