We are excited to announce that in partnership with the Coercive Control: From Literature into Law project, we will be exhibiting poetry at Keighley Library.

Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Dr Hannah Roche at the University of York and Professor Katy Mullin at the University of Leeds have worked with us to organise a series of workshops with women with lived experience of domestic abuse and sexual violence.

The group has discussed fiction and poetry by writers ranging from the Brontës to Bernardine Evaristo. The texts and extracts have helped women in the group to recognise the signs and patterns of coercive control and to process their own experiences.

Inspired by the workshops, the women went on to produce their own creative writing and share it with the group. Women in the group reported that reading and writing about coercive control, as well as acts of strength and solidarity, enabled them to access parts of trauma that “felt stuck” and helped them to move on and feel more “confident and valued.”

Their works will now be displayed alongside those of the Brontës in Keighley Library from the 30th September for a month. It is free to attend and open to the public.

Dr Roche, from the University of York’s Department of English and Related Literature, said: “When we have discussed extracts from Victorian novels, the women in the group have been surprised by how closely their own experiences reflect those of certain characters – Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, for example.

“The fact that a woman in 2024 can recognise herself and her experience in a novel from 1847 tells us just how long the behavioural patterns and timelines of coercive control have been established.”

The reading and creative writing workshops now form part of Staying Put’s Intervention and Prevention provision for women in refuges. The workshops show how imaginative writing can serve both a therapeutic and an educative purpose, helping to prevent future abuse.

One group member stated that the group “enabled me to access parts of trauma that felt stuck and has been a massive part of my healing experience.”

Professor Mullin, from the University of Leeds’s School of English, said: “Working with survivors through Staying Put has been a learning experience for Hannah and me. We have gained a much deeper understanding of coercive control’s effects through listening to the women and reading their writing, and we have been moved by their courage and resilience.”

Another group member stated: “Coercive behaviour has gone on for years. I’ve learnt more about it, I didn’t know anything about it until I found myself being coercively abused.”

Although coercive control was not a crime until 2015, it has a long history in both real life and imaginative writing. The experiences of fictionalised characters have helped to show that these acts of control have existed for centuries.

Women in the group, who are from diverse cultural backgrounds, reported that reading about coercive control allowed them to feel connected to a much wider network of survivors.

Debbie Kester, Digital Communications Manager at Staying Put, said: “Many of the women who come to the group are still feeling the effects of domestic abuse even years after they have left the abuse behind.

“As part of the workshops, these brave women often discussed difficult topics, but they were given the confidence to share their thoughts and tap into their creative processes in an environment that was safe and respectful. So many times we heard women say ‘that could have been me’ or ‘that was my experience’ when reading work by published writers and each other.

“The workshop is now a part of our service offering and extended to all women who attend our refuge.”

We have a few support groups available for people experiencing domestic abuse. Find out more here 

1 in 4 women will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime. Help us to help them. Donate online here 

Share This