This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Transnational Press via the URL in this record.This article adopts a gender perspective on war, problematising media attention on Yezidi women since the attacks by ISIS. Sinjari Yezidis’ narratives/subjectivities since 2014 are silenced in Western media reports in favour of a “hyper-visibility” of women’s “injured bodies”, which mobilises a specific narrative of victimhood. Reports from UK and US broadsheet newspapers, plus the BBC, CNN and online publications are analysed, plus new data gathered through fieldwork among Yezidis in Northern Iraq. Western media draw on and reproduce cultural and gender representations, reinstating relations of power infused with orien...
Saagarika Dadu and Marie Forestier explore ways in which gender identities and norms continue to be ...
The article explores the role of women and changing gender relations in reconstruction processes in ...
Rape during conflict is often over-simplified and sensationalised in the accounts of international h...
Although as of early 2019 ISIS has lost all of the territories it occupied, scholarly and media atte...
Sexual violence against women in the time of conflict is a problem that appeared in many cases durin...
The article discusses sexual violence by ISIS against women in Iraq, particularly Yezidi women, agai...
This paper reads the testimonies of Yazidi women who survived their slavery at the hands of ISIS (DA...
This paper explores the gender dimension of the relationship between the political marketplace and i...
Drawing from Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultural trauma this paper focuses on the selected storie...
Women have long been viewed as the “weaker sex”–more peace-loving and passive than men. However, cla...
In April of 2004, newspapers in the United States began to print stories unveiling the abuse of Iraq...
This report explores the phenomenon of Western females travelling to Syria and Iraq in support of IS...
Preventing sexual violence in conflict is not possible without tackling the underlying structural fa...
During August in 2014, the Yazidi minority in the Sinjar region in Iraq were victims of a genocide c...
This article examines newspaper coverage of the capture of a team of British sailors and marines on ...
Saagarika Dadu and Marie Forestier explore ways in which gender identities and norms continue to be ...
The article explores the role of women and changing gender relations in reconstruction processes in ...
Rape during conflict is often over-simplified and sensationalised in the accounts of international h...
Although as of early 2019 ISIS has lost all of the territories it occupied, scholarly and media atte...
Sexual violence against women in the time of conflict is a problem that appeared in many cases durin...
The article discusses sexual violence by ISIS against women in Iraq, particularly Yezidi women, agai...
This paper reads the testimonies of Yazidi women who survived their slavery at the hands of ISIS (DA...
This paper explores the gender dimension of the relationship between the political marketplace and i...
Drawing from Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultural trauma this paper focuses on the selected storie...
Women have long been viewed as the “weaker sex”–more peace-loving and passive than men. However, cla...
In April of 2004, newspapers in the United States began to print stories unveiling the abuse of Iraq...
This report explores the phenomenon of Western females travelling to Syria and Iraq in support of IS...
Preventing sexual violence in conflict is not possible without tackling the underlying structural fa...
During August in 2014, the Yazidi minority in the Sinjar region in Iraq were victims of a genocide c...
This article examines newspaper coverage of the capture of a team of British sailors and marines on ...
Saagarika Dadu and Marie Forestier explore ways in which gender identities and norms continue to be ...
The article explores the role of women and changing gender relations in reconstruction processes in ...
Rape during conflict is often over-simplified and sensationalised in the accounts of international h...