Ep 2: The Architecture of Abuse episode artwork

EPISODE · May 7, 2026 · 25 MIN

Ep 2: The Architecture of Abuse

from Talk To A Survivor · host talktoasurvivor

This episode traces the architecture of sexual abuse — the legal and religious frameworks that governed girls' bodies from the ancient world through American history. Beginning in ancient Sumer, where the moral recognition of harm to children existed and was written down, the episode moves through Biblical law, Christian canon law, the witch trials, and Hindu child marriage practices — arguing that the erasure of harm to children was not accidental. It was architecture. Built deliberately, sanctioned by the most powerful institutions in the world, and handed forward.  Content Warnings This episode contains detailed historical and legal discussion of sexual violence against children. This content is presented in an educational context. Resources for taking care while listening are listed below and on the Talk to a Survivor Substack.   Prevention and Support Resources A note on how these resources are organized: Prevention work happens at three levels. Primary prevention stops violence before it happens by addressing root causes. Secondary prevention provides immediate crisis response right after violence occurs. Tertiary prevention supports long-term healing and recovery. Many organizations work across more than one level. These resources serve survivors, secondary survivors (the friends, family members, and loved ones of survivors), and anyone working to stop abuse before it starts.   Before or right after sexual violence occurs (primary and secondary prevention):         Stop It Now: 1-888-773-8368 or stopitnow.org — Confidential help for people concerned about their own or another person’s sexual interest in children.       Darkness to Light: d2l.org — Practical tools for parents, teachers, coaches, and anyone who cares for children. Equips adults with knowledge and skills to prevent abuse or respond effectively to suspected abuse. Free trainings available in many communities.   Right after to long after violence occurs (secondary and tertiary prevention):         RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-HOPE or online.rainn.org — Crisis response for survivors and resources for those who care for them.       End Violence Against Women International: startbybelieving.org       1in6 (for male survivors): 1in6.org       The Trevor Project (LGBTQ+ youth): thetrevorproject.org       StrongHearts Native Helpline: 1-844-7NATIVE       DAWN (Deaf Abused Women’s Network): 202-559-5366 (video phone)       National Disability Rights Network: ndrn.org       NO MORE Global Directory (international): nomoredirectory.org       Hot Peach Pages (global orgs in 115+ languages): hotpeachpages.net       Hidden Water (restorative justice circles): hiddenwatercircle.org       Mirror Memoirs (Black & Indigenous TGNC survivors): mirrormemoirs.org       National Clearinghouse on Abuse in Later Life: ncall.us       Department of Justice Elder Justice Initiative: justice.gov/elderjustice   Episode Sources Episode Sources Primary analytical source Florence Rush, The Best Kept Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children (Prentice Hall, 1980) — Chapters 2, 3, 4, and 6, with endnotes providing primary source citations for all legal and historical claims. Chapter 2 (The Bible and the Talmud): Biblical property framework, Talmudic betrothal law, Maimonides, and the Rabbi Akiba folklore. Chapter 3 (The Christians): Canon law, the one flesh principle, confessional abuse, and the witch trials. Chapter 4 (Greek Love): The institutionalized sexual use of boys by adult men in ancient Greek society, including its legal sanction and cultural framing as mentorship and education. Chapter 6 (Child Marriage in India): Hindu sacred obligation, the Kama Sutra material, and Katherine Mayo's documentation. Available free to read at archive.org. Primary legal and religious texts Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Niddah and Tractate Kiddushin — Primary legal text establishing betrothal law for female children, including the three years and one day provision and its legal reasoning. Specific tractate and passage citations available in Florence Rush, The Best Kept Secret, Chapter 2 endnotes. Sources on Sumer and women's legal status Dr. Amanda Foreman, The Ascent of Woman (BBC documentary series, 2015), Episode 1: "Civilisation" — Source for Sumerian women's legal capacities. Available on Netflix. Note: no companion book exists for this series. Charles Halton and Saana Svärd, Women's Writing of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Anthology of the Earliest Female Authors (Cambridge University Press, 2018) — Scholarly source for Sumerian women's legal and social capacities. Sources on sexual exploitation in imperial China Robert van Gulik, Sexual Life in Ancient China: A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from ca. 1500 B.C. till 1644 A.D. (Brill, 1961; reprinted 2003) — The foundational scholarly survey of gender hierarchy and concubinage in imperial China, covering the legal status of women and girls as property across multiple dynasties. Wikipedia, "Concubinage in China," available at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concubinage_in_China, provides continuously updated secondary documentation. Sources on sexual violence in precolonial Africa Elizabeth Thornberry, Colonizing Consent: Rape and Governance in South Africa's Eastern Cape (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022) — Scholarly reconstruction of rape history in precolonial and colonial South Africa, including the practice of compensatory payments made to male family members rather than victims. Sources on sexual violence and European conquest of the Americas Sarah Deer, The Beginning and End of Rape: Confronting Sexual Violence in Native America (University of Minnesota Press, 2015) — The leading scholarly source establishing that rape was uncommon in many Indigenous societies before European arrival, and that sexual violence became a deliberate tool of conquest beginning with Columbus's 1492 expedition. Robin Whyatt, "Violence Against Native Women Has Colonial Roots," The Progressive, February/March 2023 — Available at progressive.org. Gandhi and the brahmacharya experiments The episode describes Gandhi's brahmacharya experiments, in which young women — including his teenage grandnieces Manu and Abha — were required to sleep naked beside him. His close associates, including Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, called the practice a "terrible blunder" and urged him to stop. The peer-reviewed scholarly source is: Vinay Lal, "Nakedness, Nonviolence, and Brahmacharya: Gandhi's Experiments in Celibate Sexuality," Journal of the History of Sexuality, Vol. 9, No. 1–2 (January/April 2000), University of Texas Press. Available via JSTOR and ResearchGate. Historical sources on India and child marriage Katherine Mayo, Mother India (Harcourt Brace, 1927) — Primary source documenting the medical consequences of child marriage in India, including the case of the twelve-year-old whose husband sued for conjugal rights.   Connect Email: [email protected] Substack: @talktoasurvivor on Substack — pinned posts include survivor and secondary survivor resources and prevention organizations doing evidence-based work.

