Javascript must be enabled to continue!
‘Wandering Throughout Lives’: Outlining Forms and Impacts of Torture
View through CrossRef
The chapter moves to outline forms of torture documented historically, and how torture (in its narrowest definitional sense) is documented. This primarily considers two substantial works: Torture and Democracy by Darius Rejali, and This Side of Silence by Tobias Kelly. It outlines physical inflictions such as electrotorture, waterboarding, prolonged bath submersion and near-drowning, prodding, beating, induced stress positions and tortures such as noise, light and mock execution. Importantly, Rejali’s work has been fundamental in exploring the silencing effects of ‘clean’ torture – that is, torture which is inflicted in more subtle ways through stealth that become difficult or impossible to physically evidence. As Kelly went on to highlight, this has significant implications for survivors of torture who are seeking asylum, as well as obtaining justice for their subjections, since evidence is diminished and thus so is the burden of proof. From this, we look at the forms of torture identified by practitioners working with survivors of torture and/or sexualized violence. This chapter broadens the scope of practitioner narratives included to draw correlations between forms of violence documented as torture, and those which are not. The latter part of this chapter shifts focus to look at the consequences and impacts of torture. It is important to highlight the complex specificities of these impacts here, so we can later draw correlations and distinctions in other chapters, as we then shift away from narrow definitions and towards the conceptualization of torturous violence in a broader and more experiential sense.
Title: ‘Wandering Throughout Lives’: Outlining Forms and Impacts of Torture
Description:
The chapter moves to outline forms of torture documented historically, and how torture (in its narrowest definitional sense) is documented.
This primarily considers two substantial works: Torture and Democracy by Darius Rejali, and This Side of Silence by Tobias Kelly.
It outlines physical inflictions such as electrotorture, waterboarding, prolonged bath submersion and near-drowning, prodding, beating, induced stress positions and tortures such as noise, light and mock execution.
Importantly, Rejali’s work has been fundamental in exploring the silencing effects of ‘clean’ torture – that is, torture which is inflicted in more subtle ways through stealth that become difficult or impossible to physically evidence.
As Kelly went on to highlight, this has significant implications for survivors of torture who are seeking asylum, as well as obtaining justice for their subjections, since evidence is diminished and thus so is the burden of proof.
From this, we look at the forms of torture identified by practitioners working with survivors of torture and/or sexualized violence.
This chapter broadens the scope of practitioner narratives included to draw correlations between forms of violence documented as torture, and those which are not.
The latter part of this chapter shifts focus to look at the consequences and impacts of torture.
It is important to highlight the complex specificities of these impacts here, so we can later draw correlations and distinctions in other chapters, as we then shift away from narrow definitions and towards the conceptualization of torturous violence in a broader and more experiential sense.
Related Results
‘I Wouldn’t Call it Torture’: Conceptualizing Torturous Violence
‘I Wouldn’t Call it Torture’: Conceptualizing Torturous Violence
In the month prior to submitting this book for publication I garnered opinions of approximately 100 practitioners working on trauma, torture, violence and rehabilitation, discussin...
1 What Should We Do about Torture?
1 What Should We Do about Torture?
Abstract
This chapter attempts to clarify the claim that there should be an absolute prohibition against torture. To clarify the claim, it is important to have a cle...
Outlining the Definitional Boundaries of ‘Torture’
Outlining the Definitional Boundaries of ‘Torture’
Contemporary legal and academic frameworks around torture are predominately based in the UN Convention against Torture or Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment ...
Engaging torture survivors in the global fight against torture
Engaging torture survivors in the global fight against torture
Lived experience can be emancipating and also paralysing, but foremost, it is immensely valuable to combat what has been suffered in first person (Henry, 2021). How to recognise th...
What Does "Mind-Wandering" Mean To The Folk? An Empirical Investigation
What Does "Mind-Wandering" Mean To The Folk? An Empirical Investigation
Although mind-wandering research is rapidly progressing, stark disagreements are emerging about what the term “mind-wandering” means. Four prominent views define mind-wandering as ...
Why ‘Torture and Torturous Violence’?
Why ‘Torture and Torturous Violence’?
Torture is simultaneously a silenced entity and an overused term – something we often shy away from in serious discussion, but a word we might use flippantly. It is not uncommon to...
Dissociable influences of implicit temporal expectation on attentional performance and mind wandering
Dissociable influences of implicit temporal expectation on attentional performance and mind wandering
Mind wandering at critical moments during a cognitive task degrades performance. At other moments, mind wandering could serve to conserve task-relevant resources, allowing a brief ...
Sexualized Torture and Sexually Torturous Violence
Sexualized Torture and Sexually Torturous Violence
Whether rape and sexualized violence is inherently perceived as torture is the subject of debate. For feminists such as Copelon (2004) and MacKinnon (2006), rape is in and of itsel...

