TY - GEN AU - Middleton,Beth Rose AU - Moreno,Melissa AU - Leal,Melissa AU - Middleton,Beth Rose AU - Moreno,Melissa AU - Leal,Melissa TI - Intergenerational Trauma and Healing SN - books978-3-03943-576-0 PY - 2021/// CY - Basel, Switzerland PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - Humanities KW - bicssc KW - Social interaction KW - Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography KW - Holocaust KW - survivors KW - second generation KW - transgenerational transmission KW - trauma KW - Grossman KW - Armenian KW - genocide KW - 1915 KW - human rights violation KW - Christianity KW - law enforcement violence KW - living with trauma KW - impunity KW - collective trauma KW - dreams KW - psychoanalysis KW - literature KW - Zabuzhko KW - transgenerationally transmitted trauma KW - indigenous wisdom KW - disrupted attachment KW - cultural restoration KW - well-being KW - survivance KW - sobrevivencia KW - healing KW - struggle KW - mothers KW - movements N1 - Open Access N2 - This Special Issue of Genealogy explores the topic of "Intergenerational Trauma and Healing". Authors examine the ways in which traumas (individual or group, and affecting humans and non-humans) that occurred in past generations reverberate into the present and how individuals, communities, and nations respond to and address those traumas. Authors also explore contemporary traumas, how they reflect ancestral traumas, and how they are being addressed through drawing on both contemporary and ancestral healing approaches. The articles define trauma broadly, including removal from homelands, ecocide, genocide, sexual or gendered violence, institutionalized and direct racism, incarceration, and exploitation, and across a wide range of spatial (home to nation) and temporal (intergenerational/ancestral and contemporary) scales. Articles also approach healing in an expansive mode, including specific individual healing practices, community-based initiatives, class-action lawsuits, group-wide reparations, health interventions, cultural approaches, and transformative legal or policy decisions. Contributing scholars for this issue are from across disciplines (including ethnic studies, genetics, political science, law, environmental policy, public health, humanities, etc.). They consider trauma and its ramifications alongside diverse mechanisms of healing and/or rearticulating self, community, and nation UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/3479 UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/68461 ER -