The Power of Domestic Violence and Abuse Counter Narratives: Telling Stories in Parliamentary Debates

Authors

  • Rebecca Shaw University of Leeds

Keywords:

domestic abuse, counter narratives, master narratives, law reform

Abstract

This paper sets out to interrogate the use of master and counter narratives in UK Parliamentary Select Committee debates surrounding the passage of the Domestic Abuse Bill (now Domestic Abuse Act 2021) in Parliament. These debates are a site that allow for the telling of counter narratives in order to challenge the narrative of the normative socio-legal position regarding domestic violence and abuse (DVA). With its roots in the patriarchy and stereotypical gender roles that foster violence and abuse, the issue with such a narrative is that it fails to recognise the complex, nuanced nature of domestic violence and abuse. As a result, it maintains the status quo and is disconnected from the realities of DVA. The work of this paper, then, is to consider the dialogue between the masterplot of DVA, the Domestic Abuse Bill, and the attempts of counter narratives to act as discursive resistance. It will consider what is the true power of these anti-hegemonic stories in exposing the problems with the master-narrative. Counter narratives submitted by organisations, activists, academics and survivors of DVA during the Committee Stage of the debates were not uniform, monolithic or pure, and were often plagued with inconsistencies and contradictions with one another. Characterised as the same but different, these counter narratives did not act in strict opposition to the hegemonic master narrative. As a result, this paper will draw on a case study which examines three different reports submitted during the Committee Stage of the Debates to consider the following questions: in what way can counter narratives act as discursive resistance in law reform efforts and why are some more successful than others in dismantling the master narrative through the mechanism of the law? Overall, the argument put forward is that it is the counter narratives with a greater illocutionary force and greater narratological power which can be a successful tool in law reform and effect a shift in the master narrative of domestic violence and abuse.

References

Abbott, H. P. ([2002] 2008). The Cambridge Introduction to Narrative. (2nd Edition). Cambridge University Press

Aldridge, J. (2021). “Not an Either/Or Situation”: The Minimization of Violence Against Women in United Kingdom “Domestic Abuse” Policy. Violence Against Women 27(11), 1823-1839

Andrews, M. (2002). Introduction: Counter-Narratives and the Power to Oppose. Narrative Inquiry 12(1), 1-6

Andrus, J. (2021). Narratives of Domestic Violence: Policing, Identity and Indexicality. Cambridge University Press

Bamberg, M. (2004). Considering Counter Narratives. In M. Bamberg and M. Andrews (Eds.). Considering Counter Narratives: Narrating, Resisting, Making Sense (pp. 351-371). John Benjamins

Bamberg, M. and Wipff, Z. (2020). Counter-Narratives of Crime and Punishment. In M. Althoff, B. Dollinger and H. Schmidt (Eds.). Conflicting Narratives of Crime and Punishment (pp. 23-41). Palgrave MacMillan

Bamberg, M. and Wipff, Z. (2022). Reconsidering Counter-Narratives. In K. Lueg and M. Wolff Lundholt (Eds.). Routledge Handbook of Counter-Narratives (paperback edition, pp. 70-82). Routledge

Bishop, C. (2021). Prevention and Protection: Will the Domestic Abuse Act Transform the Response to Domestic Abuse in England and Wales? Child and Family Law Quarterly 33(3), 163-183

Bows, H., Bromley, P., and Walklate, S. (2023). Practitioner Understandings of Older Victims of Abuse and Their Perpetrators: Not Ideal Enough? The British Journal of Criminology 20(20), 1-18

Christie, N. (1986). The Ideal Victim. In E.A. Fattah (Ed.). From Crime Policy to Victim Policy: Reorienting the Justice System (pp. 17-30). Palgrave Macmillan

Corple, D., Linabary, J. R., and Cooky, C. (2021). He never hit me #WhyIStayed: Countering the U.S. Domestic Violence Master Narrative. Journal of Applied Communication Research 49(5), 532-550

Frandsen, S., Lundholt, M. W., and Kuhn, T. (2017) Introduction. In S. Frandsen, T. Kuhn, and M. W. Lundholt (Eds.). Counter Narratives and Organisation (pp. 1-13). Routledge

Grunewald, R. (2013). The Narrative of Innocence, or, Lost Stories. Law and Literature 25(3), 366-389

Herman, D. (2007). Review of: Considering Counter-Narratives: Narrating, Resisting, Making Sense. Language in Society 36(2), 278-284

