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Kulturális trauma: adott vagy teremtett?
Author(s) -
Gábor Gyáni
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
studia litteraria
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2063-1049
pISSN - 0562-2867
DOI - 10.37415/studia/2011/50/3985
Subject(s) - freudian slip , doctrine , consciousness , psychoanalysis , politics , event (particle physics) , state (computer science) , psychological trauma , epistemology , psychology , history , sociology , philosophy , law , political science , psychotherapist , physics , algorithm , quantum mechanics , computer science
Trauma, the key experience of twentieth-century Europe, has recently gained global importance. That is the reason behind the growing number of trauma theories. An important notion of Freudian trauma theory (Cathy Caruth) is that the traumatic event does not inevitably coincides with the emergence of traumatic state of mind (or consciousness). The concept of sociological trauma, coined by Jeffrey C. Alexander, suggests that it is the community that eventually decides which past event can be considered a traumatic experience. This is how traumatic experience is becoming today a decisive political doctrine that designates directly our moral and political attitude towards the events in the world.

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