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Featured researches published by Sameena Mulla.


Medical Anthropology | 2011

Facing Victims: Forensics, Visual Technologies, and Sexual Assault Examination

Sameena Mulla

This article analyzes a particular legal-medical artifact: the photos of wounds and injuries collected by forensic nurses who work with sexual assault victim-patients. I show how forensic expertise draws on multiple medical practices and adapts these practices with the goal of preserving the integrity of the evidence collection processes. In particular, forensic nurse examiners practice a rigid regime of draping and avoiding the victim-patients gaze at some points in the forensic routine while engaging the victims gaze at other points in the examination. Unlike the examination, the photograph itself deliberately pictures the patients gaze to break the plane of the image, giving the photographic artifact an affective charge as a truth-preserving object within a juridical process. Focusing on forensic photography sheds light on the techno-scientific possibilities that enable forensic encounters as they align therapeutic techniques with legal directives in new and problematic ways.


Law, Culture and the Humanities | 2011

In Mother’s Lap: Forging Care and Kinship in Documentary Protocols of Sexual Assault Intervention

Sameena Mulla

In this article, I examine the documentary practices of forensic intervention into sexual assault as they reveal a larger set of imaginaries about kinship, gender, violence and healing. In the course of the forensic encounter, sexual assault victims frequently disclose victimization by intimates or relatives. The reading practices and audit mechanisms to which forensic documents are subjected reveal tensions between the real-life experiences of sexual assault victims and their families on the one hand, and institutional imaginaries of care and victimization on the other.


Gender & Society | 2017

Intersectionality and Credibility in Child Sexual Assault Trials

Amber Joy Powell; Heather R. Hlavka; Sameena Mulla

Children remain largely absent from sociolegal scholarship on sexual violence. Taking an intersectional approach to the analysis of attorneys’ strategies during child sexual assault trials, this article argues that legal narratives draw on existing gender, racial, and age stereotypes to present legally compelling evidence of credibility. This work builds on Crenshaw’s focus on women of color, emphasizing the role of structures of power and inequality in constituting the conditions of children’s experiences of adjudication. Using ethnographic observations of courtroom jury trials, transcripts, and court records, three narrative themes of child credibility emerged: invisible wounds, rebellious adolescents, and dysfunctional families. Findings show how attorneys use these themes to emphasize the child’s unmarked body, imperceptible emotional responses, rebellious character, and harmful familial environments. The current study fills a gap in sexual assault research by moving beyond trial outcomes to address cultural narratives within the court that are inextricably embedded in intersectional dimensions of power and the reproduction of social status.


Home Cultures | 2008

Compelling Intimacies: Domesticity, Sexuality, and Agency

Aaron Goodfellow; Sameena Mulla

ABSTRACT This introduction highlights what we call “Compelling Intimacies”—the multiple desires, affects, and affinities that arise at the intersection of institutions, actors, technologies, and ethical discourses to exert persuasive pressures on subjects. Each article animates different facets of the intensities born of intimacy as they operate across social and relational fields. The authors separate agency from intention in their efforts to identify the vitality of human and non-human relations. Together, the articles demonstrate how domesticities arise through diverse sets of circumstances, emerging in multiple incarnations—often in the same household—in such a way as to generate a wide range of affects and affinities. Finally, each author turns attention to the so-called “small events” that come to affirm or deny life as given form in everyday household arrangements, kin relations, friendships, and institutional settings, thereby suggesting the political stakes evoked by differing forms of care.


Law, Culture and the Humanities | 2011

Introduction to Forging Family: Legal Documents as New Kinship Technologies

Sameena Mulla

Corresponding author: Sameena Mulla, Department of Social and Cultural Sciences, Marquette University, Lalumiere Language Hall, P.O. Box 1881, Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881. Email: [email protected] Law, Culture and the Humanities 7(3) 352–358


Home Cultures | 2008

There Is No Place Like Home: The Body as the Scene of the Crime in Sexual Assault Intervention

Sameena Mulla


Archive | 2014

The Violence of Care: Rape Victims, Forensic Nurses, and Sexual Assault Intervention

Sameena Mulla


Violence Against Women | 2011

Gendered Violence and the Ethics of Social Science Research

Sameena Mulla; Heather R. Hlavka


Anthropology News | 2009

Political Terrains of Emergency Contraception: Medical Staff Perceptions of Sexual Assault Victim Credibility

Sameena Mulla


Law & Society Review | 2018

“That's How She Talks”: Animating Text Message Evidence in the Sexual Assault Trial: Text Messages as Evidence

Heather R. Hlavka; Sameena Mulla

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