Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T04:15:17.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Remedial Work’: Men's Strategic Responses to Their Violence Against Intimate Female Partners

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2016

Kate Cavanagh
Affiliation:
Department of Social Policy and Social Work, University of Glasgow, G12 8RT, U.K.
R. Emerson Dobash
Affiliation:
Department of Social Policy, University of Manchester, U.K.
Russell P. Dobash
Affiliation:
Department of Social Policy, University of Manchester, U.K.
Ruth Lewis
Affiliation:
Department of Social Policy, University of Newcastle, U.K.
Get access

Abstract

Based on interviews with 122 men who had used violence against their partner, and employing Goffman's (1971) concept of ‘remedial work’, this paper interrogates violent men's perceptions, constructions and understandings of domestic violence and their responses to its use. Accounts of women partners are also examined. ‘Remedial work’ involves the perpetrator of an act of untoward behaviour in various forms of ‘damage limitation’ intended to change the meaning of the offensive act into one that is deemed acceptable. Goffman's three related devices of remedial work – ‘accounts, apologies, and requests’ – are used to explore men's narratives of violent events, their definitions of the event, rationales and perceptions of consequences. Revealed are the exculpatory and expiatory discourses which dominate men's narratives and which expose the purposeful yet paradoxical nature of their responses to violence, directed at mitigating and obfuscating culpability while at the same time seeking forgiveness and absolution. We suggest that through these devices men seek to impose their own definitions upon their woman partner and thereby neutralise or eradicate her experience of abuse and control the ways in which she interprets and responds to it. These findings strongly support Goffman's theoretical conception. In addition, they highlight the need for further investigation of how men's and women's accounts, definitions and responses to violence are interactionally connected through men's attempts to define the violence in exculpatory and expiatory terms and in women's resistance to such definitions and their implications.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
2001 BSA Publications Limited

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)