Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What is soft violence

What is soft violence

Any behavior that is different from physical violence that causes harm to others can be considered "soft violence". This kind of violence has a more significant characteristic, that is, its potential harm is often overlooked, and even sometimes defined as a "habit".

For example, people's indifference to social responsibility and the connivance of bad social behavior, such as addictive online games, vulgar novels, pranks, as well as often hang in your mouth and his or her mouth a sentence or two "national curse.

Expanded

Domestic violence has four main manifestations:

1, sexual violence: in the other side of the expression of disagreement, the threat of violence to the other party to have sex, or mutilation of the other party's sexual organs, and other sexual assault behavior;

2, physical violence: the various parts of the body exerted

2. Physical violence: assaults on various parts of the body, such as pushing, shoving, punching, kicking, biting, twisting, slapping, pulling hair, or hurting the other person's body with objects, such as stabbing with knives, beating with belts, or burning with cigarettes;

3. Economic control: restricting the other person's freedom of action and will through the control of the family's money and possessions, time, means of transportation, food, clothing, and housing, and causing the other person's physical and mental dependence to achieve the purpose of controlling the other person.

4, mental violence: through verbal abuse, disparagement, intimidation, slander and other ways to directly affect the other party's self-esteem and self-confidence, the use of intentional cold or refused to communicate, do not allow the other party and the outside world to contact, do not give medical treatment, refused to divorce, and other means of mental torture on the other party, forcing the other party to do what they do not want to do.