Fr. 123.00

The Art and Science of Trauma and the Autobiographical - Negotiated Truths

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book examines posttraumatic autobiographical projects, elucidating the complex relationship between the 'science of trauma' (and how that idea is understood across various scientific disciplines), and the rhetorical strategies of fragmentation, dissociation, reticence and repetitive troping widely used the representation of traumatic experience. From autobiographical fictions to prison poems, from witness testimony to autography, and from testimonio to war memorials, otherwise dissimilar projects speak of past suffering through a limited and even predictable discourse in search of healing. Drawing on approaches from literary, human rights and cultural studies that highlight relations between trauma, language, meaning and self-hood, and the latest research on the science of trauma from the fields of clinical, behavioral and evolutionary psychology and neuroscience, I read such autobiographical projects not as 'symptoms'but as complex interrogative negotiations of trauma and its aftermath: commemorative and performative narratives navigating aesthetic, biological, cultural, linguistic and emotional pressure and inspiration.

List of contents

1. The Negotiated Truth.- 2. Valuing the Witness: Typologies of Testimony.- 3. Time, Body, Memory: The Staged Moment in Posttraumatic Letters, Journals, Essays and Memoirs.- 4. What it is like: Fiction, Fear and Narratives of Feeling in Posttraumatic Autobiographical Novels.- 5. Speaking In and Speaking Out: Postttraumatic Poetry and Autography.- 6. Annihilation and Integration in Collective Posttraumatic Monuments, Testimonies and Literary Texts.- 7. The Art and Science of Therapeutic Innovation: Hope for PTSD Sufferers Today and Tomorrow.

About the author

Meg Jensen is Associate Professor of English Literature and Creative Writing and Director of the Life Narrative Research Group at Kingston University. In 2014 she co-edited a major collection, Life Narratives and Human Rights, with Margaretta Jolly. She lives in London with her lovely family and two rather stupid cats.

Summary


This book examines posttraumatic autobiographical projects, elucidating the complex relationship between the ‘science of trauma’ (and how that idea is understood across various scientific disciplines), and the rhetorical strategies of fragmentation, dissociation, reticence and repetitive troping widely used the representation of traumatic experience. From autobiographical fictions to prison poems, from witness testimony to autography, and from testimonio to war memorials, otherwise dissimilar projects speak of past suffering through a limited and even predictable discourse in search of healing. Drawing on approaches from literary, human rights and cultural studies that highlight relations between trauma, language, meaning and self-hood, and the latest research on the science of trauma from the fields of clinical, behavioral and evolutionary psychology and neuroscience, I read such autobiographical projects not as ‘symptoms’but as complex interrogative negotiations of trauma and its aftermath: commemorative and performative narratives navigating aesthetic, biological, cultural, linguistic and emotional pressure and inspiration.

Product details

Authors Meg Jensen
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2019
 
EAN 9783030061050
ISBN 978-3-0-3006105-0
No. of pages 299
Dimensions 151 mm x 217 mm x 23 mm
Weight 526 g
Illustrations XIII, 299 p. 1 illus.
Series Palgrave Studies in Life Writing
Palgrave Studies in Life Writing
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies

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