Results for 'Emotional Trauma'

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  1.  12
    Blues and Emotional Trauma.Robert D. Stolorow & Benjamin A. Stolorow - 2011-12-09 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather (eds.), Blues–Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 121–130.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Emotional Trauma The Therapeutic Power of the Blues Three ‘Clinical’ Illustrations ‐ The Role of Lyrics Musical Characteristics of the Blues Concluding Remarks Notes.
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  2.  47
    Emotional trauma and childhood amnesia.R. Joseph - 2003 - Consciousness and Emotion 4 (2):151-179.
    It has been reported that, on average, most adults recall first memories formed around age 3.5. In general, most first memories are positive. However, whether these first memories tend to be visual or verbal and whether the period for childhood amnesia (CA) is greater for visual or verbal or for positive versus negative memories has not been determined. Because negative, stressful experiences disrupt memory and can injure memory centers such as the hippocampus and amygdala, and since adults who were traumatized (...)
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  3.  50
    Blues and Emotional Trauma.Robert D. Stolorow & Benjamin A. Stolorow - 2011 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather (eds.), Blues - Philosophy for Everyone: Thinking Deep About Feeling Low. Wiley-Blackwell.
    The process of bringing the visceral, bodily aspect of emotional experience into language plays a vital role in the working through of painful emotional states. Such visceral-linguistic unities are achieved in a dialogue of emotional understanding, and it is in such dialogue that experiences of emotional trauma can be held and transformed into endurable and namable painful feelings. The blues is a wonderful example of such dialogue. In the unifying experience of the blues, songwriter, performers, (...)
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  4.  41
    A Phenomenological-Contextual, Existential, and Ethical Perspective on Emotional Trauma.Robert D. Stolorow - 2015 - Psychoanalytic Review 102 (1):123-138.
    After a brief overview of the author's phenomenological-contextualist psychoanalytic perspective, the paper traces the evolution of the author’s conception of emotional trauma over the course of three decades, as it developed in concert with his efforts to grasp his own traumatized states and his studies of existential philosophy. The author illuminates two of trauma’s essential features: (1) its context-embeddedness—painful or frightening affect becomes traumatic when it cannot find a context of emotional understanding in which it can (...)
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  5. A Phenomenology of Emotional Trauma: Around and About the Things Themselves. [REVIEW]Gretchen Gusich - 2012 - Human Studies 35 (4):505-518.
    This paper seeks to provide a noetic analysis of emotional trauma. It highlights three essential features of trauma, as well as one non-essential feature, and attempts to make sense of them phenomenologically. The first essential feature of trauma that the paper considers is the disbelief that pervades traumatic experience. When traumatized, we cannot believe that the traumatic event has taken place. This is because we will, not for the event not to have happened—we cannot will something (...)
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  6.  18
    Psychopathology arises from intertemporal bargaining as well as from emotional trauma.George Ainslie - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38.
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  7. Emotional Disturbance, Trauma, and Authenticity: A Phenomenological-Contextualist Psychoanalytic Perspective.Robert D. Stolorow - 2018 - In Kevin Aho (ed.), Existential Medicine: Essays on Health and Illness. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 17-25.
    The psychiatric diagnostic system, as exemplified by the DSM, is a pseudo-scientific framework for diagnosing sick Cartesian isolated minds. As such, it completely overlooks the exquisite context sensitivity and radical context dependence of human emotional life and of all forms of emotional disturbance. In Descartes’s vision, the mind is a “thinking thing,” ontologically decontextualized, fundamentally separated from its world. Heidegger’s existential phenomenology mended this Cartesian subject-object split, unveiling our Being as always already contextualized, a Being-in-the-world. Here I offer (...)
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  8.  14
    Emotional Reconciliation: Reconstituting Identity and Community after Trauma.Roland Bleiker & Emma Hutchison - 2008 - European Journal of Social Theory 11 (3):385-403.
    This article examines the public significance of emotions, most specifically their role in constituting identity and community in the wake of political violence and trauma. It offers a conceptual engagement with processes of healing and reconciliation, showing that emotions are central to how societies experience and work through the legacy of catastrophe. In many instances, political actors deal with the legacy of trauma in restorative ways, by re-imposing the order that has been violated. Emotions can in this way (...)