Home Office (HO). (2024). Policy Paper: Domestic Abuse Act 2021: Overarching Factsheet. Retrieved from https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/domestic-abuse-bill-2020-factsheets/domestic-abuse-bill-2020-overarching-factsheet

Hyvärinen, M. (2022). Towards a Theory of Counter-Narratives. In K. Lueg and M. Wolff Lundholt (Eds.). Routledge Handbook of Counter-Narratives (paperback edition, pp. 17-29). Routledge

Hyvärinen, M., Hatavara, M., and Rautajoki, H. (2021). Positioning with Master and Counter-Narratives. Narrative Inquiry 31(1), 97-125

Jackson, B. (1996). Anchored Narrative and the Interface of Law, Psychology and Semiotics. Legal and Criminological Psychology 1, 17-45

Joint Written Evidence Submitted by 29 VAWG Sector Organisations on the Domestic Abuse Bill (DAB32) (2020). Retrieved from: https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5801/cmpublic/DomesticAbuse/memo/DAB32.pdf

Kuhn, T. (2017). Communicatively Constituting Organisational Unfolding Through Counter-Narrative. In S. Frandsen, T. Kuhn, and M. W. Lundholt (Eds.). Counter Narratives and Organisation (pp. 17-41). Routledge

Liveley, G. and Shaw, R. (2020). Marriage Plots: A New Narratological Approach to the Augustan Marriage Legislation. Law and Humanities 14(2), 244-266

Loseke, D. R. (2007). The Study of Identity as Cultural, Institutional, Organisational, and Personal Narratives: Theoretical and Empirical Integrations. The Sociological Quarterly 48(4), 661-688

Lueg, K., Starboek Bager, A., and Wolff Lundholt, M. (2022). Introduction. What Counter Narratives Are: Dimensions and Levels of a Theory of Middle Range. In K. Lueg and M. Wolff Lundholt (Eds.). Routledge Handbook of Counter-Narratives (paperback edition, pp. 1-14). Routledge

Office For National Statistics (ONS) (2023). Domestic Abuse in England and Wales Overview: November 2023: Figures on Domestic Abuse from the Crime Survey for England and Wales, Police Recorded Crime, and Other Organisations. Retrieved from https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/crimeandjustice/bulletins/domesticabuseinenglandandwalesoverview/november2023

Olson, G. (2014). Narration and Narrative in Legal Discourse. In P. Hühn et al (Eds.). Handbook of Narratology (pp. 371-83). De Gruyter

Pain, A. (2020) Written Evidence Submitted by Andrew Pain on Domestic Abuse Bill (DAB60). Retrieved from https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5801/cmpublic/DomesticAbuse/memo/DAB60.htm

Phelan, J. (2005). Living to Tell About It: A Rhetoric and Ethics of Character Narration. Cornell University Press

Prince, G. (2008). Narrativehood, Narrativeness, Narrativity, Narratability. In J. Pier and J. A. García Landa (Eds.). Theorizing Narrativity (pp. 19-27). De Gruyter

Ryan, M-L. ([2005] 2008). Narrative. In D. Herman, M. Jahn and M-L Ryan (Eds.). Routledge Encyclopaedia of Narrative Theory (paperback edition, pp. 344-348). Routledge

Ryan, M-L. (2007). Towards a Definition of Narrative. In D. Herman (Ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Narrative (pp. 22-25). Cambridge University Press

Stark, E. (2007). Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life. Oxford University Press

Tierney, Tim. (2020). Written Evidence Submitted by Tim Tierney on Domestic Abuse Bill (DAB56). Retrieved from https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5801/cmpublic/DomesticAbuse/memo/DAB56.htm

Women’s Aid (2022). Come Together to End Domestic Abuse: A Survey of UK Attitudes to Domestic Abuse. Retrieved from https://www.womensaid.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Final-Come-Together-to-End-Domestic-Abuse-a-survey-of-UK-attitudes-to-domestic-abuse-2022-1.pdf

Yin, R K. (2014). Case Study Research: Design and Methods (5th Edition). Sage Publications

Downloads

Published

2024-12-13

How to Cite

Shaw, R. (2024). The Power of Domestic Violence and Abuse Counter Narratives: Telling Stories in Parliamentary Debates. Narrative Works, 13(1), 12–31. Retrieved from https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/NW/article/view/34444