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Cultural Violence by Johan Galtung (1990)

Johan Galtung

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Journal of Peace Research. vol. 27. no. 3. 1990. pp. 291-305

https://bsahely.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Unmasking_Cultural_Violence__How_Hidden_Norms_Legitimize_Harm_and_What_We_Can_Do_About_It.mp3?_=1

Executive Summary

1. Introduction to Cultural Violence

Galtung introduces cultural violence as any aspect of culture that legitimizes or normalizes violence, making harmful practices or structures appear morally acceptable, inevitable, or invisible. This symbolic layer operates through deeply embedded norms, narratives, and frameworks of meaning, which often sanction or conceal violence.


2. The Violence Triangle and Strata

Galtung conceptualizes violence within a triangular framework:

Cultural violence operates as the longest-lasting and most insidious layer, forming a substratum that sustains structural patterns and eruptions of direct violence. Through myths, ideologies, and cosmologies, cultural violence renders inequality natural and oppression acceptable.


3. Mechanisms and Examples

Galtung highlights six cultural domains where legitimization of violence is entrenched:


4. Gandhi’s Contribution

Galtung aligns his framework with Gandhian philosophy, emphasizing two principles:


5. Toward a Culture of Peace

The article concludes with a call to transform cultural narratives to dismantle the legitimization of violence. Galtung envisions a virtuous triangle where:

This approach expands the field of peace research by integrating the humanities, philosophy, and cultural studies into the pursuit of systemic transformation.

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