Literature DB >> 15470947

The work of indebtedness: the traumatic present of late capitalist Chile.

Clara Han1.   

Abstract

In political and biomedical discourses, "posttraumatic stress disorder" has become a set of organizing concepts for trauma and traumatic memory. These concepts, however, are predicated on an understanding of traumatic memory as a discrete etiological event that, when reexperienced, is productive of symptoms. In this essay, I explore alternative framings of trauma that arise out of historical changes in political economic language and from experiences of monetary, historical, and affective indebtedness in Santiago, Chile. This ethnographic research is based in an historically leftist población (poor urban sector) and follows the interwoven narratives of a formerly exiled communist militant and her adopted daughter. Throughout this essay, I describe the mother's attempts to inhabit an untimely language of socialist politics and the daughter's rejection of both this language and her mother's pain. I elaborate on how these attempts are products of and productive of monetary and intersubjective indebtedness in a neoliberal present. By describing the differing historical languages inhabited by these subjects, I attempt to evoke an understanding of trauma not as an individual possession or etiological event, but rather as a referential dissonance in the neoliberal context. This referential dissonance emerges from the gap between the historical languages that inform subjectivities. I explore how such a gap can create contexts in which the everyday itself both threatens the disarticulation of the subject and produces injurious affective relationships. In this way, I interrogate relationships between trauma, recovery, and the everyday.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15470947     DOI: 10.1023/b:medi.0000034409.70790.66

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  3 in total

1.  Struggling with imaginaries of trauma and trust: the refugee experience in Switzerland.

Authors:  Corina Salis Gross
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06

2.  THE CANON--3: The harmony of illusions: inventing post-traumatic stress disorder, by Allan Young.

Authors:  Jean N Scandlyn
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2012-04

3.  The political economy of 'trauma' in Haiti in the democratic era of insecurity.

Authors:  Erica Caple James
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06
  3 in total
  4 in total

1.  From posttrauma intervention to immunization of the social body: pragmatics and politics of a resilience program in Israel's periphery.

Authors:  Keren Friedman-Peleg; Yehuda C Goodman
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-09

2.  Between Jewish settlers and Palestinian citizens of Israel: negotiating ethno-national power relations through the discourse of PTSD.

Authors:  Keren Friedman-Peleg
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2014-12

3.  Trauma, workfare and the social contingency of precarity and its sufferings: the story of Marius, a street-youth.

Authors:  Mark S Dolson
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2015-03

4.  On the Social Constructionist Approach to Traumatized Selves in Post-disaster Settings: State-Induced Violence in Nandigram, India.

Authors:  Kumar Ravi Priya
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2015-09
  4 in total

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