Woodiwiss Jo
Department of Criminology, Politics & Sociology, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, UK.
Cult Health Sex. 2008 May;10(4):345-59. doi: 10.1080/13691050701870943.
The childhood sexual abuse recovery literature presents childhood sexual abuse as something with inevitable and devastating effects, which can be identified in the lives of adult women. These effects include a problematic relationship with issues relating to sex. This paper presents findings from an in-depth study of sixteen women in Britain, which looked at women's engagement with the recovery literature aimed at adult victims of childhood sexual abuse and, in particular, that aspect of the literature which dealt with sex. The paper highlights some of the problematic assumptions that underlie much of this literature before examining how women engage with this literature. The findings suggest that women, including those who have no knowledge or memories of having been sexually abused as children, use the ideas promoted in this literature to reinterpret child and adult experiences within a narrative framework of childhood sexual abuse and construct themselves as victims of such abuse and, in doing so, ignore those external factors which may better explain or improve their adult lives.
童年期性虐待康复文献将童年期性虐待描述为具有不可避免的毁灭性影响的事情,这些影响在成年女性的生活中可以被识别出来。这些影响包括与性相关问题的不良关系。本文呈现了对英国16名女性进行深入研究的结果,该研究考察了女性对针对童年期性虐待成年受害者的康复文献的参与情况,特别是该文献中涉及性的部分。在研究女性如何参与这类文献之前,本文强调了许多此类文献所基于的一些有问题的假设。研究结果表明,女性,包括那些对童年期遭受性虐待毫无认知或记忆的女性,利用这类文献中宣扬的观点,在童年期性虐待的叙事框架内重新诠释儿童期和成年期的经历,并将自己构建为这种虐待的受害者,而这样做时,她们忽略了那些可能更好地解释或改善其成年生活的外部因素。