Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’

Retelling violence can heal. It can also hurt. Post-Second World War exigency silenced numerous victims of sexual violence. The legacy of this ‘silence’ and the brutality of the crimes remain divisive in Asia. Yet, when breaking silence, victims pay a martyr’s price. Their trauma appropriated for w...

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Main Author: James Burnham Sedgwick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2015-01-01
Series:Acta Academica
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/1480
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author James Burnham Sedgwick
author_facet James Burnham Sedgwick
author_sort James Burnham Sedgwick
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description Retelling violence can heal. It can also hurt. Post-Second World War exigency silenced numerous victims of sexual violence. The legacy of this ‘silence’ and the brutality of the crimes remain divisive in Asia. Yet, when breaking silence, victims pay a martyr’s price. Their trauma appropriated for wider agendas. Personal suffering commodifiedas national pain. Scarred bodies and psyches used as criminal evidence. In the handsof others, memories take on currency beyond personal pain and outside circles of healing. In courts, testimonies become valued only for probative worth and legal weight. Politicians use trauma as diplomatic leverage. Restitution claims monetise scales of suffering. No simple formula exists for trauma’s emotional arithmetic. Sharing experiences can provide relief, even release. However, this article shows that, in crying shame, survivors also pay a steep cost for speaking out. For some, it may be better to keep silent.
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spelling doaj.art-a7917148c91a4de3a8d25bbf71fab2f42024-03-07T11:10:39ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Academica0587-24052415-04792015-01-01471Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’James Burnham Sedgwick0Beveridge Arts Centre, Canada Retelling violence can heal. It can also hurt. Post-Second World War exigency silenced numerous victims of sexual violence. The legacy of this ‘silence’ and the brutality of the crimes remain divisive in Asia. Yet, when breaking silence, victims pay a martyr’s price. Their trauma appropriated for wider agendas. Personal suffering commodifiedas national pain. Scarred bodies and psyches used as criminal evidence. In the handsof others, memories take on currency beyond personal pain and outside circles of healing. In courts, testimonies become valued only for probative worth and legal weight. Politicians use trauma as diplomatic leverage. Restitution claims monetise scales of suffering. No simple formula exists for trauma’s emotional arithmetic. Sharing experiences can provide relief, even release. However, this article shows that, in crying shame, survivors also pay a steep cost for speaking out. For some, it may be better to keep silent. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/1480
spellingShingle James Burnham Sedgwick
Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
Acta Academica
title Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
title_full Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
title_fullStr Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
title_full_unstemmed Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
title_short Crying shame: war crimes, sexual violence, and the cost of ‘speaking out’
title_sort crying shame war crimes sexual violence and the cost of speaking out
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/1480
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