Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity


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Description

In this collaboratively authored work, five distinguished sociologists develop an ambitious theoretical model of "cultural trauma"-and on this basis build a new understanding of how social groups interact with emotion to create new and binding understandings of social responsibility. Looking at the "meaning making process" as an open-ended social dialogue in which strikingly different social narratives vie for influence, they outline a strongly constructivist approach to trauma and apply this theoretical model in a series of extensive case studies, including the Nazi Holocaust, slavery in the United States, and September 11, 2001.

Author: Jeffrey C. Alexander, Ron Eyerman, Bernard Giesen
Publisher: University of California Press
Published: 03/22/2004
Pages: 314
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.01lbs
Size: 8.98h x 6.10w x 0.83d
ISBN13: 9780520235953
ISBN10: 0520235959
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | Public Policy | Social Services & Welfare
- Social Science | Sociology | General

About the Author
Jeffrey C. Alexander is Professor of Sociology and Chair of the Sociology Department at Yale University, the author of The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology (2003), and the editor of Real Civil Societies (1998). Ron Eyerman is the author of Cultural Trauma: Slavery and the Formation of African American Identity (2001). Bernhard Giesen is the author of Intellectuals and the Nation: Collective Identity in a German Axial Age (1997). Neil J. Smelser is the author of The Social Aspects of Psychoanalysis (California, 1998). Piotr Sztompka is the author of Trust: A Sociological Theory (1999).