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Spoken and Unspoken Responses to Trauma (Q&A): Rebecca Krinke, David Beard, Jeanne Kilde, Kevin Murphy, Jose Medina, and Naomi Scheman, Sep. 2013

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Institute for Advanced Study

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Unspoken. The conflict between the will to deny horrible events and the will to proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of psychological trauma. (Judith Herman, Trauma and Recovery, 1992). This conflict operates in our bodies, our minds, and in our societies. Rebecca Krinke, Professor of Landscape Architecture, UMN, has an art practice and research agenda focused on trauma and responses to trauma. Krinke has invited five distinguished scholars to help her explore this issue through short individual presentations and reflective discussion. David Beard, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, UMD, speaking on the 1920 lynchings in Duluth and their ongoing impact. Jeanne Kilde, Religious Studies, UMN, speaking on issues related to the Muslim Community Center proposed near ground zero, NYC. Kevin Murphy, Associate Professor of History and a UMN leader of the multi-institutional Guantanamo Public Memory Project. Naomi Scheman, Professor of Philosophy, UMN. José Medina, Professor of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University.
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Video
Format:
Educational Events | Http://Vocab.Getty.Edu/Aat/300069086
Contributors:
Beard David; Kilde, Jeanne; Krinke, Rebecca; Medina, Jose; Murphy, Kevin; Scheman, Naomi
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