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Interrogating cultural narratives about ‘honour’- based violence
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2013
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Critical Race TheoryCultural StudiesSocial SciencesFeminist EthicsViolence Against WomenGender StudiesMiddle Eastern StudiesCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesLateral ViolenceFeminist ScholarshipSingular EntityFeminist TheoryStructure British DebatesAnti-racismCultureInternational CriminologyPsychological ViolenceOppressionAugust 2012Cultural NarrativesCultural AnthropologySocial Justice
On 3 August 2012, Shafilea Ahmed’s parents were convicted of her murder, nine years after the brutal ‘honour’ killing. The case offers important insights into how ‘honour’-based violence might be tackled without constructing non-Western cultures as inherently uncivilised. Critiquing the framing devices that structure British debates about ‘honour’-based violence demonstrates the prevalence of Orientalist tropes, revealing the need for new ways of thinking about culture that do not reify it or treat it as a singular entity that can only be tackled in its entirety; instead, it is important to recognise that cultures consist of multiple, intersecting signifying practices that are continually ‘creolising’. Thus, rather than talking purely about culture, debates on ‘honour’-based violence should explore the intersection of culture with gender and other axes of differentiation and inequality.
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