Reviews
Unclaimed Experience is a splendid work, written with admirable clarity, power, and economy. The book has importance for a number of different fields: for psychoanalysis, for trauma theory or theory of 'post-traumatic stress disorder,' for literary study, for literary theory, for cultural and historical studies, and for ethical theory. Each chapter is a classic essay on its topic.
Cathy Caruth has emerged as one of our most innovative scholars on what we call trauma, and on our ways of perceiving and conceptualizing that still mysterious phenomenon.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction. The Wound and the Voice
Chapter 1. Unclaimed Experience: Trauma and the Possibility of History (Freud, Moses and Monotheism)
Chapter 2. Literature and the Enactment of
Acknowledgments
Introduction. The Wound and the Voice
Chapter 1. Unclaimed Experience: Trauma and the Possibility of History (Freud, Moses and Monotheism)
Chapter 2. Literature and the Enactment of Memory (Duras, Resnais, Hiroshima mon amour)
Chapter 3. Traumatic Departures: Survival and History in Freud (Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Moses and Monotheism)
Chapter 4. The Falling Body and the Impact of Reference (de Man, Kant, Kleist)
Chapter 5. Traumatic Awakenings (Freud, Lacan, and the Ethics of Memory)
Afterword. Addressing Life: The Literary Voice in the Theory of Trauma
Notes
Index