Reasonable Men and Provocative Women: An Analysis of Gendered Domestic Homicide in Zambia

This article is based on 150 cases of killings and alleged killings of women and girls by intimate partners and male family members in Zambia from 1973 to 1996. The female victims range from infancy to old age, but half were women in their child-bearing years. The alleged perpetrators represent men...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of southern African studies 1999-03, Vol.25 (1), p.7-27
1. Verfasser: Rude, Darlene
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description This article is based on 150 cases of killings and alleged killings of women and girls by intimate partners and male family members in Zambia from 1973 to 1996. The female victims range from infancy to old age, but half were women in their child-bearing years. The alleged perpetrators represent men of all ages, all social classes and from all parts of Zambia. They used a variety of weapons, and methods that parallel state-sanctioned torture, to beat, burn, stab or shoot their victims to death. Power and control are underlying factors in these cases of gender-based homicide. Suspected adultery appears to be a leading 'motive' of the killings, as does any threat or challenge to a husband or male relative, or refusal to obey orders or perform domestic tasks. For many of the victims, the punishment for deviating from their expected gender roles was death. Newspaper accounts of such killings create a secondary level of silence about domestic violence and homicide by blaming the victims and concealing the brutality of the attacks. Cases are described simply as 'domestic disputes', thus obscuring what are actually violent and deadly assaults by men against women. A lack of detail about the victims, who are sometimes not even named, ensures they are erased, both literally and in the public eye. Comments by the judiciary, as reported in the press, reflect certain attitudes about gender roles and appropriate behaviour. The women are judged to have 'provoked' their perpetrators, whose violent reactions are all too often seen as inevitable, understandable, and therefore somewhat pardonable. Comments which legitimize men's violent behaviour could be said to sanction violence against women in the home.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/030570799108731
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The female victims range from infancy to old age, but half were women in their child-bearing years. The alleged perpetrators represent men of all ages, all social classes and from all parts of Zambia. They used a variety of weapons, and methods that parallel state-sanctioned torture, to beat, burn, stab or shoot their victims to death. Power and control are underlying factors in these cases of gender-based homicide. Suspected adultery appears to be a leading 'motive' of the killings, as does any threat or challenge to a husband or male relative, or refusal to obey orders or perform domestic tasks. For many of the victims, the punishment for deviating from their expected gender roles was death. Newspaper accounts of such killings create a secondary level of silence about domestic violence and homicide by blaming the victims and concealing the brutality of the attacks. Cases are described simply as 'domestic disputes', thus obscuring what are actually violent and deadly assaults by men against women. A lack of detail about the victims, who are sometimes not even named, ensures they are erased, both literally and in the public eye. Comments by the judiciary, as reported in the press, reflect certain attitudes about gender roles and appropriate behaviour. The women are judged to have 'provoked' their perpetrators, whose violent reactions are all too often seen as inevitable, understandable, and therefore somewhat pardonable. 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The female victims range from infancy to old age, but half were women in their child-bearing years. The alleged perpetrators represent men of all ages, all social classes and from all parts of Zambia. They used a variety of weapons, and methods that parallel state-sanctioned torture, to beat, burn, stab or shoot their victims to death. Power and control are underlying factors in these cases of gender-based homicide. Suspected adultery appears to be a leading 'motive' of the killings, as does any threat or challenge to a husband or male relative, or refusal to obey orders or perform domestic tasks. For many of the victims, the punishment for deviating from their expected gender roles was death. Newspaper accounts of such killings create a secondary level of silence about domestic violence and homicide by blaming the victims and concealing the brutality of the attacks. 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identifier ISSN: 0305-7070
ispartof Journal of southern African studies, 1999-03, Vol.25 (1), p.7-27
issn 0305-7070
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language eng
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source MEDLINE; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Jstor Complete Legacy; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete
subjects AFRICA
Attribution
Children
Court decisions
Criminology
Domestic violence
Domestic Violence - economics
Domestic Violence - ethnology
Domestic Violence - history
Domestic Violence - legislation & jurisprudence
Domestic Violence - psychology
Family - ethnology
Family - history
Family - psychology
Family Health - ethnology
Family Power
Family Violence
Females
Gender
Gender Identity
GENDER ROLES, GENDER DIFFERENCES
Girls
History of medicine
History, 20th Century
Homicide
Homicide - economics
Homicide - ethnology
Homicide - history
Homicide - legislation & jurisprudence
Homicide - psychology
Human Rights - economics
Human Rights - education
Human Rights - history
Human Rights - legislation & jurisprudence
Human Rights - psychology
Husbands
Killing
Law
Males
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Zambia
Zambia - ethnology
title Reasonable Men and Provocative Women: An Analysis of Gendered Domestic Homicide in Zambia
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