ABSTRACT

This book explores the psychological trauma affecting soldiers and civilians who have encountered the violence of war or terrorism, arguing that the enigmas surrounding war trauma are rooted in culture, collective memory and social norms. Focusing primarily on a large-scale sociological study in Israel, chapters detail the ideological, political, historical and economic factors that shape the multifaceted connection between individual and collective trauma, probing the exterior layers of Israeli society and exposing the complex relationship between society and emotionally scarred individuals everywhere.

Divided into three main parts, particular attention is paid to the treatment of soldiers and civilians, and the tension between the medical and societal approaches to PTSD, shedding light on the intricate relationships between war trauma and society worldwide. Part 1 looks at traumatized soldiers and the changing attitudes towards CSR and PTSD; Part 2 explores civilian trauma and shock, including the first published research on the implications of war trauma in Israeli Arab society; and Part 3 analyses the deficiencies and contradictions in current international definitions and discourses of trauma, and the profound consequences of war trauma in society as a whole.

Psychological War Trauma and Society will be of key value for academics and postgraduate students in the fields of psychology, sociology, history, Jewish studies, military studies, social work, terrorism studies and political science, as well as professionals who work with traumatised individuals, either directly or indirectly, including psychologists, psychotherapists and social workers. The Hebrew edition of the book was the winner of the 2012 AIS (Association for Israel Studies) Shapiro Award for Best Book in Israel Studies.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

War Trauma, Myth, and Longing in Israeli Society

part I|76 pages

“In the Terrible Silence That Followed”

chapter |7 pages

Trapped in the Myth

chapter |8 pages

The Starting Point

chapter |14 pages

The Early Decades

Starting Point to Turning Point

chapter |19 pages

“The Helicopter Isn't Coming” 1

The Wounded and the System

part II|66 pages

The Israeli Home Front

chapter |12 pages

Lower in Rank

Israeli Citizens in War and Terror

chapter |12 pages

From Denial to Recognition

part III|26 pages

The Shadow of War in People's Hearts

chapter |11 pages

The “Invention” of Trauma

Debate and Conceptualization

chapter |13 pages

From Stone to Lake and Back

The Individual and Collective Circles of Trauma