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  9. If it weren't for bad luck, I wouldn't have no luck at all : blues and the human condition. Why can't we be satisfied? : blues is knowin' how to cope / Brian Domino ; Doubt and the human condition : nobody loves me but my momma- and she might be jivin' too / Jesse R. Steinberg ; Blues and emotional trauma : blues as musical therapy / Robert D. Stolorow and Benjamin A. Stolorow ; Suffering, spirituality, and sensuality : religion and the blues / Joseph J. Lynch ; Worrying the line : blues as story, song, and prayer. [REVIEW]Kimberly Connor - 2011 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather (eds.), Blues - Philosophy for Everyone: Thinking Deep About Feeling Low. Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  10.  3
    Economic crisis and trauma journalism: Assessing the emotional toll of reporting in crisis-ridden countries.Eleana Pandia, Theodora A. Maniou & Lambrini Papadopoulou - 2022 - Communications 47 (3):350-374.
    This article discusses the relationship between the post-2008 global economic crisis and trauma journalism through a quantitative study of reporters covering austerity’s everyday manifestations and examines the effects on the media professionals involved. The findings indicate that journalists who cover economic crisis-related incidents suffer specific symptoms of trauma. As such, the study re-conceptualizes the economic crisis as primarily affective for media workers, it establishes a direct correlation between the economic crisis and emotional trauma, and provides an (...)
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  11.  5
    Secondary Trauma: Emotional Safety in Sensitive Research.Emma Williamson, Alison Gregory, Hilary Abrahams, Nadia Aghtaie, Sarah-Jane Walker & Marianne Hester - 2020 - Journal of Academic Ethics 18 (1):55-70.
  12. Reasoning, trauma, and PTSD : insights into the emotion-cognition interaction.Isabelle Blanchette & Sara-Valérie Giroux - 2021 - In Valentina Cardella & Amelia Gangemi (eds.), Psychopathology and Philosophy of Mind: What Mental Disorders Can Tell Us About Our Minds. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  13.  14
    Emotions Under Trauma.Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Emotion 3 (1):31-38.
    While emotions can play positive, contributory roles in our cognition and our lives, they frequently have the opposite effect. Michael Brady’s otherwise excellent introduction to the topic of emotion is unbalanced because he does not attend to harms emotions cause. The basic problem is that emotions have a normative aspect: they can be justified or unjustified and Brady does not attend to this. An example of this is Brady’s discussion of curiosity as the emotional motivation for knowledge. More importantly, (...)
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  14.  34
    Emotional Stroop interference in trauma-exposed individuals: A contrast between two accounts.Serge Caparos & Isabelle Blanchette - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 28:104-112.
  15.  4
    Psychological trauma and emotional upheaval as revealed in academic writing: The case of COVID-19.David M. Markowitz - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (1):9-22.
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  16. Emotion, Memory, and Trauma.Glenn W. Most - 2009 - In Richard Thomas Eldridge (ed.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and literature. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  17.  28
    Low emotional response to traumatic footage is associated with an absence of analogue flashbacks: An individual participant data meta-analysis of 16 trauma film paradigm experiments.Ian A. Clark, Clare E. Mackay & Emily A. Holmes - 2015 - Cognition and Emotion 29 (4):702-713.
  18.  88
    Trauma and Human Existence: Autobiographical, Psychoanalytic, and Philosophical Reflections.Robert D. Stolorow - 2007 - Routledge.
    Trauma and Human Existence effectively interweaves two themes central to emotional trauma--the first pertains to the contextuality of emotional life in general, and of the experience of emotional trauma in particular, and the second pertains to the recognition that the possibility of emotional trauma is built into the basic constitution of human existence. This volume traces how both themes interconnect, largely as they crystallize in the author’s personal experience of traumatic loss. As (...)
  19.  5
    Agency via Life Satisfaction as a Protective Factor From Cumulative Trauma and Emotional Distress Among Bedouin Children in Palestine.Guido Veronese, Alessandro Pepe, Federica Cavazzoni, Hania Obaid & Jesus Perez - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:436125.
    Adopting an ecological perspective on children’s functioning and psychological well-being, we investigated the association between agency and life satisfaction, and its bearing on trauma symptoms and negative emotions in a group of Bedouin children living in the occupied Palestinian territories. Specifically, we hypothesized that the more children were agentic, the more they would be satisfied with their lives; and that greater life satisfaction would be associated with reduced trauma symptoms. A sample of 286 Bedouin children attending primary schools (...)
