ABSTRACT

When soldiers at Fort Carson were charged with a series of 14 murders, PTSD and other "invisible wounds of war" were thrown into the national spotlight. With these events as their starting point, Jean Scandlyn and Sarah Hautzinger argue for a new approach to combat stress and trauma, seeing them not just as individual medical pathologies but as fundamentally collective cultural phenomena. Their deep ethnographic research, including unusual access to affected soldiers at Fort Carson, also engaged an extended labyrinth of friends, family, communities, military culture, social services, bureaucracies, the media, and many other layers of society. Through this profound and moving book, they insist that invisible combat injuries are a social challenge demanding collective reconciliation with the post-9/11 wars.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Sharing War: A View from Home

part I|80 pages

Soldiers Coming Home

chapter 1|24 pages

“PTSD = Pulling the Stigma Down”

chapter Two|12 pages

“It’s Just a Job”

chapter 3|23 pages

Lethal Warriors at Home

part II|76 pages

War’s Labyrinth at Home

part III|70 pages

Dialog

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

War and Collective Reckoning