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Women's everyday resistance: space, affect and healing

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dc.contributor.advisor Seedat, Mohamed
dc.contributor.advisor Suffla, Shahnaaz
dc.contributor.author Day, Sarah
dc.date.accessioned 2021-07-23T08:49:39Z
dc.date.available 2021-07-23T08:49:39Z
dc.date.issued 2021-01
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27717
dc.description.abstract Despite South Africa’s constitution being demonstrably one of the most progressive in the world, there remains a divide between legislation and women’s lived experiences of violence and inequality. In this context, marginalised women, in particular, are often wrongly perceived of as lacking in power and agency. In an attempt to understand how marginalised women articulate their agency under conditions of direct and structural violence, the aim of my study is to examine how women perform everyday resistance to violence at and between different sites, including the home, community and state-controlled institutions, and to examine the process of undertaking this research, using a critical reflexive approach. My research is structured around four studies. In Study I, I examine how a group of marginalised women perform everyday resistance in relation to state-controlled institutions. In Study II, I consider how a group of marginalised women do everyday resistance in relation to constructions of home. Study III offers an analysis of how the Thembelihle Women’s Forum functions as an invented space of resistance, and everyday resistance is a relational practice. Finally, in Study IV, I do a critical reflexive reading of psychosocial accompaniment as method, elucidating the complexities, tensions and trade-offs inherent to the method. When considered against my study’s broader theoretical framework (i.e., liberation psychology, feminist geopolitics and affective economies), the findings of these four studies present a complex examination of the enactment of everyday resistance. Each of the studies demonstrates a number of strategies for everyday resistance, including becoming a willful subject, refusal and withdrawal, quiet encroachment, collective storytelling, affective reimagining, collective conscientisation, de-ideologizing reality, social solidarity, coping mechanisms, tactics of survival and acts of reclamation. Methodologically, I demonstrate the messiness inherent to how power dynamics are reproduced and resisted during the research process. My research seeks to deepen our understandings of the flow of power within the research process, and the dynamic and shifting imperatives of our research practice. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xv, 317 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Everyday resistance en
dc.subject Marginalised women en
dc.subject South Africa en
dc.subject Psychosocial accompaniment en
dc.subject Ethnography en
dc.subject.ddc 362.880820968
dc.subject.lcsh Abused women -- South Africa -- Psychology en
dc.subject.lcsh Women -- Violence against -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Women -- Crimes against -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Resilience (Personality trait) in women -- South Africa en
dc.title Women's everyday resistance: space, affect and healing en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Psychology en
dc.description.degree D. Phil. (Psychology)


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