Introduction: Languages of Trauma
Peter Leese, Julia Barbara Köhne, and Jason Crouthamel
Part One: Words and Images
1. "A perfect hell of a night which we can never forget":
Narratives of Trauma in the Private Writings of British and Irish
Nurses in the First World War
Bridget E. Keown
2. Religious Language in German Soldiers’ Narratives of
Traumatic Violence, 1914–1918
Jason Crouthamel
3. Languages of the Wound: Finnish Soldiers’ Bodies as Sites of
Shock during World War II
Ville Kivimäki
4. Efim Segal Shell-shocked Sergeant: Red Army Veterans and the
Expression and Representation of Trauma Memories
Robert Dale
5. The Falling Man: Resisting and Resistant Visual Media in Art
Spiegelman’s In the Shadow of No Towers
Jennifer Anderson Bliss
Part Two: Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts
6. Performing Songs and Staging Theatre Performances: Working
through the Trauma of the 1965 Indonesian Mass Killings
Dyah Pitaloka and Hans Pols
7. Encounters with Some Things Are Difficult to Say,
Re-Membered
Katrina Bugaj
8. Performing Memory in an Interdependent Body
Emily Mendelsohn
9. Memory and Trauma: Two Contemporary Art Projects
Maj Hasager
Part Three: Normalizations of Trauma
10. Between Social Criticism and Epistemological Critique:
Critical Theory and the Normalization of Trauma
Ulrich Koch
11. The New Normal: Trauma as Successfully Failed Communication
in Nurse Betty
Thomas Elsaesser
12. The Exploitation of Trauma: (Mis-)Representations of Rape
Victims in the War Film
Marzena Sokołowska-Paryż
Part Four: Representations in Film
13. Translating Individual and Collective Trauma through Horror:
The Case of George A. Romero’s Martin
Adam Lowenstein
14. Aesthetic Displays of Perpetrators in Joshua Oppenheimer’s
The Act of Killing: Post-Atrocity Perpetrator Symptoms,
Re-enactments of Violence, and Perpetrator-Victim-Inversions
Julia Barbara Köhne
15. Perpetrator Trauma and Current American War Cinema
Raya Morag
Coda: Climate Trauma Reconsidered
E. Ann Kaplan
Peter Leese is an associate professor in the
Department of English, Germanic and Romance Studies at the
University of Copenhagen.
Jason Crouthamel is a professor in the
Department of History at Grand Valley State University.
Julia Barbara Köhne is FONTE visiting professor
in the Faculty of Culture, Social Sciences and Education at
Humboldt-University Berlin.
"This collection significantly advances trauma studies, a field destined to continue to grow, expand its intellectual purchase and deepen the extent and complexity of its interdisciplinary reach." - Joy Porter, University of Hull (Social History of Medicine)
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