Cultural Trauma and Collective IdentityIn this collaboratively authored work, five distinguished sociologists develop an ambitious theoretical model of "cultural trauma"—and on this basis build a new understanding of how social groups interact with emotion to create new and binding understandings of social responsibility. Looking at the "meaning making process" as an open-ended social dialogue in which strikingly different social narratives vie for influence, they outline a strongly constructivist approach to trauma and apply this theoretical model in a series of extensive case studies, including the Nazi Holocaust, slavery in the United States, and September 11, 2001. |
Contents
Psychological Trauma and Cultural Trauma | 25 |
Cultural Trauma Slavery and the Formation of African American Identity | 54 |
The Trauma of Perpetrators The Holocaust as the Traumatic Reference of German National Identity | 106 |
The Trauma of Social Change A Case of Postcommunist Societies | 149 |
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Common terms and phrases
affect African American antisemitism associated atrocities attacks audience Auschwitz became become black nationalism camps CBOS Bulletin century civil collective guilt collective identity collective memory collective trauma communist construction context coping created crimes cultural trauma debates defense defined democracy democratic developed discourse dominant economic Elijah Muhammad emerged ethnic evil example experience Freud genocide German groups Holocaust human identified individual intellectuals involved Jewish mass Jews Kristallnacht Malcolm X mass killings mass media mass murder means modern moral movement national identity national trauma Nazi Nazism Negro past percent perpetrators perspective political postwar present progressive narrative psychological psychological trauma racial radical reconstruction reference remember representation represented responsibility ritual role sense September 11 situations slave slavery Smelser social society story strategies suffering symbolic symptoms Sztompka threat tion tive tragedy tragic trauma drama trauma process traumatic event traumatogenic change United universal victims Western
Popular passages
Page 5 - Trauma is not locatable in the simple violent or original event in an individual's past, but rather in the way its very unassimilated nature — the way it was precisely not known in the first instance — returns to haunt the survivor later on.