editorialTranscultural PsychiatryMay 22, 2014Closed access

Rethinking Historical Trauma

McGill University · University of Michigan · +1 more institution

PubMed
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Abstract

Recent years have seen the rise of historical trauma as a construct to describe the impact of colonization, cultural suppression, and historical oppression of Indigenous peoples in North America (e.g., Native Americans in the United States, Aboriginal peoples in Canada). The discourses of psychiatry and psychology contribute to the conflation of disparate forms of violence by emphasizing presumptively universal aspects of trauma response. Many proponents of this construct have made explicit analogies to the Holocaust as a way to understand the transgenerational effects of genocide. However, the social, cultural, and psychological contexts of the Holocaust and of post-colonial Indigenous "survivance" differ in…

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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Historical trauma
  • Genocide
  • Indigenous
  • Oppression
  • Construct (python library)
  • Criminology
  • Colonialism
  • Sociology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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