Unfurling Genocide and the Politics of Gender Stereotypes in Pat Barker's The Silence of the Girls

Authors

  • Sima Kalita Sima Kalita Gauhati University Author

Keywords:

Genocide, gendercide, gender stereotype, power, oppression

Abstract

Abstract: 

Contextualizing mass conflict or genocide, this paper endeavors to demonstrate how genocidal violence is gendered and how the politics of gender stereotypes has contributed to this genocidal violence from ancient times to modern as explored in Pat Barker’s novel The Silence of the Girls (2018). As gender stereotypes in terms of mass conflict operate through the mechanism of gender-based inequality operating in patriarchal society, Barker’s novel effectively unblocks several gender-selective measures of violence used in genocide. However, this paper attempts to show how Barker’s novel projects genocide through the process of re-reading the classical Trojan War and the experiences of its forgotten victims to delve into the themes of genocidal violence, hegemonic masculinity and women’s oppression. Focusing on ‘genocide’, ‘gendercide’ and the politics of gender stereotypes, the paper intends to offer a nuanced insight towards the domain of study concerning genocide and the complex interplay of several power structures. 

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References

References:

Barker, P. (2018). The Silence of the Girls. Penguin Books.

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Published

2025-06-30

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Section

Articles