List of Illustrations
Foreword, Claude Barbre
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Ethics of Remembering and the Consequences of
Forgetting: Introductory Essay
Michael O’Loughlin
Part I Ethics of Memory
Chapter 1: Is Autonomy Unethical?: Trauma and the Politics of
Responsibility
Mari Ruti
Chapter 2: Troubling Naturalized Trauma, Essentialized Therapy, and
the Asphyxiation of Dangerous Memory
Michael O’Loughlin
Part II Biographical Remnants
Chapter 3: Wit(h)nessing the Other’s Trauma: An Exploration of
Barbara Loftus’s Painting Through the Work of Bracha Ettinger
Angie Voela
Chapter 4: In Search of Forgotten Memories after Thirty-three
Years: A Journey Home
Minh Truong-George
Chapter 5: The Sense of Loss and the Search for Meaning
Norma Tracey & Graham Toomey
Chapter 6: Anglo-German Displacement and Diaspora in the Early
Twentieth Century: An Intergenerational Haunting
Nigel Williams
Chapter 7: Ghosts in the Mirror: A Granddaughter of Holocaust
Survivors Reflects the Faces of History
Nirit Gradwohl Pisano
Chapter 8: Questions Unasked: The Legacy of Childhood Trauma in the
Life Narratives of Lithuanian Women Survivors of the 1941 Soviet
Deportations.
Justina Kaminskaite Dillon & Michael O’Loughlin
Chapter 9: They Left it All Behind: Psychological Experiences of
Jewish Immigration and the Ambiguity of Loss
Hannah Hahn
Part III Historical Remnants
Chapter 10: The Silence of the Grandchildren of the Civil War:
Transgenerational Trauma in Spain
Clara Valverde & Luis Martín-Cabrera
Chapter 11: A South African Story of Disavowal: Towards a Genealogy
of Post-apartheid Empathy
Ross Truscott
Chapter 12: Spanish Horror as Te(x)timony of Mass Extermination and
the Cultural Trauma of Enforced Disappearance
Scott Boehm
Chapter 13: “Each of Us Bears His Own Hell:” A Window into Venues
of Trauma in Central
Eastern Europe
Reinhold Stipsits
Chapter 14: Transmission of Jewish/Israeli Collective Memory as
Evident in the Narratives of Israeli Soldiers who participated in
The 2006 Second Lebanon War.
Naama De La Fontaine & Kate Szymanski
Chapter 15: Trauma, Community, and Contemporary Racial Violence:
Reflections on the Architecture of Memory
Ricardo Ainslie
Chapter 16: Managing Collapse: Commemorating September 11th through
the Relational Design of a Memorial Museum
Billie Pivnick & Tom Hennes
Afterword, Marilyn Charles
Michael O’Loughlin, PhD, is professor in the School of Education and clinical and research supervisor in the PhD Program in Clinical Psychology at Adelphi University.
This is a collection of essays that make important historical
events come alive in a direct and vivid manner through the lens of
trauma. A vast reach of geographical spaces and historical moments
are captured, not only from a therapeutic perspective, but also
through other ways of engaging trauma, namely art therapy, critical
history, and many other discursive positions. This unusual approach
makes this volume so special.
*Ingo Lambrecht, Manawanui, Maori Mental Health Services, Auckland
District Health Board, New Zealand*
This book is both thought provoking and morally challenging. Our
heritage of uninvited ghosts that haunt our personal, cultural, and
socio-political histories where traumatic memories are repressed
yet transmitted to subsequent generations is brought home as each
chapter unfolds with vivid accounts of unbearable inhumanity and
inspiring threads of human recognition. The ghosts of collective
trauma, unwanted social memory and inconvenient truth are
everywhere. This book is essential reading to any scholar, social
theorist, psychoanalyst or psychotherapist who recognises that
globally more and more individuals are being forced by birth or
citizenship to have to deal with human violations committed in
their name.
*Cora Smith, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa*
A truly excellent and impressive collection for quality and range,
this book brings to light, and brings light to, many dark events in
human history. Its near-global set of case studies and
intergenerational dimension makes this a must read for anyone
interested in understanding the historical, psychological and
socio-political dimensions of trauma.
*Lita Crociani-Windland, PhD, University of the West of England*
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