Cultural Trauma as a Potential Symbolic Boundary

Using the case of the Holocaust as a cultural trauma in the Jewish-Israeli context, some insights are suggested as to the ways younger members of collectives view cultural trauma as a symbolic boundary. The findings obtained from three groups of students, each expressing their views on a different f...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of politics, culture, and society culture, and society, 2009-06, Vol.22 (2), p.183-190
Hauptverfasser: Lazar, Alon, Litvak-Hirsch, Tal
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container_title International journal of politics, culture, and society
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creator Lazar, Alon
Litvak-Hirsch, Tal
description Using the case of the Holocaust as a cultural trauma in the Jewish-Israeli context, some insights are suggested as to the ways younger members of collectives view cultural trauma as a symbolic boundary. The findings obtained from three groups of students, each expressing their views on a different facet of the Holocaust as a symbolic boundary, suggest that the major contributing factor that turns cultural trauma into a symbolic boundary is the way in which members of the collective categorize the modes through which others, within and outside the collective, relate to that cultural trauma.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals; Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Borders
Boundaries
Clinical Psychology
Collective memory
Commemorations
Cultural identity
Cultural studies
Culture
Group identity
Heroism
Holocaust
Jewish culture
Jewish diaspora
Jewish peoples
Jewish symbolism
Jews
Memory
Nazism
Personality and Social Psychology
Psychology
Social Sciences
Sociocultural Factors
Sociology
Studies
Symbolism
Trauma
World War Two
title Cultural Trauma as a Potential Symbolic Boundary
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