I don't want to regurgitate this week's reading, some of it was rather intense. Hence no review, just a list:
Penelope Hollander: Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma. Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, 212-216.
Richard M. Waugaman: Reality as an Inkblot: Looking at the Trauma Literature. Commentary on “Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma.” Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, pp. 222-230.
Katherine B. Burton: Resilience in the Face of Psychological Trauma. Commentary on “Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma.” Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, 231-234.
Benson, Porter, Dolchok: Circle of Healing: Traditional Storytelling, Parts 1-3. Arctic Anthropology Vol. 40, No. 2, pp. 9-22, 2003.
Matthew Pittman: Thou Shalt Kill … Carefully: Secular Religion, the Immanent Frame, and Showtime's Dexter. The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 27:3, Fall 2015, pp. 171-185.
This last one was really entertaining. Not directly about trauma, though in my opinion Dexter's rituals are a consequence of what happened in his childhood, so it's an interesting prelude. Or maybe companion article? Like those tie-ins to series' and movies.
Penelope Hollander: Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma. Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, 212-216.
Richard M. Waugaman: Reality as an Inkblot: Looking at the Trauma Literature. Commentary on “Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma.” Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, pp. 222-230.
Katherine B. Burton: Resilience in the Face of Psychological Trauma. Commentary on “Cherchez la Femme, Cherchez la Femme: A Paradoxical Response to Trauma.” Psychiatry 67 (3) Fall 2004, 231-234.
Benson, Porter, Dolchok: Circle of Healing: Traditional Storytelling, Parts 1-3. Arctic Anthropology Vol. 40, No. 2, pp. 9-22, 2003.
Matthew Pittman: Thou Shalt Kill … Carefully: Secular Religion, the Immanent Frame, and Showtime's Dexter. The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 27:3, Fall 2015, pp. 171-185.
This last one was really entertaining. Not directly about trauma, though in my opinion Dexter's rituals are a consequence of what happened in his childhood, so it's an interesting prelude. Or maybe companion article? Like those tie-ins to series' and movies.