Description

Book Synopsis
How do we approach other people’s pain? This question is of crucial importance to the humanities, particularly literary and cultural studies, whenever they address narratives of terror and genocide, injustice and oppression, violence and trauma. Talking about other people’s pain inevitably draws attention to the ethical dimension involved in acknowledging stories and histories of violence while avoiding an appropriation – by the reading public, literary critics or cultural historians alike – of the traumatic experiences themselves. The question of how to do justice to the other’s pain calls for an academic response that reflects as much on its own status as ethical agent as on literary expression and philosophical accounts or theoretical descriptions. This volume therefore explores the theoretical framework of trauma studies and its place within academic discourse and society, and examines from a multidisciplinary perspective the possibilities and limitations of trauma as an analytical category. A variety of case studies on individual and collective traumatic experiences as portrayed in literature and art highlight the ethical implications involved in the production, reception and analysis of other people’s pain.

Table of Contents
Contents: Martin Modlinger/Philipp Sonntag: Introduction: Other People’s Pain - Narratives of Trauma and the Question of Ethics – Colin Davis: Trauma and Ethics: Telling the Other’s Story – Aleida Assmann: From Collective Violence to a Common Future: Four Models for Dealing with a Traumatic Past – Susannah Radstone: Trauma Studies: Contexts, Politics, Ethics – María Jesús Martínez-Alfaro: Narrating the Holocaust and its Legacy: The Complexities of Identity, Trauma and Representation in Art Spiegelman’s Maus – Bettina Bannasch: Zero - A Gaping Mouth: The Discourse of the Camps in Herta Müller’s Atemschaukel between Literary Theory and Political Philosophy – Hubert Zapf: Trauma, Narrative and Ethics in Recent American Fiction – Rudolf Freiburg: Trauma as Normalcy: Pain in Philip Roth’s The Human Stain – Susana Onega: Trauma, Shame and Ethical Responsibility for the Death of the Other in J. M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians.

Other People’s Pain: Narratives of Trauma and the

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    A Paperback / softback by Christian Emden, David Robin Midgley, Martin Modlinger

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 12/05/2011
      ISBN13: 9783034302609, 978-3034302609
      ISBN10: 3034302606

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      How do we approach other people’s pain? This question is of crucial importance to the humanities, particularly literary and cultural studies, whenever they address narratives of terror and genocide, injustice and oppression, violence and trauma. Talking about other people’s pain inevitably draws attention to the ethical dimension involved in acknowledging stories and histories of violence while avoiding an appropriation – by the reading public, literary critics or cultural historians alike – of the traumatic experiences themselves. The question of how to do justice to the other’s pain calls for an academic response that reflects as much on its own status as ethical agent as on literary expression and philosophical accounts or theoretical descriptions. This volume therefore explores the theoretical framework of trauma studies and its place within academic discourse and society, and examines from a multidisciplinary perspective the possibilities and limitations of trauma as an analytical category. A variety of case studies on individual and collective traumatic experiences as portrayed in literature and art highlight the ethical implications involved in the production, reception and analysis of other people’s pain.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Martin Modlinger/Philipp Sonntag: Introduction: Other People’s Pain - Narratives of Trauma and the Question of Ethics – Colin Davis: Trauma and Ethics: Telling the Other’s Story – Aleida Assmann: From Collective Violence to a Common Future: Four Models for Dealing with a Traumatic Past – Susannah Radstone: Trauma Studies: Contexts, Politics, Ethics – María Jesús Martínez-Alfaro: Narrating the Holocaust and its Legacy: The Complexities of Identity, Trauma and Representation in Art Spiegelman’s Maus – Bettina Bannasch: Zero - A Gaping Mouth: The Discourse of the Camps in Herta Müller’s Atemschaukel between Literary Theory and Political Philosophy – Hubert Zapf: Trauma, Narrative and Ethics in Recent American Fiction – Rudolf Freiburg: Trauma as Normalcy: Pain in Philip Roth’s The Human Stain – Susana Onega: Trauma, Shame and Ethical Responsibility for the Death of the Other in J. M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians.

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