Paper two talks about the ever-present fact of violence, overt and covert, physical and non-physical has an overwhelming influence on feminine identity formation. A child's sense of self is greatly dependent on how others think, feel and behave towards her. This fundamental difference in identity formation between the sexes has deep roots in socialization processes, resource allocation within families, the impact of external influences such as mass media, pornography, and of course the educational system. While identity, notions of self, roles and obligations are worked out fairly early in a woman's life, no stage is without change and questioning. Thus feminine identity and a woman's position within the family continue to be open to modification, …show more content…
In order to do so it is necessary to see the family and its individual members in an emerging context with many players in the field: an interface between them, the State, the law and the women's movement becomes increasingly relevant. As re-telling and reinterpretation become the sites for differing realities, it is clear that contemporary understandings of domestic violence will need to interrogate a familial ideology based on unity and patriarchal dominance in a manner which does not valorize victimhood alone. In spite of its clichetic resonance, a caveat based on the exceptions - be it in the context of food distribution, notions of maternal love or wife abuse, violence against boys and men - as well as on the rule is essential to resist stereotypification and a monolithic discourse on domestic …show more content…
The instance of violence was reported to be lowest among Buddhist and Jain women, and highest among Muslim women in India. A 2014 study in The Lancet reports that the reported sexual violence rate in India is among the lowest in the world, the large population of India means that the violence affects 27•5 million over women their lifetime.
The 2012 National Crime Records Bureau report of India states a reported crime rate of 46 per 100,000, rape rate of 2 per 100,000, dowry homicide rate of 0.7 per 100,000 and the rate of domestic cruelty by husband or his relatives as 5.9 per 100,000. These reported rates are significantly smaller than the reported intimate partner domestic violence rates in many countries, such as the United States (590 per 100,000) and reported homicide (6.2 per 100,000 globally), crime and rape incidence rates per 100,000 women for most nations tracked by the United