Revision with unchanged content. This book deals with an area of
scholarship attracting interdisciplinary interest: the field of trauma
studies. It is a project that focuses both on the psychodynamics of
trauma and its political and historical contexts. It draws from and
reformulates psychoanalytical theory but refuses an easy "therapeutic"
approach to pain and suffering and an easy claim to collective
(especially national) suffering as in the wake of 9/11. Taking a long
historical view but focusing particularly on contemporary experiences of
trauma, the author seeks to expose the metropolitanism of contemporary
trauma theory and to reverse or at least challenge that trend by looking
at the ways in which poscolonial, non-metropolitan literatures about
trauma can question Euro-centered trauma theories and practices that are
often presented as universal. These critical literatures come from
Native America, Algeria, and the Caribbean. This book is addressed to
thinkers and writers in all area studies programs that attend to the
historical and contemporary dynamics of trauma and its consequences.