Structural violence and colonial oppression in Shahnaz Bashir’s Scattered Souls

This paper aims to analyse the concept of structural violence and its implications for people as depicted in Scattered Souls. Galtung’s concept of Structural violence and its distinction from other types of violence provides a useful framework to examine and understand the complexity of the represen...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bashir, Ishrat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2024
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/25428/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/25428/1/TD%209.pdf
Description
Summary:This paper aims to analyse the concept of structural violence and its implications for people as depicted in Scattered Souls. Galtung’s concept of Structural violence and its distinction from other types of violence provides a useful framework to examine and understand the complexity of the representation of violence and socio-political relations. According to Galtung, structural violence refers to the indirect violence inherent in dominant social structures like systemic discrimination based on race, ethnicity, religion, and gender, which create conditions of disadvantage for underprivileged and oppressed people. This paper aims to analyse how the conventional focus on visible violence in Scattered Souls leads to the invisibility and oblivion of implicit or structural violence. This paper endeavours to use Galtung's and Žižek's categorisation of violence as a conceptual tool to understand the impact of violence at the deeper levels. It further seeks to examine the ways in which structural violence deteriorates the lives of people, bolsters the direct violence of occupation, and diminishes the possible impact of resisting oppression.