Dr. Rachel Pain speaks at CUNY
Dr. Rachel Pain's talk "Bringing terrorism home: fear, security and domestic violence" will take place Wednesday, February 22nd, 11:45am-1:45pm at the CUNY Graduate Center.
“Bringing terrorism home: fear, security and domestic violence”
Dr. Rachel Pain, Department of Geography, Durham University, UK
Wednesday, February 22nd, 11:45am-1:45pm
CUNY Graduate Center
Environmental and Social Psychology, 6th Floor
365 Fifth Avenue, NY NY 10016
This event is free and open to the public!
In this paper, domestic violence is understood as everyday
terrorism. The effect of terrorism rests on its ability to exert some
control over everyday geographies. I focus on the ways in which emotions
have been understood to play a role in this coercion, by reviewing
ideas from medical, political and feminist science. Moving between
analysis of global terrorism and analysis of intimate partner violence
muddies the boundaries between forms of violence that are framed as
public, political and spectacular; and forms of violence that are framed
as private, apolitical and mundane. How do understandings of terror
change when fear is framed as having liberatory as well as oppressive
potential? Rather than identifying parallels, the aim is to explore the
diversity of geographies of terror, but at the same time to question the
different levels of academic, public and policy attention given to its
various forms. I will refer to emerging findings from research with
survivors that forefronts their analysis and agency.
This event is sponsored by the
Social-Personality and Environmental Psychology Programs; The Center for
Place, Culture, and Politics; Center for the Study of Women and
Society; Public Science Project; and the SpaceTime Research Collective
of The Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY).
Published Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012