The Politics of Trauma: Gender, Futurity, and Violence Prevention in South Africa.
Michelle PentecostPublished in: Medical anthropology quarterly (2022)
In this article, I consider the framing of trauma as an epigenetic exposure that warrants intergenerational interventions. I draw on ethnographic research conducted in Khayelitsha, Cape Town, South Africa in 2014-15 to illustrate how violence prevention in this context is increasingly framed in epigenetic terms. I show that, in contrast to the anticipatory logic of a programmatic focus on maternal investment as a means to arrest intergenerational cycles of violence, violence produces different infrastructures of anticipation and effects on intergenerational relations. I argue against the speculative conflation of trauma and intergenerational epigenetics, to resist a newly biologized view of the bodily manifestations of apartheid history-in itself a re-inscription of damage, and a form of violence. Drawing on Murphy's concept of distributed reproduction (2017b), I argue for collectivized forms of intervention that aim for accountability and social justice.
Keyphrases
- south africa
- mental health
- hiv positive
- dna methylation
- intimate partner violence
- gene expression
- mental illness
- randomized controlled trial
- trauma patients
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance
- physical activity
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- cell cycle
- hiv infected
- contrast enhanced
- weight loss