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Trauma

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Trauma in Different Perspectives; ... (1. a bodily wound ??, ??) 2. a wound, a breach on the mind ????; ... Dissociation (p. 7): 'disruption of the usu. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Trauma


1
Trauma
  • Globalization

2
Outline
  • Definitions of Trauma
  • How is trauma related to globalization?
  • First Responses
  • Historical Representation
  • The following weeks
  • Trauma and identity
  • Trauma in Different Perspectives
  • Trauma, its Mediatization and other responses
    ??? (doom to boom)

3
Trauma Definitions and Issues
  • (1. a bodily wound ??, ??) 2. a wound, a breach
    on the mind ????
  • Of victims of surviving witness of all of us
    of historys im/possibility of referentiality.
  • surviving symptoms of shock, absorption and
    loss identity re-construction
  • Representation delayed appearance twofold
    disjunction
  • Between experience and testimony of Witness
    reliability of memory and memory work. Witness
    can only be accessible to the extent that it is
    not fully perceived or experienced as it occurs.
  • Between representation and understanding of
    Reader an obligation to recognize anothers
    experience as irreducibly other and irreducible
    to generalizations.

4
Trauma Definitions and Issues (2)
  • delayed appearance (or belated impact) a wound
    that cries out that tells us a reality which
    cannot be otherwise known.
  • Tassos story of Tancred and Clorinda (textbook
    chap 8)
  • Tancred kills Clorinda when she is disguised as
    an enemy knight.
  • After her burial he goes into a magic forest and
    slashes a tall tree with his sword.
  • The blood streams from the cut and the voice of
    Clorinda is heard complaining that he has wounded
    his beloved again.
  • Cathy Caruth The voice of his beloved bears
    witness to the past he has unwittingly repeated.
    (trauma as double)
  • The story of traumathe story of belated
    experience

5
Examples of Collective/Cultural Trauma
  • Wars ? Genocide e.g. Holocaust (the systematic
    state-sponsored killing of six million Jewish
    men, women, and children and millions of others
    by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during
    World War II. The Germans called this the final
    solution to the Jewish question.)
  • ? Migration (e.g. partition in India migration
    to Taiwan)
  • Natural Disasters (earthquake, typhoon,
    hurricane virus and transmittable diseases
    (AIDS, SARS, Ebola) technology breakdown
    accidents (plane crash, blackout).

6
How is trauma related to globalization?
  • Anti-Globalization (corporate-driven
    globalization resistance to U.S. government, to
    the West, to McWorld) in the form of terrorism
  • Many historical traumas (e.g. Holocaust Vietnam
    War 911) have to do with racial/cultural
    oppression and resistance to it.
  • The news get to be widespread
  • Economic crises and some natural disasters
    interconnected

7
First Responses EMOTIONAL REACTIONS 1) Lack of
control
  • A. Loss of volume control
  • (textbook chap 7 p. 4 loss of volume
    controlmodulating the level of arousal.)
  • shock and disbelief fear and/or anxiety
    grief, disorientation, denial
  • hyper-alertness or hypervigilance (????) (e.g.
    fear of fire in Summer Flower)
  • irritability, restlessness, outbursts of anger or
    rage
  • emotional swings -- like crying and then laughing
  • B. Learned Helplessness (p. 3) feelings of
    helplessness, panic, feeling out of control
  • C. Thinking under Stress -- worrying or
    ruminating -- intrusive thoughts of the trauma ?
    Action not Thought (oversimplified decision poor
    judgement)

source
8
EMOTIONAL REACTIONS (2) Fragmentation
  • A. of the past -- Remembering under Stress
    speechlessness non-verbal selective memories p.
    5 (egret, cat, teapot) ?amnesia flashbacks --
    feeling like the trauma is happening now
  • Nightmares
  • B. Isolation loss of contact tendency to
    isolate oneself
  • feelings of detachment
  • concern over burdening others with problems
  • difficulty trusting and/or feelings of betrayal
  • difficulty concentrating or remembering
  • feelings of self-blame and/or survivor guilt
  • shame
  • diminished interest in everyday activities or
    depression

source
9
EMOTIONAL REACTIONS (2) Fragmentation
  • Dissociation (p. 7) disruption of the usu.
    integrated functions of consciousness, memory
    identity, or perception of environment. ?
    fragmentation of identity.

source
10
EMOTIONAL REACTIONS (3) Pessimism or Escapism
  • Pessimism loss of a sense of order or fairness
    in the world expectation of doom and fear of the
    future
  • Escapism and/or rationalization
  • minimizing the experience (first experience of
    numbness ? mechanism of denial (????, disavowal)
  • ? numbness emotional numbing or restricted range
    of feelings
  • ? return, delayed experience
  • ? reconstruction of myth consumption of disaster
    ?????
  • attempts to avoid anything associated with trauma
  • increased need to control everyday experiences

source
11
First Responses Physical
  • PHYSICAL REACTIONS or symptoms
  • aches and pains like headaches, backaches,
    stomach aches
  • sudden sweating and/or heart palpitations
    (fluttering)
  • changes in sleep patterns, appetite, interest in
    sex
  • constipation or diarrhea
  • more susceptible to colds and illnesses
  • easily startled by noises or unexpected touch
    (the fight-or-flight reaction)
  • increased use of alcohol or drugs and/or
    overeating (lack of volume control)

source
12
Post-Traumatic Syndrome
  • Denial
  • or addiction p. 9 (self-mutilation, violence,
    drug)
  • --addicted to their own internal endorphins
    feeling calm only when they are under stress.
  • -- death drive
  • -- alteration in the opioid system (narcotic?).
  • Traumatic Reenactment (repetition compulsion)
    acting out, repeating the action without knowing
    it.
  • Trauma-Bonding (The English Patient the man and
    the woman in Hiroshima mon amour)

Endorphin a chemical naturally released in the
brain to reduce pain, and which in large amounts
can make you feel relaxed and/or energetic.
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