Not exact matches
I especially like the parts about the
rather abstract sense of
victimhood, which blinds us to real suffering, and the assumption that modern thinkers aren't «rational agents» who give arguments that need to be engaged, because they're characteristically neither wholly true nor wholly false.
The more serious problem, however, is in the theory
rather than the practice of the politics of
victimhood.
It's a story of survival
rather than
victimhood, and its message flies right in the face of the global stigmatization that still strives to repress women, shaming them from embracing their sexuality.
No matter what, your treatment will release you from your past feelings of
victimhood, cure old pains so that you can leave them behind you, and explain who you are in yourself
rather than in the situation of your marital life.
Rather than confronting unacceptable behaviour like lateral violence an identity of
victimhood that is further fed by deficit approaches ultimately transforms our communities into the toxicity of passivity and powerlessness.