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  20. Social Sharing of Emotions and Communal Appraisal as Mediators Between the Intensity of Trauma and Social Well-Being in People Affected by the 27F, 2010 Earthquake in the Biobío Region, Chile. [REVIEW]Carlos Reyes-Valenzuela, Loreto Villagrán, Carolina Alzugaray, Félix Cova & Jaime Méndez - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The psychosocial impacts of natural disasters are associated with the triggering of negative and positive responses in the affected population; also, such effects are expressed in an individual and collective sphere. This can be seen in several reactions and behaviors that can vary from the development of individual disorders to impacts on interpersonal relationships, cohesion, communication, and participation of the affected communities, among others. The present work addressed the psychosocial impacts of the consequences of natural disasters considering individual effects via (...)
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  21.  8
    The Effects of a Reading-Based Intervention on Emotion Processing in Children Who Have Suffered Early Adversity and War Related Trauma.Julia E. Michalek, Matteo Lisi, Deema Awad, Kristin Hadfield, Isabelle Mareschal & Rana Dajani - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Early adversity and trauma can have profound effects on children’s affective development and mental health outcomes. Interventions that improve mental health and socioemotional development are essential to mitigate these effects. We conducted a pilot study examining whether a reading-based program improves emotion recognition and mental health through socialization in Syrian refugee and Jordanian non-refugee children aged 7–12 years old living in Jordan. To measure emotion recognition, children classified the expression in faces morphed between two emotions, while mental health was (...)
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  22. Trauma and human existence : the mutual enrichment of Heidegger's existential analytic and a psychoanalytic understanding of trauma.Robert D. Stolorow - 2009 - In Roger Frie & Donna M. Orange (eds.), Beyond Postmodernism: New Dimensions in Theory and Practice. Routledge. pp. 143-161.
    In this article I chronicle the emergence of two interrelated themes that crystallized in my investigations of emotional trauma during the more than 16 years that followed my own experience of traumatic loss. One pertains to the context-embeddedness of emotional trauma and the other to the claim that the possibility of emotional trauma is built into our existential constitution. I find a reconciliation and synthesis of these two themes—trauma’s contextuality and its existentiality—in the (...)
     
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  23.  36
    World, Affectivity, Trauma: Heidegger and Post-Cartesian Psychoanalysis.Robert D. Stolorow - 2011 - Routledge.
    Stolorow and his collaborators' post-Cartesian psychoanalytic perspective – intersubjective-systems theory – is a phenomenological contextualism that illuminates worlds of emotional experience as they take form within relational contexts. After outlining the evolution and basic ideas of this framework, Stolorow shows both how post-Cartesian psychoanalysis finds enrichment and philosophical support in Heidegger's analysis of human existence, and how Heidegger's existential philosophy, in turn, can be enriched and expanded by an encounter with post-Cartesian psychoanalysis. In doing so, he creates an important (...)
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  24.  74
    Trauma and Phenomenology.Natalie Depraz - 2018 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 2 (2):53-74.
    The phenomenology of trauma is a historical, epistemological, and methodic inquiry that wishes to test the validity of an already settled dynamic model of surprise as shock-rupture based on its correlated inner structures of attention and emotion. Thanks to an integrative approach, crossing phenomenological subjective experiences and empirical data, we hope to renew the understanding of the blank lived experience of trauma and the passive preconscious dynamics of traumatism, as well as to generate possible therapeutic effects.
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  25.  8
    The Artistic Transformation of Trauma, Loss, and Adversity in the Blues.Alan M. Steinberg, Robert S. Pynoos & Robert Abramovitz - 2011-12-09 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather (eds.), Blues–Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 49–65.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Roots of the Blues in Trauma, Loss, and Adversity Transforming Trauma, Loss, and Adversity The Blues as Living Oral History Transformation through Music Emotional Regulation in the Blues The Creative Reverberation of Traumatic Loss The Blues as a Living, Evolving Legacy Notes.
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  26.  13
    Network Approach to Understanding Emotion Dynamics in Relation to Childhood Trauma and Genetic Liability to Psychopathology: Replication of a Prospective Experience Sampling Analysis.Laila Hasmi, Marjan Drukker, Sinan Guloksuz, Claudia Menne-Lothmann, Jeroen Decoster, Ruud van Winkel, Dina Collip, Philippe Delespaul, Marc De Hert, Catherine Derom, Evert Thiery, Nele Jacobs, Bart P. F. Rutten, Marieke Wichers & Jim van Os - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  27.  12
    Observing systemic conflict: The emotional affect on pastors in the Netherdutch Reformed Church of Africa.Frederick J. Labuschagne & Petrus L. Steenkamp - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (1):9.
