Journals Log In | Journals Account Info

Books Cart  
Journals Cart  
 
 
SEARCH
  
Browse Books

Holiday Sale
Gift Book Ideas
Cooking Sale
Browse Bestsellers
Browse Bargain Books


Thanksgiving Hours
UNP Nobel Prize Winner
New November Books
UNP on Facebook

View Our New Seasonal Catalog (pdf)
Storying Domestic Violence, Storying Domestic Violence, 0803232594, 0-8032-3259-4, 978-0-8032-3259-4, 9780803232594, Jarmila Mildorf, Frontiers of Narrative, Storying Domestic Violence, 0803206992, 0-8032-0699-2, 978-0-8032-0699-1, 9780803206991, Jarmila Mildorf, Frontiers of Narrative, Storying Domestic Violence, 080322494X, 0-8032-2494-X, 978-0-8032-2494-0, 9780803224940, Jarmila Mildorf, Frontiers of Narrativ

Storying Domestic Violence
Constructions and Stereotypes of Abuse in the Discourse of General Practitioners
Jarmila Mildorf

hardcover
2007. 259 pp.
Illustration, table, index
978-0-8032-3259-4
$19.95 s
 
paperback
2009. 256 pp.
978-0-8032-2494-0
$19.95 x
 

Globally, at least one in four women experiences domestic violence at some point in her life, according to World Bank figures, which are confirmed by local surveys throughout the world. Since domestic violence can cause both acute physical injuries and long-term chronic illness, an abused woman is likely to appeal to a family doctor or general practitioner as one of her first resources for help. General practitioners, however, rarely report domestic violence in their practices.
 
Jarmila Mildorf’s interdisciplinary study makes a unique contribution to the fields of domestic abuse and narrative studies with her analysis of the narrative practices of doctors who treat abused women. Mildorf, a sociolinguist and literary scholar, analyzes the narrative trajectories, space-time parameters, agency, modalities, metaphors, and stereotypes in thirty-six narratives deriving from in-depth interviews with twenty general practitioners in Aberdeen, Scotland. Mildorf shows what these narrative strategies reveal about the perceptions and attitudes of practitioners toward domestic violence and the ways in which the narratives linguistically reconstruct knowledge and realities of domestic violence.
 
Unique in its emphasis on the discourse of doctors, Storying Domestic Violence suggests the possibility of narrative approaches in medical modules that might preclude further stigmatization and victimization of abused women. A cross section of scholars will recognize this study as significant for its potential to change how people think about domestic abuse, physician-patient relations, and public health policy.

Jarmila Mildorf is an assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of Paderborn in Germany. She is a coeditor of Magic, Science, Technology and Literature, published in Germany.

Also of Interest

Fictional Minds
Alan Palmer


Spaces of the Mind
Elaine A. Jahner


White Mother to a Dark Race
Margaret D. Jacobs


Make a Beautiful Way
Barbara Alice Mann