
Shameful “Victims” and Angry “Survivors”: Emotion, Mental Health, and Labeling Sexual Assault
Decades of research demonstrate that women frequently avoid the label “rape” when reflecting on nonconsensual sexual experiences. The current study focuses on self-labels to further understand the relationship between assault characteristics, emotion, mental health, and
women’s labeling of sexual assault. We argue that emotions produced by various assault characteristics are important mechanisms for understanding self-labeling after a sexual assault. We draw from research on rape scripts and cultural discourses of victimhood, survivorhood, and emotion
to examine labeling “rape” and self-labeling as a “victim” or “survivor” in an online survey of 138 undergraduate women at a southeastern university. Using a series of ordinal logistic regressions in which labels are regressed on emotions and measures of
mental health, we find that the “victim” label is associated with shame and post-traumatic stress, while the “survivor” label is associated with anger and less depression.
Keywords: emotion; identity; mental health; rape; stigma
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: 1: Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 2: University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
Publication date: June 1, 2018
- Violence and Victims is no longer available to subscribers on Ingenta Connect. Please go to http://connect.springerpub.com/content/sgrvv to access your online subscription to Violence and Victims.
- Access Key
- Free content
- Partial Free content
- New content
- Open access content
- Partial Open access content
- Subscribed content
- Partial Subscribed content
- Free trial content