The Roots of Social Trauma: Collective, Cultural Pain and Its Consequences

IF 3 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Seth Abrutyn
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Since Kai Erikson’s landmark study of the devastation of five communities in West Virginia, sociology has leveraged the concept of trauma to describe certain social phenomena. Collective trauma came to refer to the destruction of social infrastructure and the ensuing negative mental health outcomes, while cultural trauma has come to describe the imposition of historical and ongoing attacks by a dominant group on the culture (broadly defined) of a group of people sharing a collective identity. The following article sketches out a theory of social trauma designed to bring these two types of sociological trauma together, highlight their similarities and differences, and unite them by grounding them in the neuroscience of (social) pain. The term trauma, borrowed from medical and psychological study, implies pain, but the sociological version of trauma is best understood as the collectivization and enculturation of social pain, or the evolved negative affective response to separation, rejection, exclusion, and isolation from cherished social objects including statuses. The article concludes by modeling the process by which an event transforms individual social pain into collective social trauma as well as the pathways through which social trauma becomes enculturated in a collective identity. Implications for the sociology of mental health follow.
社会创伤的根源:集体、文化痛苦及其后果
自凯-埃里克森(Kai Erikson)对西弗吉尼亚州五个社区遭受的破坏进行里程碑式的研究以来,社会学一直在利用创伤的概念来描述某些社会现象。集体创伤指的是社会基础设施遭到破坏以及随之而来的负面心理健康后果,而文化创伤则指的是历史上占统治地位的群体对具有集体身份的群体的文化(广义上)进行的持续攻击。以下文章概述了社会创伤理论,旨在将这两类社会学创伤结合起来,突出它们的异同,并通过(社会)疼痛神经科学将它们统一起来。从医学和心理学研究中借用的 "创伤 "一词意味着疼痛,但社会学版本的创伤最好被理解为社会疼痛的集体化和文化化,或者说是对与珍视的社会对象(包括地位)分离、拒绝、排斥和孤立所产生的负面情绪反应的进化。文章最后模拟了事件将个人社会痛苦转化为集体社会创伤的过程,以及社会创伤在集体身份中文化化的途径。文章对心理健康社会学的启示如下。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
7.80%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: Official journal of the ASA Section on the Sociology of Mental Health. Society and Mental Health (SMH) publishes original and innovative peer-reviewed research and theory articles that link social structure and sociocultural processes with mental health and illness in society. It will also provide an outlet for sociologically relevant research and theory articles that are produced in other disciplines and subfields concerned with issues related to mental health and illness. The aim of the journal is to advance knowledge in the sociology of mental health and illness by publishing the leading work that highlights the unique perspectives and contributions that sociological research and theory can make to our understanding of mental health and illness in society.
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