    The Netherdutch Reformed Church of Africa (NRCA) did not escape this existential crisis of conflict. It manifests in various ways resulting in the bleeding of congregations, the exodus of congregants and the closure of congregations, as many congregants that declare themselves as members of the Church do not attend worship services or participate in the Holy Communion and exit the church. The study was conducted in the NRCA to determine the effect and response formation of observed conflict by ministers in (...)
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  28.  78
    Ten-fifty P. I.: Emotion and the photographer's role.Garry Bryant - 1987 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 2 (2):32 – 39.
    The emotional traumas news photographers experience are not often discussed outside the newsroom. Here professional newspaper photographer Garry Bryant offers a personal testimonial on the effects his job has had on him, as well as on the public. The excitement and drama of shooting spot news at accidents and disasters have caused a certain dulling of the senses, but on the other hand have heightened Bryant's awareness of the importance of his work. A variety of Bryant's favorite photos illustrate (...)
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  29.  29
    Trauma and Historical Witnessing: Hope for Malabou's New Wounded.Jennifer O. Gammage - 2016 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (3):404-413.
    Catherine Malabou in The New Wounded develops a general theory of trauma by extending her account of destructive plasticity to the realm of post-traumatic stress disorder. “The new wounded,” she claims, “all come together around a single fact: the radical rupture that trauma introduces in the psyche”. This rupture is demonstrated by an affective fissure, which renders traumatized persons emotionally and socially mute, and a temporal fissure, which punctures subjects’ relationships to their pasts, thus tearing them from any (...)
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  30.  34
    Trauma Site Museums and Politics of Memory.Patrizia Violi - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (1):36-75.
    This article aims to analyse one specific type of memorial site that furnishes an indexical link to past traumatic events which took place in precisely these places. Such memorials will be defined here as trauma sites. It will be shown how the semiotic trait of indexicality produces unique meaning effects, forcing a reframing of the issue of representation, with all its aesthetic and ethical dimensions. In contrast to other forms of memorial site, trauma sites exist factually as material (...)
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  31. The sky is crying : emotion, upheaval, and the blues. The artistic transformation of trauma, loss, and adversity in the blues / Alan M. Steinberg, Robert S. Pynoos, and Robert Abramovitz ; Sadness as beauty : why it feels so good to feel so blue / David C. Drake ; Anguished art : coming through the dark to the light the hard way / Ben Flanagan and Owen Flanagan ; Blues and catharsis. [REVIEW]Roopen Majithia - 2011 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather (eds.), Blues - Philosophy for Everyone: Thinking Deep About Feeling Low. Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  32.  11
    Visual Representations of Physical Trauma: A Medical Pedagogy.Caroline Wellbery - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (2):225-233.
    Incorporating a discussion of physical and emotional trauma in medical education can help prepare students for their encounters with trauma survivors in clinical practice. A pedagogical approach begins with an inquiry into the purpose of historical or current representations of torture. Justifications include rationalizing state-sponsored torture, providing an outlet for critique and protest, and organizing representations of the enemy. Discussions of torture must further address the emotional and symbolic effects of clinical work with torture survivors on (...)
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  33. A Kantian Account of Trauma.Helga Varden - 2022 - Kantian Review (4):1-19.
    In our societies today, the prevalence of serious, untreated trauma means that we cannot reliably expect to receive or give unconditional love, understood as love which functions within a normative framework to protect each and all of us as having dignity. Serious, untreated trauma makes unconditional love, so understood, unreliable because each time the pattern of the psychological damage (trauma) is triggered in the traumatized person, in the wrongdoers, or in the bystanders, their behaviour easily becomes self- (...)
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  34.  10
    Nature Trauma: Ecology and the Returning Soldier in First World War English and Scottish Fiction, 1918–1932.Samantha Walton - 2021 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (2):213-223.
    Nature has been widely represented in literature and culture as healing, redemptive, unspoilt, and restorative. In the aftermath of the First World War, writers grappled with long cultural associations between nature and healing. Having survived a conflict in which relations between people, and the living environment had been catastrophically ruptured, writers asked: could rural and wild places offer meaningful sites of solace and recovery for traumatised soldiers? In Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925), Rebecca West’s The Return of the Soldier (1918), (...)
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  35.  15
    Nature Trauma: Ecology and the Returning Soldier in First World War English and Scottish Fiction, 1918–1932.Samantha Walton - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (2):213-223.
