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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Intro Introduction: Languages of Trauma 1
-
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 29
- 2 Religious Language in German Soldiers’ Narratives of Traumatic Violence, 1914–1918 46
- 3 Languages of the Wound: Finnish Soldiers’ Bodies as Sites of Shock during the Second World War 70
- 4 Efim Segal, Shell-Shocked Sergeant: Red Army Veterans and the Expression and Representation of Trauma Memories 97
- 5 The Falling Man: Resisting and Resistant Visual Media in Art Spiegelman’s In the Shadow of No Towers (2004) 120
-
PART TWO. Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts
- 6 Performing Songs and Staging Theatre Performances: Working through the Trauma of the 1965/66 Indonesian Mass Killings 141
- 7 Some Things Are Difficult to Say, Re-membered 160
- 8 Performing Memory in an Interdependent Body 183
- 9 Memory and Trauma: Two Contemporary Art Projects 197
-
PART THREE. Normalizations of Trauma
- 10 Between Social Criticism and Epistemological Critique: Critical Theory and the Normalization of Trauma 213
- 11 The New Normal: Trauma as Successfully Failed Communication in Nurse Betty (2000) 239
- 12 The Exploitation of Trauma: (Mis-)Representations of Rape Victims in the War Film 265
-
PART FOUR. Representations in Film
- 13 Translating Individual and Collective Trauma through Horror: The Case of George A. Romero’s Martin (1978) 293
- 14 Aesthetic Displays of Perpetrators in The Act of Killing (2012): Post-atrocity Perpetrator Symptoms and Re-enactments of Violence 310
- 15 Perpetrator Trauma and Current American War Cinema 360
- Coda: Climate Trauma Reconsidered 384
- Contributors 397
- Index 403
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Intro Introduction: Languages of Trauma 1
-
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 29
- 2 Religious Language in German Soldiers’ Narratives of Traumatic Violence, 1914–1918 46
- 3 Languages of the Wound: Finnish Soldiers’ Bodies as Sites of Shock during the Second World War 70
- 4 Efim Segal, Shell-Shocked Sergeant: Red Army Veterans and the Expression and Representation of Trauma Memories 97
- 5 The Falling Man: Resisting and Resistant Visual Media in Art Spiegelman’s In the Shadow of No Towers (2004) 120
-
PART TWO. Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts
- 6 Performing Songs and Staging Theatre Performances: Working through the Trauma of the 1965/66 Indonesian Mass Killings 141
- 7 Some Things Are Difficult to Say, Re-membered 160
- 8 Performing Memory in an Interdependent Body 183
- 9 Memory and Trauma: Two Contemporary Art Projects 197
-
PART THREE. Normalizations of Trauma
- 10 Between Social Criticism and Epistemological Critique: Critical Theory and the Normalization of Trauma 213
- 11 The New Normal: Trauma as Successfully Failed Communication in Nurse Betty (2000) 239
- 12 The Exploitation of Trauma: (Mis-)Representations of Rape Victims in the War Film 265
-
PART FOUR. Representations in Film
- 13 Translating Individual and Collective Trauma through Horror: The Case of George A. Romero’s Martin (1978) 293
- 14 Aesthetic Displays of Perpetrators in The Act of Killing (2012): Post-atrocity Perpetrator Symptoms and Re-enactments of Violence 310
- 15 Perpetrator Trauma and Current American War Cinema 360
- Coda: Climate Trauma Reconsidered 384
- Contributors 397
- Index 403