Lacan on Trauma and Causality: A Psychoanalytic Critique of Post-Traumatic Stress/Growth

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Abstract

This article makes the case for the largely unacknowledged relevance of the thought of the French psychoanalyst, Jacques Lacan, for the emerging field of the medical and/or health humanities. From the 1930s all the way through to the late 1970s, Lacan was deeply concerned with the ethical and political consequences of then-dominant conceptions of the human in the ‘psy’ disciplines. His attempt to ‘humanise’ these disciplines involved an emphasis on humans as symbolic beings, inevitably entangled in the structures of speech and the ‘logic of the signifier.’ This article explores the implications of Lacan’s linguistic framework for his understanding of trauma. It argues that the Lacanian concept of trauma offers a timely antidote to dominant psychiatric notions of trauma today, linked as they are to the questionable politics of ‘Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder’ and, more recently, of ‘Post-Traumatic Growth.’

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Wright, C. (2021). Lacan on Trauma and Causality: A Psychoanalytic Critique of Post-Traumatic Stress/Growth. Journal of Medical Humanities, 42(2), 235–244. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-020-09622-w

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