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Article
Making Meaning Out of Interpersonal Victimization The Narratives of IPV Survivors
Violence Against Women (2015)
  • Ban Hong Phylice Lim, Northern Illinois University
  • Christine E. Valdez, Northern Illinois University
  • Michelle M. Lilly, Northern Illinois University
Abstract
Research examining meaning-making in the aftermath of interpersonal victimization among women has been restricted by quantitative methods and a focus on single distressing event. Qualitative methods were used to inspect meaning-making cognitions among a community sample of IPV (intimate partner violence) survivors. Consensus coding resulted in eight categories of meaning-making. The most widely endorsed cognition was self-blaming. Other strategies included justification for the abuser, normalizing violence, attribution to karmic or godly intervention, minimization and social comparison, reappraisal/opportunity for growth, absence of a protective figure, and failure to make sense of abuse. Implications with respect to adaptiveness and intervention are discussed.
Keywords
  • meaning-making,
  • cognitions,
  • intimate partner violence,
  • interpersonal trauma
Publication Date
2015
DOI
10.1177/1077801215590670
Citation Information
Ban Hong Phylice Lim, Christine E. Valdez and Michelle M. Lilly. "Making Meaning Out of Interpersonal Victimization The Narratives of IPV Survivors" Violence Against Women Vol. 21 Iss. 9 (2015) p. 1065 - 1086
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/christine-valdez/11/