About this item
Highlights
- As awareness of the widespread presence of trauma grows, popular culture can name everything stressful "traumatic.
- Author(s): M Jan Holton & Jill L Snodgrass
- 278 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Counseling
Description
About the Book
As awareness of the widespread presence of trauma grows, popular culture can name everything stressful "traumatic." Yet, diagnostic definitions of trauma overlook cultural understandings that refine our concept of trauma. In Reframing Trauma, M. Jan Holton and Jill L. Snodgrass offer a theory and theology of trauma to navigate such complexities.Book Synopsis
As awareness of the widespread presence of trauma grows, popular culture can name everything stressful "traumatic." Yet, diagnostic definitions of trauma overlook cultural understandings that refine our conceptualization of trauma. M. Jan Holton and Jill L. Snodgrass argue for a theory and theology of trauma to navigate such complexities.
In Reframing Trauma, Holton and Snodgrass compile essays that expand our understanding of trauma as a stress-trauma continuum. The volume engages the challenges of racism, eco-violence, and myriad sociopolitical and interpersonal injustices that injure individuals, communities, and the globe. Each essay is grounded in a strength-based approach to trauma and contextualizes our societal negativity bias within spiritual values of hope, growth, and resilience. Meanwhile, the understanding of a trauma-stress continuum avoids diminishing the suffering that emerges from stress and trauma of all kinds.
Holton and Snodgrass also offer a reframed theology of trauma. The volume mines Christian theology and wisdom from other faith traditions for insight into interpersonal and communal woundedness that, paradoxically, both expands and narrows our understandings of trauma. This exploration helps identify implications for spiritually integrated care and counseling, chaplaincy, and pastoral education.
The result is a groundbreaking understanding of stress and trauma as an ever-evolving concept that is imbued with theological and spiritual wisdom. Such wisdom eschews the limitations of Western understandings of trauma. This wisdom offers insight into how stressful and traumatic experiences can be both life-limiting and life-giving, both despair-inducing and the impetus for growth and resilience.
Reframing Trauma will engage educators in pastoral and practical theology, spirituality, and psychology; care practitioners in congregational and healthcare settings; and clinical mental health professionals who offer spiritually integrated care. Likewise, trained Christian laity will find the book an invaluable resource for cultivating an inclusive and meaningful understanding of trauma in their congregational caregiving.
Review Quotes
"The strength of this volume lies in its insistence on the vitality of diverse communities responding to trauma. The authors resist the pathologizing narratives often associated with trauma, powerfully advocating for communities that are frequently overlooked in trauma literature. These unique essays showcase pastoral theologians as attentive educators and advocates for healing justice. Serving as a model for intercultural literacy, they make excellent additions to a variety of theological courses." --Shelly Rambo, associate professor of theology, Boston University
"Reframing Trauma is a deeply thoughtful and compassionate exploration of how we understand and experience trauma. M. Jan Holton and Jill L. Snodgrass invite us to see suffering through a psychospiritual lens, offering insight and genuine hope for healing and growth. This book speaks to the heart and mind and is a must-read for those seeking to navigate the complexities of human distress with grace and wisdom." --John Swinton, professor in practical theology and pastoral care, School of Divinity, History and Philosophy, King's College University of Aberdeen
"While I have long been skeptical of superficial applications of the concept of post-traumatic growth, I find in this book a sophisticated understanding of the coexistence of traumatic suffering with resilience. From a psychoanalytic perspective, I appreciate this as a move from unconscious splitting to greater possibilities for wholeness. By widening the lens in this approach to trauma beyond a purely medicalized conception, and beyond Western and Christian notions of trauma and healing, the authors offer an expanded and more contextualized understanding of how persons navigate both trauma and healing. By framing stress and trauma as a continuum, this volume invites readers to expand their thinking about how to address trauma, with implications for practice, in a world where global injustice and climate crisis have created a baseline of existential anxiety for us all." --Pamela Cooper-White, Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor Emerita of Psychology and Religion, and dean and vice president emerita for academic affairs, Union Theological Seminary