Download file Domestic violence
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Domestic violence refers to any form of physical, psychological, sexual, or economic abuse perpetrated within close social relationships, particularly in partnerships or families. What makes it unique is the perpetrator-victim relationship: the abuser is simultaneously the victim's most trusted person, which significantly hinders escape, resistance, and external perception. Victims often find themselves in a cycle of violence, remorse, reconciliation, and renewed violence (the violence spiral), maintained by emotional dependence, shame, fear, and economic coercion. In literature, domestic violence is used as a special theme to illuminate hidden depths behind bourgeois facades: the trauma of the private sphere, where safety and threat are inseparably intertwined. Particularly effective is the moment when an outsider – an investigator, a neighbor, a child – recognizes the invisible violence and cannot categorize it. Literary relevance also lies in the long-term consequences: children who grow up in violent households often develop antisocial behaviors, attachment disorders, or even profiles of perpetrators themselves. In thrillers, domestic violence often serves as the backstory for antagonists or as a motivational background for acts of revenge.