âThe essays in Revisioning War Trauma in Cinema challenge us to re-vision well-known cinematic representations of the Holocaust through the lens of key insights from trauma studies. The authorsâ lucid and accessible language renders reading their unsettling analyses an enriching journey into some of the most complex Holocaust films made. Scholars as well as aficionados of cinematic representations will find the authorsâ re-visionings both absorbing and exciting.â
- Ingeborg Majer-OâSickey, Professor Emerita, Binghamton University, State of New York University,
âOn almost every page of War Trauma in Cinema the authors show not only how psychoanalysis speaks to the state of Europe after the Holocaust (and, in the last chapter, the state of America after itâs civil war: death is not just a âmaster from Germanyâ, as Celan wrote), but how much what was relevant then speaks to the trauma of our reality at this moment. May it be widely read.â
- J. Todd Dean, American Psychoanalytic Association,
âRevisioning War Trauma in Cinema is an excellent and extensive intervention into the areas of trauma, film studies, and psychoanalysis. Through brilliant close readings of contemporary films on the trauma of war and its aftermath, Datema and Steinkoler examine the fundamental questions of memory in the face of catastrophe and the possibility of constructionâin the psychoanalytic senseâof community in a world in which we are all exiles. The authorsâ work is a âsinthomaticâ resistance to the violence and narcissism of the injunction of becoming as citizens and subjects, and explores the power of film to see the real differently, an âuncomingâ that begets survival creation amid disaster.â
- Alexander Howe, University of the District of Columbia,