This episode traces the architecture of sexual abuse — the legal and religious frameworks that governed girls' bodies from the ancient world through American history. Beginning in ancient Sumer, where the moral recognition of harm to children existed and was written down, the episode moves through Biblical law, Christian canon law, the witch trials, and Hindu child marriage practices — arguing that the erasure of harm to children was not accidental. It was architecture. Built deliberately, sanctioned by the most powerful institutions in the world, and handed forward.  Content Warnings This episode contains detailed historical and legal discussion of sexual violence against children. This content is presented in an educational context. Resources for taking care while listening are listed below and on the Talk to a Survivor Substack.   Prevention and Support Resources A note on how these resources are organized: Prevention work happens at three levels. Primary prevention stops violence before it happens by addressing root causes. Secondary prevention provides immediate crisis response right after violence occurs. Tertiary prevention supports long-term healing and recovery. Many organizations work across more than one level. These resources serve survivors, secondary survivors (the friends, family members, and loved ones of survivors), and anyone working to stop abuse before it starts.   Before or right after sexual violence occurs (primary and secondary prevention):         Stop It Now: 1-888-773-8368 or stopitnow.org — Confidential help for people concerned about their own or another person’s sexual interest in children.       Darkness to Light: d2l.org — Practical tools for parents, teachers, coaches, and anyone who cares for children. Equips adults with knowledge and skills to prevent abuse or respond effectively to suspected abuse. Free trainings available in many communities.   Right after to long after violence occurs (secondary and tertiary prevention):         RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-HOPE or online.rainn.org — Crisis response for survivors and resources for those who care for them.       End Violence Against Women International: startbybelieving.org       1in6 (for male survivors): 1in6.org       The Trevor Project (LGBTQ+ youth): thetrevorproject.org       StrongHearts Native Helpline: 1-844-7NATIVE       DAWN (Deaf Abused Women’s Network): 202-559-5366 (video phone)       National Disability Rights Network: ndrn.org       NO MORE Global Directory (international): nomoredirectory.org       Hot Peach Pages (global orgs in 115+ languages): hotpeachpages.net       Hidden Water (restorative justice circles): hiddenwatercircle.org       Mirror Memoirs (Black & Indigenous TGNC survivors): mirrormemoirs.org       National Clearinghouse on Abuse in Later Life: ncall.us       Department of Justice Elder Justice Initiative: justice.gov/elderjustice   Episode Sources Episode Sources Primary analytical source Florence Rush, The Best Kept Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children (Prentice Hall, 1980) — Chapters 2, 3, 4, and 6, with endnotes providing primary source citations for all legal and historical claims. Chapter 2 (The Bible and the Talmud): Biblical property framework, Talmudic betrothal law, Maimonides, and the Rabbi Akiba folklore. Chapter 3 (The Christians): Canon law, the one flesh principle, confessional abuse, and the witch trials. Chapter 4 (Greek Love): The institutionalized sexual use of boys by adult men in ancient Greek society, including its legal sanction and cultural framing as mentorship and education. Chapter 6 (Child Marriage in India): Hindu sacred obligation, the Kama Sutra material, and Katherine Mayo's documentation. Available free to read at archive.org. Primary legal and religious texts Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Niddah and Tractate Kiddushin — Primary legal text establishing betrothal law for female children, including the three years and one day pr

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Ep 2: The Architecture of Abuse

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This episode traces the architecture of sexual abuse — the legal and religious frameworks that governed girls' bodies from the ancient world through American history. Beginning in ancient Sumer, where the moral recognition of harm to children...

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