Rebuilding Identities amidst Women Acid Attack Survivors in Nepal
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Abstract
This study explores the narratives of the women acid victims of Nepal from
the pluralist views in light of trauma literature. Although the classic model of trauma
claims that truth cannot be attained due to the distortion of the traumatic experience,
hence ‘unknowable’ and ‘unspeakable’, the revisionist model argues that trauma
ruptures the order of life and can also reorient lives, when dealt with, from the
standpoint of its variability in literature and society. Acid attacks have devastating
psychological effects on survivors, leading to issues such as anxiety, depression,
social isolation, and even suicidal ideations. However, the four testimonies of
Nepalese acid survivors in this study reveal that psychological trauma is not an
individual affliction but a socio-cultural wound, wherein identities are not only
shattered but also contested. Drawing upon Cheryl Glenn’s ‘rhetorical feminism’ as a
major insight from her work, Rhetorical Feminism and This Thing Called Hope, the
study analyzes survivors’ narratives to address the feminist agency aligning with the
revisionist model of Michelle Baelev’s ‘reorientation of consciousness.’ The
researcher argues that oppressed gender norms can be challenged through the
acknowledgement of traumatic events, rhetorical listening, and spatial rhetoric in
rebuilding victims’ identities. The survivors fought an ordeal to remake identities in
the new normal by ways of developing resilience, rhetorical resistance, activism, and
advocacy. It is significant for social workers and policymakers to tailor effective
interventions for trauma evacuation and social healing. Further, it is expected to open
a discourse on burn violence, a pressing issue for future research in the Nepalese
context.
Keywords: agency, psychological trauma, reorientation of consciousness, rhetorical
feminism, spatial rhetoric, rebuilding identities, trauma evacuation
