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From the Ashes of History: Collective Trauma and the Making of International Politics

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In recent years, calls for reparations and restorative justice, alongside the rise of populist grievance politics, have demonstrated the stubborn resilience of traumatic memory. From the transnational Black Lives Matter movement's calls for reckoning with the legacy of slavery and racial oppression, to continued efforts to secure recognition of the Armenian genocide or Imperial Japan's human rights abuses, international politics is replete with examples of past violence reasserting itself in the present. But how should scholars understand trauma's long-term impacts? Why do some traumas lie dormant for generations, only to surface anew in pivotal moments? And how does trauma scale from individuals to larger political groupings like nations and states, shaping political identities, grievances, and policymaking?

In From the Ashes of History, Adam B. Lerner looks at collective trauma as a foundational force in international politics—a "shock" to political cultures that can constitute new actors and shape decision-making over the long-term. As Lerner shows, uncovering collective trauma's role in international politics is vital for two key reasons. First, it can help explain longstanding tensions between groups—an especially relevant topic as scholars examine the transnational resurgence of nationalism and populism. Second, it pushes the discipline of International Relations to more completely account for mass violence's true long-term costs, particularly as they become embedded in longstanding structural inequalities and injustices. While IR scholarship has largely dismissed non-systematic, latent phenomena like trauma, Lerner argues that collective trauma can help draw the lines between international political groups and frame the logics of international political action. Drawing on three historical cases that uncover the impact of collective trauma in Indian, Israeli, and American foreign policymaking, From the Ashes of History demonstrates the broad utility of collective trauma as a theoretical lens for investigating how mass violence's legacy can resurge and dissipate over time.

Author: Lerner Adam
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 272
ISBN: 9780197623596
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

Part I
Chapter 1: Collective Trauma and the Making of International Politics
Chapter 2: Theorizing Collective Trauma
Chapter 3: Collective Trauma and Identity: A Necessary Liaison
Part II
Chapter 4: Colonialism as Collective Trauma: Economic Nationalism and Autarkic State-Building in India
Chapter 5: Victimhood Nationalism in Israel: The Eichmann Trial's Role in Israeli Foreign Policy Discourse
Chapter 6: Blurring the Boundaries of War: PTSD and the Collectivization of US Combat Trauma
Chapter 7: Conclusion
References
Index

Adam B. Lerner is permanent Lecturer (Assistant Professor) of Politics and International Relations at Royal Holloway, University of London. He also serves as Deputy Director of Royal Holloway's Centre for International Security (RHISC).

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