Bringing into focus the ways of how to approach trauma instead of defining the object of research is becoming increasingly important. This also in-dicates that the range of approaches to trauma that informs cultural inquiry is widening, and is moving away from one singular paradigm posited as universal. Trauma scholars have demonstrated, on the one hand, the importance of particular experiences, specific cases, individual features of experiencing, remembering, and narrating trauma. On the other hand, they have pointed out the impact of cultural “scripts” shaped by broader cultural understandings and social and cultural regulations and preferences that shape the possibilities of the representation of traumatic experience. This special issue seeks to recognize and negotiate the individual and collective dimensions of trauma as well as their interwovenness, with a focus on the (post)-Soviet and Eastern European experience. It does so by addressing the generalizing theoretical models as well as the practical, material, and experimental aspects of trauma. Thus, it seeks to disentangle and clarify the links between the collective and the individual, the theoretical and the practical, and finally, the universal and the specific, the global and the local.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7-28
Number of pages22
JournalFolklore (Estonia)
Volume83
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Aug 2021

    Research areas

  • Collective trauma, Cultural trauma, Eastern Europe, Individual trauma, Post-Soviet, Trauma studies, individual trauma, trauma studies, post-Soviet, MEMORY, cultural trauma, HOLOCAUST, collective trauma, TRAUMA

    Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies
  • Anthropology

ID: 86576662