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Video testimony : the generation and transmission of trauma

Version 2 2024-06-17, 07:13
Version 1 2014-10-28, 09:08
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posted on 2024-06-17, 07:13 authored by S Goddard
My mother experienced the final part of the Second World War displaced and separated from her family and particularily her husband. (His name was on Oscar Schindler's List; her name was, and then wasn't). This dislocation from her husband was one trauma within a larger set of daily traumas. In 1997, as part of the Shoah Foundation Visual History series, my mother narrated her individualized video testimony, once again, separated from her family. This paper examines the methodologies of this video testimony in relation to two connected questions: was my mother re-traumatized by the process of providing her testemony, and by narrating and recording her video testimony, did she, unwittingly, 'transmit' her traumas, and those of her generation to my generation?

History

Chapter number

5

Pagination

79-93

ISBN-13

9781443822831

ISBN-10

1443822833

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2010, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Extent

16

Editor/Contributor(s)

Broderick M, Traverso A

Publisher

Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Place of publication

Newcastle, England

Title of book

Trauma, media, art : new perspectives

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