Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Trauma and the victim economy. / Troitskiy, Sergey.
In: Folklore (Estonia), Vol. 83, 01.08.2021, p. 29-46.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Trauma and the victim economy
AU - Troitskiy, Sergey
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021, FB and Media Group of Estonian Literary Museum. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/8/1
Y1 - 2021/8/1
N2 - The history of the twentieth century is filled with examples of mass murder and destruction of entire nations. Survivors of those traumatic events have horrific memories, which cannot be compared to anything that may happen in the course of an ordinary quiet life. However, coping strategies for overcoming the consequences of such traumatic experience were also developed in the twentieth century. It was made possible by conceptualisation of trauma as a cultural and psychological phenomenon at the level of theory and practice in various sciences. Introduction of this concept into the flesh and blood of modern (popular) culture, or rather its inclusion in the fabric of everyday cultural practices, transformed the concept of trauma into a mechanism of culture. Trauma developed into a concept, as we know it, because it functioned as one of the cultural clichés of the era, according to which economics, politics, science, literature, etc., are built. Of course, mass exterminations of people took place even before the twentieth century; however, they were not interpreted as historical traumas as we interpret them now because, firstly, a sense of distance from the event was not developed, which is characteristic of traumatic interpretation, and, secondly, the narratives cor-responded to other cultural clichés (typical of those epochs), which served as the basis for political mechanics, economic processes, etc. This article identifies the main features characterising the functioning of trauma as a cultural mechanism. This objective is achieved by appealing to political economy and Baudrillard’s and Derrida’s critique of the victim order. In this study the term “loss” is used as an umbrella term for various traumatic constructs, such as the victim and the trauma itself. They are characterised as objects of a credit relationship between subjects (both individual and collective), according to which the victim (trauma) construct could be described as a debt obligation that must be fulfilled by pay-ing off a symbolic debt. The study identifies all the acting forces (parties) in the trauma construct, which give form to this construct. The author draws attention to the spatial (topographical) accent of the traumatic narrative, as well as to the necessity of toponymic localisation of the active forces in space.
AB - The history of the twentieth century is filled with examples of mass murder and destruction of entire nations. Survivors of those traumatic events have horrific memories, which cannot be compared to anything that may happen in the course of an ordinary quiet life. However, coping strategies for overcoming the consequences of such traumatic experience were also developed in the twentieth century. It was made possible by conceptualisation of trauma as a cultural and psychological phenomenon at the level of theory and practice in various sciences. Introduction of this concept into the flesh and blood of modern (popular) culture, or rather its inclusion in the fabric of everyday cultural practices, transformed the concept of trauma into a mechanism of culture. Trauma developed into a concept, as we know it, because it functioned as one of the cultural clichés of the era, according to which economics, politics, science, literature, etc., are built. Of course, mass exterminations of people took place even before the twentieth century; however, they were not interpreted as historical traumas as we interpret them now because, firstly, a sense of distance from the event was not developed, which is characteristic of traumatic interpretation, and, secondly, the narratives cor-responded to other cultural clichés (typical of those epochs), which served as the basis for political mechanics, economic processes, etc. This article identifies the main features characterising the functioning of trauma as a cultural mechanism. This objective is achieved by appealing to political economy and Baudrillard’s and Derrida’s critique of the victim order. In this study the term “loss” is used as an umbrella term for various traumatic constructs, such as the victim and the trauma itself. They are characterised as objects of a credit relationship between subjects (both individual and collective), according to which the victim (trauma) construct could be described as a debt obligation that must be fulfilled by pay-ing off a symbolic debt. The study identifies all the acting forces (parties) in the trauma construct, which give form to this construct. The author draws attention to the spatial (topographical) accent of the traumatic narrative, as well as to the necessity of toponymic localisation of the active forces in space.
KW - Construct
KW - Cultural memory
KW - Forgiveness
KW - Jacques Derrida
KW - Jean Baudrillard
KW - Localisation
KW - Political economy
KW - Referee
KW - Sacrifice
KW - Third party
KW - Topography
KW - Tormentor
KW - Trauma
KW - Victim
KW - Victim economy
KW - Victim order
KW - SILENCE
KW - construct
KW - referee
KW - victim order
KW - MEMORY
KW - victim
KW - third party
KW - trauma
KW - forgiveness
KW - localisation
KW - topography
KW - political economy
KW - sacrifice
KW - victim economy
KW - cultural memory
KW - tormentor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85114266519&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7592/FEJF2021.83.troitskiy
DO - 10.7592/FEJF2021.83.troitskiy
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85114266519
VL - 83
SP - 29
EP - 46
JO - Folklore (Estonia)
JF - Folklore (Estonia)
SN - 1406-0957
ER -
ID: 86576608