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Writing History, Writing Trauma
Johns Hopkins University Press
£24.00
£21.69
LaCapra''s analysis of trauma is folded into an ambitious and compelling reflection on the possibilities for a genuinely cross-disciplinary theoretical dialogue on history . . . Important reading not only to trauma theorists and their critics, but to historians and literary critics of all persuasions invested in rethinking the relationship between trauma, history, and ethics.
—SubStance Thoughtful and compelling . . . LaCapra''s discussions of historiography, philosophy, and psychoanalysis are extraordinarily lucid, and this book is a brilliant example of some of the capabilities of contemporary trauma theory in analyzing representations of trauma.
—Tikkun The strength of LaCapra''s text lies in its urgency, in the clarity of its commitment to historiographic adequacy and the constructive potential of a psychoanalytic mode of interpretation, and in its appeal to a sense of civic responsibility.
—Criticism Until now trauma studies lacked the kind of discerning metacommentary that would adjudicate among its emergent logics, truth claims, intellectual strategies, objects of analysis, and scholarly positions. That dream of totalization, however, is precisely what LaCapra casts doubt upon in his important new book.
—Modernism/Modernity Insightful and compassionate . . . LaCapra both uses and transcends contemporary critical theory in assessing the influence of trauma on present-day historical writing.
—Holocaust and Genocide Studies This updated edition includes a substantive new preface that reconsiders some of the issues raised in the book.
—SubStance Thoughtful and compelling . . . LaCapra''s discussions of historiography, philosophy, and psychoanalysis are extraordinarily lucid, and this book is a brilliant example of some of the capabilities of contemporary trauma theory in analyzing representations of trauma.
—Tikkun The strength of LaCapra''s text lies in its urgency, in the clarity of its commitment to historiographic adequacy and the constructive potential of a psychoanalytic mode of interpretation, and in its appeal to a sense of civic responsibility.
—Criticism Until now trauma studies lacked the kind of discerning metacommentary that would adjudicate among its emergent logics, truth claims, intellectual strategies, objects of analysis, and scholarly positions. That dream of totalization, however, is precisely what LaCapra casts doubt upon in his important new book.
—Modernism/Modernity Insightful and compassionate . . . LaCapra both uses and transcends contemporary critical theory in assessing the influence of trauma on present-day historical writing.
—Holocaust and Genocide Studies This updated edition includes a substantive new preface that reconsiders some of the issues raised in the book.
- | Author: Dominick LaCapra
- | Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
- | Publication Date: Oct 29, 2014
- | Number of Pages:
- | Language:
- | Binding: Paperback / softback
- | ISBN-13: 9781421414003
- | ISBN-10: 1421414007
- Author:
- Dominick LaCapra
- Publisher:
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Publication Date:
- Oct 29, 2014
- Binding:
- Paperback / softback
- ISBN-13:
- 9781421414003
- ISBN10:
- 1421414007