Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”

The 20th century of human history was overshadowed by the horrifying events of world wars and totalitarian regimes, with their traumatic experiences becoming the very focus of today’s modern globalized society. Psychoanalytic psychotherapy is one of the ways of dealing with this overwhelmi...

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Main Author: Mariia Lenherr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Genealogy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/1/4
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spelling doaj-d493dbaf4b5a4db0846cf199f48b7bb22020-11-24T21:50:28ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782019-01-0131410.3390/genealogy3010004genealogy3010004Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”Mariia Lenherr0Department of Psychotherapy, Sigmund Freud University, 1020 Vienna, AustriaThe 20th century of human history was overshadowed by the horrifying events of world wars and totalitarian regimes, with their traumatic experiences becoming the very focus of today’s modern globalized society. Psychoanalytic psychotherapy is one of the ways of dealing with this overwhelmingly violent phenomenon. This article will discuss an historical traumatic event through literature, using psychoanalytic theories of trauma. The problem is discussed on the level of the actual theoretical landscape including the relation between transgenerational transmitted trauma, collective trauma, and cumulative trauma inscribed in a “foundation matrix” (Foulkes). As a clinical vignette, the novel “Museum of Abandoned Secrets” by modern Ukrainian writer Oksana Zabuzhko is used. The author addresses the functions of dreams, scrutinizing the psychodynamics of the novel using concepts of projective identification, mourning, the need for repair, and epigenetic and fractal theory. It is suggested that the novel facilitates the characters’ journey through trauma and its integration by the large groups (of readers).http://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/1/4collective traumadreamspsychoanalysisliteratureZabuzhkotransgenerationally transmitted trauma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mariia Lenherr
spellingShingle Mariia Lenherr
Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
Genealogy
collective trauma
dreams
psychoanalysis
literature
Zabuzhko
transgenerationally transmitted trauma
author_facet Mariia Lenherr
author_sort Mariia Lenherr
title Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
title_short Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
title_full Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
title_fullStr Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
title_full_unstemmed Collective Trauma and Mystic Dreams in Zabuzhko’s “The Museum of Abandoned Secrets”
title_sort collective trauma and mystic dreams in zabuzhko’s “the museum of abandoned secrets”
publisher MDPI AG
series Genealogy
issn 2313-5778
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The 20th century of human history was overshadowed by the horrifying events of world wars and totalitarian regimes, with their traumatic experiences becoming the very focus of today’s modern globalized society. Psychoanalytic psychotherapy is one of the ways of dealing with this overwhelmingly violent phenomenon. This article will discuss an historical traumatic event through literature, using psychoanalytic theories of trauma. The problem is discussed on the level of the actual theoretical landscape including the relation between transgenerational transmitted trauma, collective trauma, and cumulative trauma inscribed in a “foundation matrix” (Foulkes). As a clinical vignette, the novel “Museum of Abandoned Secrets” by modern Ukrainian writer Oksana Zabuzhko is used. The author addresses the functions of dreams, scrutinizing the psychodynamics of the novel using concepts of projective identification, mourning, the need for repair, and epigenetic and fractal theory. It is suggested that the novel facilitates the characters’ journey through trauma and its integration by the large groups (of readers).
topic collective trauma
dreams
psychoanalysis
literature
Zabuzhko
transgenerationally transmitted trauma
url http://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/1/4
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