generational trauma

All garden entries tagged with "generational trauma".

3 entries across the garden

Seed

Critique of the ‘Unspeakability’ Model in Trauma Studies

While Cathy Caruth’s 1990s model was foundational for bringing trauma into literary criticism, it faced heavy pushback starting in the late 1990s and 2000s. Critics from psychology, history, and postcolonial studies argued that her definition of trauma was too narrow, politically limited, and overly reliant on Western, white, and middle-class frameworks. The primary criticisms and […]

acting out vs. working throughcollective memoryeurocentrismgenerational trauma
🌱 Planted Jun 19, 2026
Seed — Review

Review: We Don’t Talk About Carol

“We Don’t Talk About Carol” by Kristen L. Berry is an engaging and thought-provoking family drama that explores the complexities of sibling relationships and long-buried secrets. Through Sydney’s grueling IVF journey, the book deeply examines the visceral desires, vulnerabilities, and identity crises tied to trying to conceive and build a foundation for the future. The […]

collective memorycommunitygenerational traumajustice
🌱 Planted Jan 15, 2026
Bloom

The Wound That Doesn’t Close: Trauma Across the Literary Spectrum

Trauma theory began, as so much of modern literary criticism does, with Freud. In Studies on Hysteria, he and Joseph Breuer proposed that an extreme event isn’t traumatic in the moment so much as it becomes traumatic later, surfacing during a latency period when some unrelated trigger calls the repressed memory back up. Decades later, […]

acting out vs. working throughcapitalism as traumacollective memoryexploitation
🌱 Planted Jun 19, 2026