This book explores the legacies of suffering in relation to 'those who
come after' - the descendants of victims, survivors and perpetrators of
traumatic events. It draws on recent discussions of 'postmemory' and
'haunting' that are concerned mainly with the transgenerational impact
of personal and social trauma. It examines how we are connected to past
events for which we have no direct responsibility yet in which we might
in some way be 'implicated' and it asks how we might attain a position
of active witnessing that helps resolve the suffering of others. Those
Who Come After includes vivid accounts of witnessing from a variety of
perspectives, ranging from Biblical and Jewish stories to contemporary
art and music. The book draws on psychosocial studies and psychoanalysis
to help make sense of this material and to develop an understanding of
acknowledgment and responsibility that is both ethical and emancipatory.
Those Who Come After will be of great interest to readers in
psychosocial studies and psychoanalysis and to all who are concerned
with the question of how to put past suffering to rest.