Dear Colleague,
We are pleased to announce that the latest issue of Historical Reflections/Reflexions Historiques has been published by Berghahn Journals.
Most historians, other than historians of the Holocaust, have not had to engage with the historical implications of trauma. Thus, the goal of this special issue is to offer a modest commentary on what Trauma Studies can offer “Other Historians” and, perhaps, on what they can offer in return. The work presented here is of a provisional nature and is the product of a year-long seminar by a diverse group of historians at the Institute of Historical Studies at the University of Texas at Austin and the international conference, “Trauma and History,” that they organized.
Current Issue: Volume 41, Issue 3
INTRODUCTION
Trauma and Other Historians: An Introduction Yoav Di-Capua <http://bit.ly/1Ln3h1z>
ARTICLES
Miraculous Healing for the Warrior Soul: Transforming Fear, Violence, and Shame in Fourteenth-Century Provence Nicole Archambeau <http://bit.ly/1ZGy03b>
Trauma and the Effects of Mass Violence in Revolutionary France: A Critical Inquiry Ronen Steinberg <http://bit.ly/1ZGy2It>
From Holocaust Trauma to the Dirty War Federico Finchelstein <http://bit.ly/1GIVpFJ>
"Our Actions Never Cease to Haunt Us": Frantz Fanon, Jean-Paul Sartre, and the Violence of the Algerian War Emma Kuby <http://bit.ly/1VV8MP8>
The Trauma of Liberation: Dutch Political Culture and the Indonesian Question in 1945 Jennifer L. Foray <http://bit.ly/1LQLC7S>
The Complete Story of the Galveston Horror: Trauma, History, and the Great Storm of 1900 Andy Horowitz <http://bit.ly/1LQLEN9>
Noble Ghosts, Empty Graves, and Suppressed Traumas: The Heroic Tale of "Taiyuan's Five Hundred Martyrs" in the Chinese Civil War Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang <http://bit.ly/1jreGXl>