    Nature has been widely represented in literature and culture as healing, redemptive, unspoilt, and restorative. In the aftermath of the First World War, writers grappled with long cultural associations between nature and healing. Having survived a conflict in which relations between people, and the living environment had been catastrophically ruptured, writers asked: could rural and wild places offer meaningful sites of solace and recovery for traumatised soldiers? In Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, Rebecca West’s The Return of the Soldier, Nan Shepherd’s (...)
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  36.  31
    No more than discomfort: the trauma film paradigm meets definitions of minimal-risk research.Melanie K. T. Takarangi, Reginald D. V. Nixon & Nadine S. J. Stirling - 2023 - Ethics and Behavior 33 (1):1-17.
    ABSTRACT Despite Institutional Review Board concerns about psychological harm arising from research participation, evidence from trauma-questionnaire research suggests that participation is typically well-tolerated by participants. Yet, it is unclear how participant experiences of in-lab trauma simulations align with IRB ethical guidelines. Thus, we compared reactions to a trauma film paradigm with reactions to a positive film task or cognitive tasks. Overall, relative to other conditions, the trauma film was well-tolerated by participants: they generally reported low-to-moderate negative (...)
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  37. Rethinking affects, narration, fantasy, and realism. Rethinking affects, narration, fantasy, and realism. Trauma, pleasure, and emotion in the viewing of titanic: A cognitive approach.Carl Plantinga - 2009 - In Warren Buckland (ed.), Film theory and contemporary Hollywood movies. New York: Routledge.
  38. Rethinking affects, narration, fantasy, and realism. Trauma, pleasure, and emotion in the viewing of Titanic: a cognitive approach.Carl Plantinga - 2009 - In Warren Buckland (ed.), Film theory and contemporary Hollywood movies. New York: Routledge.
  39.  73
    Combat Trauma and the Moral Risks of Memory Manipulating Drugs.Elisa A. Hurley - 2010 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 27 (3):221-245.
    To date, 1.7 million US military service personnel have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. Of those, one in five are suffering from diagnosable combat-stress related psychological injuries including Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). All indications are that the mental health toll of the current conflicts on US troops and the medical systems that care for them will only increase. Against this backdrop, research suggesting that the common class of drugs known as beta-blockers might prevent the onset of PTSD is drawing (...)
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  40.  5
    ‘Making Cuts that Matter’ in Social Work: A Diffractive Experiment with Trauma-informed Practice.Raewyn Tudor - 2023 - Ethics and Social Welfare 17 (4):350-365.
    Recently Feminist New Materialism has emerged as a field that questions the capability of critique to offer substantive change and calls for more affirmative forms of criticality which add to, rather than subtract from, alternate ways of living in the world. This ‘affirmative turn’ is an emerging influence in social work where it is taken up to disrupt human-centred notions of agency and engage with the non-human and more-than-human relations that make up the material-social world. This paper adds to this (...)
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  41.  7
    Kryzys emocjonalny i trauma szansą na rozwój i potęgowanie zdrowia. Wątpliwości i pytania.Dorota Kubacka-Jasiecka - 2016 - Rocznik Filozoficzny Ignatianum 22 (1):51-89.
    This study discusses the issue of emotional crisis and trauma in terms of opportunities to develop and grow. The article seeks to show the complex psychological conditions pertaining to emotional crises, a constructive way of dealing with them, and the possibility of growing and developing thanks to having experienced such a crisis. These issues are usually omitted when describing crises; however, as the author postulates, they constitute a foundation for differentiating — as we surely must do — (...)
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  42.  52
    Westernization as Cultural Trauma: Egyptian Radical Islamist Discourse on Religious Education.Mehmet Ozan Asik & Aykan Erdemir - 2010 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 9 (25):111-132.
    In this article, the relation between the Westernization experience and the radical Islamists reaction in Egypt is examined. It is argued that it is necessary to focus on the historical imagination of Westernization to understand the Egyptian reaction as manifested in Islamist religious educational discourse. The historical imagination appears to be based on a traumatic experience which was triggered by a traumatic event, namely British colonialism. The religious educational discourse in Egypt, an opportune case to observe radical Islamist response to (...)
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  43.  9
    Trauma and Trust: How War Exposure Shapes Social and Institutional Trust Among Refugees.Jonathan Hall & Katharina Werner - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The brutal wars in Iraq, Syria and now Ukraine have caused a massive influx of refugees to Europe. Turkey alone has received more than 4.8 million refugees. An important precondition for their economic and social incorporation is trust: refugees need to trust the citizens as well as the state and the justice system to find their place in the host country. Yet refugees’ propensity to trust may be affected by cultural differences between their home and host countries, their personal conflict (...)
