Aarhus Universitets segl

Rape in Gapun: talk, violence and innovation in a Papua New Guinea village

Academic Hour by Don Kulick, Professor of Anthropology at Uppsala University

Oplysninger om arrangementet

Tidspunkt

Onsdag 16. november 2016,  kl. 13:15 - 15:00

Sted

Foredragssalen, 4206-139, Campus Moesgaard

In Papua New Guinea, sexual violence against women occurs at staggering rates. Research has highlighted this violence from a number of perspectives, and explored some possible causes of what is widely perceived to be ever-increasing levels of violence throughout the country. One dimension of sexual violence, though, that has not been considered much is the interactional structure and meaning of talk about rape. How is something like rape talked about in casual conversation among rural villagers? What social messages are communicated when people tell each other stories about rape? My talk will present material from a small, isolated Sepik village called Gapun, where I have been conducting fieldwork for the past thirty years. I will play audio recordings of how women tell each other stories about gang rapes of both women and men. I will use those stories to discuss local concepts of “rape” and “domestic violence”, and I will contextualize the sexual violence that occurs in Gapun in relation to child socialization, local understandings of violence and agency, conflict incitement and resolution, and the shifting shape of rural gender roles.

In Papua New Guinea, sexual violence against women occurs at staggering rates. Research has highlighted this violence from a number of perspectives, and explored some possible causes of what is widely perceived to be ever-increasing levels of violence throughout the country. One dimension of sexual violence, though, that has not been considered much is the interactional structure and meaning of talk about rape. How is something like rape talked about in casual conversation among rural villagers? What social messages are communicated when people tell each other stories about rape? 

 

My talk will present material from a small, isolated Sepik village called Gapun, where I have been conducting fieldwork for the past thirty years. I will play audio recordings of how women tell each other stories about gang rapes of both women and men. I will use those stories to discuss local concepts of “rape” and “domestic violence”, and I will contextualize the sexual violence that occurs in Gapun in relation to child socialization, local understandings of violence and agency, conflict incitement and resolution, and the shifting shape of rural gender roles.