ABSTRACT

This book offers a critical feminist perspective on the widely debated topic of transitional justice and forgiveness. Louise Du Toit examines the phenomenon of rape with a feminist philosophical discourse concerning women’s or ‘feminine’ subjectivity and selfhood. She demonstrates how the hierarchical dichotomy of male active versus female passive sexuality – which obscures the true nature of rape – is embedded in the dominant western symbolic frame. Through a Hegelian and phenomenological reading of first-person accounts by rape victims, she excavates an understanding of rape that also starts to open up a way out of the denial and destruction of female sexual subjectivity.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

Rape, Forgiveness and Reconciliation

chapter 2|32 pages

The Impossibility of Rape

chapter 3|36 pages

The Possibility of Rape

chapter 5|38 pages

What if the Object Started to Speak?

chapter 6|37 pages

Towards Female Subjectivity