Other People's Pain: Narratives of Trauma and the Question of Ethics
- š¤ Speaker: CRASSH
- š Date & Time: Friday 19 March 2010, 10:30 - 21:00
- š Venue: CRASSH, 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge CB2 1RX
Abstract
Other People’s Pain: Narratives of Trauma and the Question of Ethics Friday, 19 March to Saturday, 20 March Location: CRASSH , 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge
http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/1154/
|Works of art ā from Primo Leviās If this is a Man to Anselm Kieferās Margarethe ā are built up out of the destruction of human life and dignity. Drawing speciļ¬cally on the horrors of history, they come to haunt us and question our understanding of the past, of ethics, even of the idea of āknowingā itself. Yet, what is it exactly that these works of art can achieve? Medicine is able to heal or alleviate suļ¬ering through the work of professionals observing, testing, and writing about patientsā physical and psychological pain. Human rights activists craft testimonies with the echoes of the victimsā howling cries; lawyers draft national and international laws and resolutions with a history of persecution, war, and genocide foremost in mind.
|What are the implications of the meeting with violence and terror in scholarly engagement with texts of trauma? In which ways can art, literature and disciplines like medicine, psychology, sociology and law inform each other? All of these engagements seem to share a fundamental divide between the experience of the victim, the traumatic event itself, and the scrutinizing gaze of those who address it. How then are personal or collective traumatic experiences, maybe even the very āideaā of violence, pain and terror, comprehended via narrative transmission?
Drawing upon other peopleās pain to do their work, where do we discover the limits of the attempts to represent the events in their historical, biological, emotional, and political realities? In what ways do cultural manifestations of trauma, violence and terror ā through textual, visual, political, medical or scientiļ¬c media ā reļ¬ect on the ethical implications of the project? Assuming the work of these ļ¬elds is to enact transcendence of the trauma, terror, and violence, at least by humanity as a whole if not for the original victims, those āother peopleā, in what ways are these works moral agents? If we believe in the value of our transcendence of other peopleās pain, the end products seem to never be sullied themselves by the process that provided the material for their eventual coming into being. Or are they?
|When we construct narratives of trauma, what are the obligations and what are the dangers? Where does exploitation begin? Can appropriation of other people’s pain ever occur without exploitation to some degree? Can works based on other peopleās pain turn into sources of abuse, exploitation, and structural violence themselves?
Series This talk is part of the Film Screenings and Talks series.
Included in Lists
- Cambridge Countercultural Studies Research Group
- CRASSH, 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge CB2 1RX
- Film Screenings and Talks
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Friday 19 March 2010, 10:30-21:00