ABSTRACT

This collection analyses the future of ‘trauma theory’, a major theoretical discourse in contemporary criticism and theory. The chapters advance the current state of the field by exploring new areas, asking new questions and making new connections.

Part one, History and Culture, begins by developing trauma theory in its more familiar post-deconstructive mode and explores how these insights might still be productive. It goes on, via a critique of existing positions, to relocate trauma theory in a postcolonial and globalized world, theoretically, aesthetically and materially, and focuses on non-Western accounts and understandings of trauma, memory and suffering. Part two, Politics and Subjectivity, turns explicitly to politics and subjectivity, focussing on the state and the various forms of subjection to which it gives rise, and on human rights, biopolitics and community.

Each chapter, in different ways, advocates a movement beyond the sort of texts and concepts that are the usual focus for trauma criticism and moves this dynamic network of ideas forward.

With contributions from an international selection of leading critics and thinkers from the US and Europe, this volume will be a key critical intervention in one of the most important areas in contemporary literary criticism and theory.

part |101 pages

History and culture

chapter |21 pages

Fascism and the Sacred

Sites of inquiry after (or along with) trauma

chapter |17 pages

Beyond Eurocentrism

Trauma theory in the global age

chapter |13 pages

Affect, Body, Place

Trauma theory in the world

chapter |14 pages

Trauma Ties

Chiasmus and community in Lebanese civil war literature

chapter |19 pages

Undoing Sovereignty

Towards a theory of critical mourning

part |57 pages

Politics and subjectivity

chapter |13 pages

‘That which You are Denying Us'

Refugees, rights and writing in Arendt

chapter |11 pages

Future Shock

Science fiction and the trauma paradigm