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  44.  23
    Reading, Trauma and Literary Caregiving 1914-1918: Helen Mary Gaskell and the War Library.Sara Haslam - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (3):305-321.
    This article is about the relationship between reading, trauma and responsive literary caregiving in Britain during the First World War. Its analysis of two little-known documents describing the history of the War Library, begun by Helen Mary Gaskell in 1914, exposes a gap in the scholarship of war-time reading; generates a new narrative of "how," "when," and "why" books went to war; and foregrounds gender in its analysis of the historiography. The Library of Congress's T. W. Koch discovered Gaskell's (...)
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  45. Emotions and Identity as Foreign Policy Determinants: Serbian Approach to Relations with Russia.Artem Patalakh - 2018 - Chinese Political Science Review 3 (4):495-528.
    The paper argues that while the Serbian society and political elite are known for treating their country’s accession to the EU in terms of pragmatic utility maximisation, they generally conceive of Serbian relations with Russia, contrariwise, as an identity-laden issue. To prove it, the author analyses Serbia’s behaviour toward Russia along the features of emotion-driven cooperation, found in the literature on identity and emotions in foreign policy. In particular, the paper focuses on Serbians’ especially strong friendliness vis-à-vis Russia, the parallel (...)
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  46. Portkeys, resurrective ideology, and the phenomenology of collective trauma.Robert D. Stolorow - 2010 - In Lester Embree, M. Barber & T. Nenon (eds.), Phenomenology 2010, Vol. 5: Selected Essays From North America. Part 2: Phenomenology Beyond Philosophy. Zeta Books.
    In this essay, I extend my conception of emotional trauma as a shattering of the tranquilizing “absolutisms of everyday life” that shield us from our finitude and our existential vulnerability, to a consideration of collective trauma. Using the collective trauma of 9/11 and its aftermath as my prime example, I illustrate how traumatized people fall prey to “resurrective ideologies” that promise to restore the sheltering illusions that have been lost. I suggest that an alternative to these (...)
     
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  47.  35
    The preparatory set: a novel approach to understanding stress, trauma, and the bodymind therapies.Peter Payne & Mardi A. Crane-Godreau - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9:128767.
    Basic to all motile life is a differential approach/avoid response to perceived features of environment. The stages of response are initial reflexive noticing and orienting to the stimulus, preparation, and execution of response. Preparation involves a coordination of many aspects of the organism: muscle tone, posture, breathing, autonomic functions, motivational/emotional state, attentional orientation and expectations. The organism organizes itself in relation to the challenge. We propose to call this the “preparatory set” (PS). We suggest that the concept of the (...)
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  48.  3
    Trauma Coping Self-Efficacy Mediates Associations Between Adult Attachment and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms.Margaret Morison & Charles C. Benight - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Attachment orientations reflect individuals’ expectations for interpersonal relationships and influence emotion regulation strategies and coping. Previous research has documented that anxious and avoidant attachment orientations have deleterious effects on the trauma recovery process leaving these survivors vulnerable to posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms. However, avoidant attachment may be more complicated. Prior work has also found those high in avoidant attachment but also low in anxious attachment may not experience such vulnerabilities. Further, avoidant attachment individuals often report higher self-efficacy than their (...)
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  49.  5
    Trauma Exposure and Mental Health Prevalence Among First Aiders.Charlotte Rowe, Grazia Ceschi & Abdel Halim Boudoukha - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    IntroductionFirst aiders are commonly exposed to different forms of traumatic event during their duties, such as Chronic Indirect Vicarious Exposure which refers to an indirect exposure to aversive details of the trauma. If the psychopathological impact of TE is well documented, the mental health of first aiders remains neglected. Therefore, our main objectives are to study the link between exposure to traumatic events and psychopathological outcomes and to quantify the rates of mental health disorders among first aiders.MethodOur sample comprised (...)
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  50.  5
    Women’s cinema of trauma: Affect, movement, time.Dijana Jelača - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):335-352.
    This article analyses several notable examples of what the author calls the post-Yugoslav women’s cinema of trauma. These films made by women filmmakers challenge the standard tropes of war, as well as normative approaches to war cinema, by highlighting the intimate affective domain of experience, rather than large-scale narratives and collective emotions. The author focuses on the near-silent short and experimental works of Una Gunjak and Šejla Kamerić, and suggests that they offer insightful formal and narrative ways of rethinking (...)
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