Abstract

This article reports on the ways in which the rape of women by men is constructed in the advice column Dear Dolly , published in the South African periodical Drum Magazine . The data collected for the study spans from 1984 to 2004, encompassing both 10 years before and 10 years after the onset of democracy in South Africa. The article uses critical discourse analysis (Fairclough 2003) as main analytical tool, but also draws on critical feminist theory (Bourke 2007). The findings suggest that there has been a decrease in explicit victim blaming after 1994, but that subtle and opaque victim blaming is still evident in readers’ letters and in the responses. These rape discourses presented in Drum after 1994 are, as Bakhtin (1981) suggests, made up of multiple voices articulating different gendered discourses. In this article, we argue that even though the use of less explicit victim blaming might seem like a positive move in the representation of rape and gender, this is not always the case. The more subtle forms of victim blaming avoid contestation and consequently often go unchecked (Fairclough 2003: 58). Additionally, new rape myths are created to mitigate the responsibility of males. These processes of subtle victim blaming and new myth-making manufacture consent and make it more difficult to counteract dominant discourses.

Highlights

  • During 2013/2014, a total of 46 253 cases of rape were reported in South Africa (Africa Check 2014)

  • While various psychosocial research projects have attempted to explain the dynamics behind this perpetual state of affairs, there is very little work that has explicitly targeted the societal norms and ideologies expressed in South African media discourses as their main focus

  • The aim of this article is to draw on both critical discourse analysis (CDA) and Critical Feminist Theory (CFT) in order to investigate how victims of rape, perpetrators of rape, and the act of rape are constructed by the selected texts

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Summary

Introduction

During 2013/2014, a total of 46 253 cases of rape were reported in South Africa (Africa Check 2014). While various psychosocial research projects have attempted to explain the dynamics behind this perpetual state of affairs, there is very little work that has explicitly targeted the societal norms and ideologies expressed in South African media discourses as their main focus (see Bonnes 2013). It is exactly this gap in scholarly research that is addressed by this article. The focus of this article is an analysis of how victims and perpetrators of sexual violence are discursively constructed in the advice column Dear http://spilplus.journals.ac.za

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