Cogito ergo sum Logic and rhetoric |
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DARVO is an acronym that stands for deny, attack, reverse victim and offender.
Here's a hypothetical scenario, using Christian-backed anti-gay rhetoric as an example:
Psychologist Jennifer Freyd coined the term in her 1997 study "Violations of power, adaptive blindness, and betrayal trauma theory"[3] to explain how perpetrators of unequivocally bad things (e.g., sexual assault) paint themselves as victims and their victims as the ones in power.
In a 2017 study which aimed to test whether DARVO is an empirically strong method of classification, the researchers concluded that:[4][5]
“”(1) DARVO was commonly used by individuals who were confronted; (2) women were more likely to be exposed to DARVO than men during confrontations; (3) the three components of DARVO were positively correlated, supporting the theoretical construction of DARVO; and (4) higher levels of exposure to DARVO during a confrontation were associated with increased perceptions of self-blame among the confronters. These results provide evidence for the existence of DARVO as a perpetrator strategy and establish a relationship between DARVO exposure and feelings of self-blame. Exploring DARVO aids in understanding how perpetrators are able to enforce victims' silence through the mechanism of self-blame.
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