Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Robert Jay Lifton
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Inscribing Trauma in Culture, Brain, and Body
- SECTION I NEUROBIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- SECTION II CLINICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- SECTION III CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- 15 Trauma, Adaptation, and Resilience: A Cross-Cultural and Evolutionary Perspective
- 16 Bruno and the Holy Fool: Myth, Mimesis, and the Transmission of Traumatic Memories
- 17 Failures of Imagination: The Refugee's Predicament
- 18 Trauma, Culture, and Myth: Narratives of the Ethiopian Jewish Exodus
- 19 Posttraumatic Politics: Violence, Memory, and Biomedical Discourse in Bali
- 20 Terror and Trauma in the Cambodian Genocide
- 21 Trauma in Context: Integrating Biological, Clinical, and Cultural Perspectives
- Epilogue: Trauma and the Vicissitudes of Interdisciplinary Integration
- Glossary
- Index
- References
19 - Posttraumatic Politics: Violence, Memory, and Biomedical Discourse in Bali
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Robert Jay Lifton
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Inscribing Trauma in Culture, Brain, and Body
- SECTION I NEUROBIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- SECTION II CLINICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- SECTION III CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA
- 15 Trauma, Adaptation, and Resilience: A Cross-Cultural and Evolutionary Perspective
- 16 Bruno and the Holy Fool: Myth, Mimesis, and the Transmission of Traumatic Memories
- 17 Failures of Imagination: The Refugee's Predicament
- 18 Trauma, Culture, and Myth: Narratives of the Ethiopian Jewish Exodus
- 19 Posttraumatic Politics: Violence, Memory, and Biomedical Discourse in Bali
- 20 Terror and Trauma in the Cambodian Genocide
- 21 Trauma in Context: Integrating Biological, Clinical, and Cultural Perspectives
- Epilogue: Trauma and the Vicissitudes of Interdisciplinary Integration
- Glossary
- Index
- References
Summary
In June 2004, as we were preparing this chapter on the emergence of discourses of trauma in Indonesia, two incidents occurred. The first was a conversation between Santikarma and Bre Redana, an editor at Kompas, an Indonesian newspaper. After hearing that we were writing about trauma, Redana asked Santikarma to explain something. Why were a number of social welfare organizations in Jakarta changing the names of their programs from “crisis centers” (krisis center) to “trauma clinics” (klinik trauma)? Both krisis and trauma – the words borrowed directly from English – were, they agreed, far from neutral terms. “Crisis” had entered widespread usage in Indonesia in 1998, when the “Asian economic crisis,” along with a “crisis of legitimacy” of former President Soeharto's government, were claimed by scholars and journalists to have ushered in the end of 32 years of dictatorship and the new era of political possibility known as reformasi. So popular had the word “crisis” grown that for many Indonesians it came to signal a generic lack: krisis moneter or “monetary crisis” (usually abbreviated as krismon) meant that people no longer had money; krisis kepemimpinan or “leadership crisis” meant that no one had belief in those in power; and “saya lagi krisis” or “I'm in a crisis,” with one's empty hands extended, meant that one had nothing to spare. But what, they wondered, did it mean for a rhetoric of “crisis” to be replaced by a language of “trauma”?
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- Information
- Understanding TraumaIntegrating Biological, Clinical, and Cultural Perspectives, pp. 403 - 432Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
References
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