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Beyond Post-Traumatic Stress
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A01=Sarah Hautzinger
Active Duty Soldiers
Army Spouses
Author_Jean Scandlyn
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Canyon Maneuver Site
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Da Costa's Syndrome
Da Costa’s Syndrome
El Paso County
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Equine Assisted
ethnographic fieldwork
Informal Dialogs
invisible war wounds
Iraq Tour
Local Actors Families
Mild TBI
military anthropology
Military Spouses
Moral Injuries
OEF Veteran
Pikes Peak Region
Public Engagement
qualitative analysis of combat veterans
Service Members
Social Reproduction
Town Hall
trauma recovery research
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9781611323658
- Weight: 750g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Dec 2013
- Publisher: Left Coast Press Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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When soldiers at Fort Carson were charged with a series of 14 murders, PTSD and other "invisible wounds of war" were thrown into the national spotlight. With these events as their starting point, Jean Scandlyn and Sarah Hautzinger argue for a new approach to combat stress and trauma, seeing them not just as individual medical pathologies but as fundamentally collective cultural phenomena. Their deep ethnographic research, including unusual access to affected soldiers at Fort Carson, also engaged an extended labyrinth of friends, family, communities, military culture, social services, bureaucracies, the media, and many other layers of society. Through this profound and moving book, they insist that invisible combat injuries are a social challenge demanding collective reconciliation with the post-9/11 wars.
Jean Scandlyn is Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Health and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Colorado Denver, USA.
Sarah Hautzinger is Professor and Chair in the Department of Anthropolgoy at Colorado College, USA.
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