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Home SOS. Katherine BrickellЧитать онлайн книгу.

Home SOS - Katherine Brickell


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the case for viewing forced eviction more specifically, and emphatically, as a form of gender‐based violence like domestic violence. The book reveals women’s feminised responsibility to deal with the far‐reaching and adverse consequences of forced eviction, from possible destruction of the family home, splintering of familial and/or community ties, the loss of livelihood, and access to essential facilities and services. These carry with them significant physical and mental burdens. As UN‐HABITAT (2011a, pp. 3–4) notes and Home SOS demonstrates, ‘the prospect of being forcibly evicted can be so terrifying that it is not uncommon for people to risk their lives in an attempt to resist or, even more extreme, to take their own lives when it becomes apparent that the eviction cannot be prevented’.

      Indeed, seminal feminist scholarship conjectures that an indelible link exists between ‘the global extension of capitalist relations and the escalation of violence against women, as the punishment against their resistance to the appropriation of their bodies and labour’ (Federici 2014, p. xi). Prompted by Silvia Federici’s work, Sutapa Chattopadhyay (2018, p. 1296) asks, ‘how can women’s vulnerability to gender‐based violence be explained through numerous co‐constitutive forms of violence and inequalities that shape the bodies of the marginalized?’ Home SOS places the experiences of domestic violence and forced eviction centrefold in order to examine women’s injuries, but also their survival practices, in defence of home. It therefore works to connect rather than isolate different forms of gender‐based violence in its co‐constitutive analysis of violences and inequalities shaping women’s lives.

      Home SOS brings together original data from four studies I have undertaken. Over the 16‐year collection period (2003–2019), my work has shifted from the broad‐based focus of my doctorate (Brickell 2007) on household gender relations and marriage to a more concentrated engagement on domestic violence and forced eviction issues. This work began in Siem Reap Province and has since extended to Pursat Province and Phnom Penh, the country’s capital.

Image described by caption.

      Photo: Katherine Brickell.

Image described by caption.

      Photo: Katherine Brickell.

      Orm’s interview impressed upon me the toll that the responsibility of managing the crisis ordinary people can have, and how this weight is linked memories and experiences of the past. When fantasies of ‘the good life’ become untenable (Berlant 2011), as they had for Orm, a sense of crisis can pervade to such an extent that life feels hopeless. Orm describes that she ‘can only hold the pain in my chest’ and feels that ‘trouble’ was ‘accumulating continuously’ in her life. This inability to move forward positively in life, the sheer


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