This article explores trauma as a form of ‘social wound’, entrenched in the intersections of local histories and social experiences of violence and displacement. Building on ethnographic accounts of displacement of Iraqis in Lebanon in the wake of the US occupation of Iraq (2003–2011), I ask: what happens when wounds travel across different social worlds and local histories of violence? The account presented tells the story of Hussein, an Iraqi refugee who escaped Iraq during the height of sectarian violence (2006–2007) and claimed asylum status as a torture victim in Lebanon. For displaced people like Hussein, the experiences of violence and uprooting were amplified by the uncertainties of everyday life in Beirut. His case shows that the s...
In the context of ongoing armed conflicts in Libya, Syria, Yemen, and Iraq, it is vital to foster nu...
War is so omnipresent in our contemporary world that the story of war is too important to be left to...
This article has been retracted due to the republishing of this article in the December 2010 issue o...
This article explores trauma as a form of ‘social wound’, entrenched in the intersections of local h...
This special issue aims to contribute to a deeper and critical understanding of trauma in the societ...
This article traces the infrastructures of suffering under the governance of humanitarian psychiatry...
Recent studies have documented how successive wars and sanctions have led to a deterioration of the ...
The authors of this Special Section invite us to consider what it means to go beyond the common trop...
For Iraqi refugee women in Connecticut, trauma is a pervasive and debilitating force that affects th...
Trauma theories have acquired paradigmatic significance in the study of war and representations of v...
Trauma does not have a single definition. Within Western paradigms, across humanities and social sci...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
War, political terror and forced migration impairs social functioning and erodes social relationship...
What have we learned in the aftermaths of wars across the Middle East as a prolegomena for a new gen...
Throughout its history Iraq has been plagued by colonialism, the Iran-Iraq war, the U.S. invasion of...
In the context of ongoing armed conflicts in Libya, Syria, Yemen, and Iraq, it is vital to foster nu...
War is so omnipresent in our contemporary world that the story of war is too important to be left to...
This article has been retracted due to the republishing of this article in the December 2010 issue o...
This article explores trauma as a form of ‘social wound’, entrenched in the intersections of local h...
This special issue aims to contribute to a deeper and critical understanding of trauma in the societ...
This article traces the infrastructures of suffering under the governance of humanitarian psychiatry...
Recent studies have documented how successive wars and sanctions have led to a deterioration of the ...
The authors of this Special Section invite us to consider what it means to go beyond the common trop...
For Iraqi refugee women in Connecticut, trauma is a pervasive and debilitating force that affects th...
Trauma theories have acquired paradigmatic significance in the study of war and representations of v...
Trauma does not have a single definition. Within Western paradigms, across humanities and social sci...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
War, political terror and forced migration impairs social functioning and erodes social relationship...
What have we learned in the aftermaths of wars across the Middle East as a prolegomena for a new gen...
Throughout its history Iraq has been plagued by colonialism, the Iran-Iraq war, the U.S. invasion of...
In the context of ongoing armed conflicts in Libya, Syria, Yemen, and Iraq, it is vital to foster nu...
War is so omnipresent in our contemporary world that the story of war is too important to be left to...
This article has been retracted due to the republishing of this article in the December 2010 issue o...