ABSTRACT

Tense Past provides a much needed appraisal and contextualization of the upsurge of interest in questions of memory and trauma evident in multiple personality and post-traumatic stress disorders, child abuse, and commemoration of the Holocaust. Contributors examine the historical origins of memory in psychiatric discourse and show its connection to broader developments in Western science and medicine. They address the new links between trauma and memory, and they explore how memory shapes the way traumatic events are put into narrative form. They also consider the social and political contexts in which sufferers speak and remember.

part I|64 pages

Remembering Trauma, Remaking the Self

chapter 1|21 pages

Telling Stories, Making Selves

Memory and Identity in Multiple Personality Disorder

chapter 2|20 pages

Remembering Trouble

Three Lives, Three Stories

chapter 3|20 pages

Contested Meanings and Controversial Memories

Narratives of Sexual Abuse in Western Newfoundland

part II|81 pages

The Medicalization of Memory

chapter 6|43 pages

Traumatic Cures

Shell Shock, Janet, and the Question of Memory

part III|108 pages

Culture As Memorial Practice

chapter |21 pages

Trauma, Time, Illness, and Culture

An Anthropological Approach to Traumatic Memory

chapter 8|26 pages

Landscapes of Memory

Trauma, Narrative, and Dissociation

chapter 9|16 pages

Missions to the Past

Poland in Contemporary Jewish Thought and Deed

chapter 10|19 pages

Internal and External Memory

Different Ways of Being in History

chapter 11|20 pages

The Past Imperfect

Remembering As Moral Practice