OPEN ACCESS
PEER-REVIEWED
Exploratory Study
| Published: March 05, 2026
Caste and Silence: The Psychic Transmission of Trauma in Dalit Women
Clinical Psychologist, Master's Degree in Clinical and Counseling Psychology from the Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa (UAL), São Paulo, Brazil
Google Scholar
More about the auther
Specialist in Psychopathology and Public Health from the Faculdade de Ciências Médicas da Santa Casa de São Paulo (FCMSCSP), São Paulo, Brazil
Google Scholar
More about the auther
DIP: 18.01.107.20261401
DOI: 10.25215/1401.107
ABSTRACT
For decades, Dalit narratives have been primarily examined through sociological and historical lenses, often neglecting the psychic dimension of caste exclusion and its transgenerational effects. This article proposes a critical listening to this dimension by investigating how the trauma of untouchability is psychically inscribed and transmitted among Dalit women, based on the autobiography The Weave of My Life (2022), by Urmila Pawar. Drawing on critical psychoanalysis, French Discourse Analysis, and subaltern studies, the analysis explores how trauma operates as an affective and historical grammar. Scenes involving shame, silence, bodily violence, sexual harassment, and symbolic dispossession are examined. The findings suggest that caste suffering is transmitted through sensitive, non-discursive inscriptions such as the body, affect, and gesture, constituting a legacy that speaks through silence. The autobiography thus becomes a space for reinscribing trauma and collectively elaborating memory. As a key contribution, the study proposes a decentred clinic that affirms the epistemic legitimacy of Dalit testimony and challenges universalist paradigms in psychoanalytic theory to enable a situated listening of historical suffering.
Keywords
Dalit Women, Psychic Trauma, Silence, Postcolonial Psychoanalysis
This is an Open Access Research distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any Medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
© 2026, Passarinho, A.F. & Furtado, C.
Received: October 19, 2025; Revision Received: March 01, 2026; Accepted: March 05, 2026
Article Overview
ISSN 2348-5396
ISSN 2349-3429
18.01.107.20261401
10.25215/1401.107
Download: 18
View: 487
Published in Volume 14, Issue 1, January-March, 2026
