A Burden Too Heavy to Bear

Diane Miller Sommerville
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Abstract

Examines the psychological impact of the Civil War on Confederate soldiers who suffered debilitating psychological and emotional wounds that sometimes resulted in institutionalization in insane asylums, or in suicidal behavior. Historians have not focused on Civil War participants as victims of war trauma until recently. This chapter deepens our understanding of these experiences by asserting that external war-related pressures like witnessing death and mayhem combined with internal pressures like fear of masculine failure or being called a coward heavily taxed soldiers and their psyches. Factors that contributed to psychological distress among Confederate servicemen include: exposure to battle, fear of being called a coward, fear of failure, youthfulness, homesickness, and depression.Suicide offered southern white men a way to maintain mastery and control over their deaths in war zones where chaos and disorder prevailed. Attitudes toward Confederates who killed themselves during the war were more supportive and less stigmatizing than one might think. Many soldiers also ended up institutionalized in asylums after being diagnosed as insane. Caregivers and family members rarely connected signs of mental distress with wartime experiences.
负担太重,无法承受
考察了内战对南方邦联士兵的心理影响,这些士兵遭受了心理和情感上的创伤,有时导致精神病院的制度化,或自杀行为。历史学家直到最近才开始关注内战参与者是战争创伤的受害者。这一章加深了我们对这些经历的理解,通过断言与战争相关的外部压力,如目睹死亡和混乱,加上内部压力,如害怕男性失败或被称为懦夫,沉重地负担了士兵和他们的精神。造成邦联军人心理困扰的因素包括:经历过战争、害怕被称为懦夫、害怕失败、年轻、思乡和抑郁。在混乱和无序盛行的战区,自杀为南方白人提供了一种控制死亡的方法。人们对在战争中自杀的邦联士兵的态度比人们想象的更支持,更少污蔑。许多士兵在被诊断为精神失常后,也被送进了精神病院。照顾者和家庭成员很少将精神痛苦的迹象与战争经历联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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