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Masculinity and Spousal Violence: Discursive Accounts of Husbands Who Abuse Their Wives in Ghana

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Abstract

This study investigated the influence of cultural notions of masculinity and its enactments on husband-to-wife abuse in Ghana from a discursive psychological perspective. Two focus group discussions and four in-depth personal interviews were conducted with 16 perpetrators (husbands) from rural and urban Ghana. Participants’ discursive accounts revealed that social anxieties of husbands, their fear of being perceived by others as weak or emasculated, and their disappointment with unfulfilled notions of masculine sovereignty influence conjugal violence. Perpetrators constructed a wife’s expression of dissent to her husband’s wishes and commands as an encroachment on masculine spaces, a gender-norm violation, or as providing a public challenge to male identity and thus violence could be used as an obligatory passage to manhood. Perpetrators also mobilized shifting and ambivalent discourses that draw upon culturally familiar notions of maleness to both resist and authorize a patriarchal privilege in marriage.

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Acknowledgments

I would like to thank all participants who spent their time to talk about their personal and difficult experiences of spousal abuse.

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Correspondence to Stephen Baffour Adjei.

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Adjei, S.B. Masculinity and Spousal Violence: Discursive Accounts of Husbands Who Abuse Their Wives in Ghana. J Fam Viol 31, 411–422 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-015-9781-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-015-9781-z

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