“Silence, Trauma, and Female Resistance: A Comparative Content Analysis of Indian and Korean Women’s Literature”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64751/dyftzv64Abstract
The present research study explores the relationship between silence, trauma, and female
resistance in selected Indian and Korean women’s literary texts, with particular reference to That
Long Silence and The Vegetarian. The study investigates how patriarchal social structures shape
women’s emotional lives through silence, domestic control, social expectation, and psychological
pressure. Rather than treating silence only as passivity, the paper examines how it gradually
becomes a form of survival, emotional withdrawal, and resistance within oppressive social
environments. The research is based on qualitative comparative textual analysis using feminist
literary criticism and trauma theory. Through close reading of the selected texts, the study
analyses emotional suppression, psychological fragmentation, bodily alienation, domestic
isolation, and subtle forms of female resistance. Comparative analysis has been used to
understand both the shared and culturally distinct experiences represented in Indian and Korean
women’s writing. The findings reveal that trauma in these literary works is largely psychological
and develops through continuous emotional control, neglect, adjustment, and social pressure
rather than through isolated acts of violence alone. Indian women’s literature mainly portrays
emotional suffering within family-centred structures shaped by marriage, duty, and social honour,
whereas Korean women’s literature more directly presents psychological alienation, bodily
resistance, emotional detachment, and the pressure of social conformity. The study further finds
that female resistance in these texts rarely appears through open rebellion; instead, it emerges
quietly through silence, refusal, self-awareness, withdrawal, and narrative expression. This
research study concludes that silence in women’s literature functions as a complex emotional and
symbolic space where suffering and resistance exist together. Although the cultural contexts differ,
both Indian and Korean women’s texts reveal how women negotiate patriarchal control while
attempting to reclaim identity, emotional agency, and selfhood
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