ABSTRACT
The international feminist contributors to this book look through the lens of poststructuralism at how child sexual abuse is differently represented and understood in the populist, academic, clinical, media and legal contexts. Reworking earlier feminist analyses, they show how child sexual abuse is not just about gender and power but also about class, race and sexuality. The first, theoretical section of the book critiques normative theories of the 'effects' of abuse, explores the impact and consequences of feminist interventions and critically examines the potential usefulness of a feminist post-stucturalist approach. In the second part, these understandings are applied to specific arenas of practice with the aim of providing a framework for critical intervention and alternative and better ways of working with child sexual abuse.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |115 pages
Exploring the cultural and political landscape of child sexual abuse
chapter |19 pages
Feminism's restless undead
chapter |21 pages
The vigilant(e) parent and the paedophile
part |114 pages
How we theorise and intervene in the lives of women who have experienced child sexual abuse