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Moral Injury and the Humanities: Interdisciplinary Perspectives

✍ Scribed by Andrew I. Cohen (editor); Kathryn McClymond (editor)


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2023
Tongue
English
Leaves
289
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book brings together leading interdisciplinary scholars to broaden and deepen the conversation about moral injury. In the original chapters, the contributors present new research to show how the humanities are crucial for understanding the expressions, meaning, and significance of moral injury.

Moral injury is the disorientation we suffer when we are complicit in some moral transgression. Most existing works address moral injury from a clinical or neuroscientific perspective. The chapters in this volume show how the humanities are crucial for understanding the meaning and significance of moral injury as well as suggesting how to grapple with its lived challenges. The chapters address the conceptual, sociological, historical, and ritualistic dimensions of moral injury across three thematic sections. Section 1 explores how tools of the humanities provide new lenses for understanding conceptual and genealogical themes about moral injury. Section 2 highlights the experiences of moral injury in combat soldiers, law enforcement, and noncombatants such as photojournalists. These chapters examine the power and limits to theorizing moral phenomena by appeals to lived experience. Section 3 considers how humanistic inquiry illuminates important dimensions of the aftermath of moral injury beyond the scope of clinical research. These chapters consider how ritual, relationship repair, and atonement might shape the ways people navigate moral injury and consider how such responses shape our understanding of what we owe to one another.


Moral Injury and the Humanities: Interdisciplinary Perspectives is an essential resource for researchers and advanced students in philosophy, religious studies, literature, journalism, and the arts who are interested in moral injury.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Section 1 Some Frameworks for Moral Injury
1 The Moral Challenges of Moral Injury
2 Ulterior Motives and Moral Injury in War
3 Theorizing Moral Injury with Reports of Trauma
4 The Ethics of Moral Injury
5 Moral Injury and the Making of Amends
Section 2 Experiences of Moral Injury
6 Greek Tragedy, Virgil's Aeneid, and the Moral Injury of Combat Veterans and Health-Care Workers
7 Moral Injury in Law Enforcement
8 Photojournalism and Moral Injury: An Inquiry
9 The Moral Limits to Moral Testimony in Soldiering
10 Meaning-Making and Moral Injury: The Role of the Narrative in Understanding Trauma
Section 3 Accounts of Recovery: Applying Humanistic Approaches to Moral Injury
11 Evil in Innocence: Moral Injury and the Encounter with Children
12 On the Necessity of Ritual for Moral Injury Recovery
13 Animist Forms of Atonement and Healing in Edwidge Danticat's the Dew Breaker
14 Rituals and Moral Injury: How Veterans Make Peace
Conclusion
List of Contributors
Index


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