000101603 001__ 101603
000101603 005__ 20230622083310.0
000101603 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.1017/S1062798720000666
000101603 0248_ $$2sideral$$a118234
000101603 037__ $$aART-2020-118234
000101603 041__ $$aeng
000101603 100__ $$0(orcid)0000-0001-8928-7295$$aPellicer-Ortín, Silvia$$uUniversidad de Zaragoza
000101603 245__ $$aIntroduction. Contemporary Literature in Times of Crisis and Vulnerability: Trauma, Demise of Sovereignty and Interconnectedness
000101603 260__ $$c2020
000101603 5060_ $$aAccess copy available to the general public$$fUnrestricted
000101603 5203_ $$aThe late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries have been dominated by multifarious crises that have given way to individual and collective wounds resulting from environmental disasters, exile and migratory movements, war, terrorism, radicalism and other disturbing historical episodes. Our main contention is that trauma and/or excessive exposure to vulnerable situations can be relieved thanks to diverse narrative practices. Accordingly, we explore the field of Trauma Studies since its emergence to its current evolution towards the vulnerability paradigm, examining the different meanings of vulnerability not only from the perspective of the life sciences but also from the social sciences and its application to the humanities. Then, we move on to the notion of resilience and how it can help us articulate and/or move beyond trauma and vulnerability. In keeping with this, considering the ethical and political relationality between the self and other, we highlight one's tendency to be affected by the other''s wounds and vulnerability as well as the inevitability of interdependency and interconnectedness between people and non-human entities. Thus, we explore the role of literature in giving voice to the voiceless and to unheard experiences of suffering as well as in representing the demise of the sovereign self and the rise of human and non-human interconnectedness after being exposed to traumatic or disastrous events, as represented in contemporary literatures in English.
000101603 536__ $$9info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/DGA/H03-17R$$9info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/MINECO-FEDER/FFI2017-84258-P$$9info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/UZ/JIUZ-2019-HUM-02
000101603 540__ $$9info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess$$aAll rights reserved$$uhttp://www.europeana.eu/rights/rr-f/
000101603 590__ $$a0.487$$b2020
000101603 591__ $$aAREA STUDIES$$b69 / 80 = 0.863$$c2020$$dQ4$$eT3
000101603 592__ $$a0.219$$b2020
000101603 593__ $$aPolitical Science and International Relations$$c2020$$dQ3
000101603 593__ $$aGeography, Planning and Development$$c2020$$dQ3
000101603 655_4 $$ainfo:eu-repo/semantics/article$$vinfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
000101603 700__ $$aSarikaya-Sen, Merve
000101603 7102_ $$13004$$2345$$aUniversidad de Zaragoza$$bDpto. Filolog.Inglesa y Alema.$$cÁrea Filología Inglesa
000101603 773__ $$g29, 3 (2020), 315 - 332$$pEur. rev.$$tEuropean Review$$x1062-7987
000101603 8564_ $$s184527$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/101603/files/texto_completo.pdf$$yPostprint
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000101603 951__ $$a2023-06-21-14:59:36
000101603 980__ $$aARTICLE