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56 results for "collective trauma" — page 1 of 3
T_2_21 — Collective Trauma Psychology
Collective trauma refers to the psychological impact of traumatic events experienced by entire communities, populations, or cultural groups — events such as genocide, slavery, colonialism, war, natural disasters, and pan
K_4_06 — Collective Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Intergenerational Transmission
Collective trauma — the psychological impact of catastrophic events on entire communities, nations, or peoples — and its intergenerational transmission across generations is one of the most important intersections of psy
ZC_5_21 — Intergenerational Trauma: Epigenetic Inheritance and Collective Wounds
Intergenerational trauma (also transgenerational or historical trauma) refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to subsequent generations through psychological, behavioral, social, and — contro
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
T_5_17 — Cultural Memory: Collective Remembrance, Tradition, and Identity
Cultural memory — the shared body of knowledge, narratives, images, and rituals through which a society constructs and maintains its sense of identity across generations — emerged as a distinct academic field in the late
INTERDOC_59 — Intergenerational Trauma: A Three-Channel Synthesis (Epigenetic, Psychological, Cultural)
Trauma is empirically heritable — but not through any single mechanism. The dominant public framing (epigenetics-as-Lamarckism) is overconfident; the dominant academic counter-framing (it's all attachment / it's all cult
ZC_5_18 — Disaster Resilience & Cultural Recovery: Anthropological Perspectives
Disaster resilience — the capacity of communities to absorb, adapt to, and recover from catastrophic events while maintaining essential functions and identity — is increasingly understood not as a property of infrastruct
T_2_12 — Psychology of Trauma and PTSD
Psychological trauma — exposure to events involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — can produce lasting alterations in cognition, emotion, arousal, and behavior. Post-Traumatic Stress Dis
L_4_17 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Trauma
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of trauma — the hypothesis that severe stress, famine, or psychological trauma experienced by one generation can alter the epigenetic marks (DNA methylation, histone modifications
P_2_14 — Philosophy of Action: Agency, Intention, and Collective Action
The philosophy of action investigates the nature of human agency — what it means to act (as opposed to merely moving), what makes an action intentional, how reasons relate to causes, and how individual agency extends to
K_4_11 — Collective Consciousness & the Collective Unconscious
Collective consciousness — whether framed as Durkheim's sociological construct, Jung's archetypal collective unconscious, or ancient concepts like the Akashic Records and the Noosphere — describes a shared psychic field
ZC_5_04 — Social Movements: Collective Action, Mobilization, and Protest
Social movements are sustained, organized collective efforts by non-institutional actors to promote or resist social, political, economic, or cultural change through unconventional means — including protest, civil disobe
ZC_2_02 — Collective Memory and Cultural Transmission of Myth
Collective memory — the shared pool of knowledge and information held by a group — is the mechanism by which myths, traditions, and historical narratives are transmitted across generations. This document surveys the scho
T_2_10 — Psychology of Resilience and Post-Traumatic Growth
The dominant narrative — that trauma inevitably causes lasting psychological damage — is contradicted by extensive research. Resilience — the ability to maintain or quickly recover stable psychological functioning after
T_1_01 — Jungian Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) developed analytical psychology as a departure from Freudian psychoanalysis, proposing that beneath the personal unconscious lies a collective unconscious—a shared psychic substrate containin
Y_4_13 — Collective Effervescence and Group Altered States
Collective effervescence — Émile Durkheim's term (The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1912) for the heightened emotional energy generated when people gather and act together in coordinated ritual — describes a group
X_5_14 — Emergency & Critical Care Medicine: From Battlefield Triage to Modern Intensive Care
Emergency medicine and critical care medicine represent two interconnected disciplines born from crisis — battlefield carnage, epidemic waves, and the realization that rapid intervention separates survival from death. Em
X_3_11 — Battlefield Medicine: Surgical Innovation Under Fire
Battlefield medicine — the practice of treating wounded soldiers under active combat conditions — has been one of the most powerful and paradoxical engines of medical innovation in human history. The pressure of mass cas
INTERDOC_74 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Inheritance: Confirmed Mechanisms and Honest Limits
[KEY FINDING] Specific environmentally-induced epigenetic states (notably from severe famine and from controlled fear-conditioning paradigms) can survive embryonic reprogramming and influence offspring phenotype across o
ZC_3_23 — Commons Governance — Ostrom
Elinor Ostrom (1933–2012), professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington, became the first woman to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2009) for her groundbreaking work demonstratin
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