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October 22, 2007

Heroes at Home: Emory University Research Project on PTSD

Quilt[Editor's note: If this post is a little bit mystifying, it's only because the specifics of this project are a little unclear.]

The Emory Center for Myth and Ritual in American Life ("MARIAL") near Atlanta, Georgia, has a research project underway called Heroes at Home?: Experiences of Combat Trauma among Returning Veterans and Their Families

According to the website,

This research uses a combination of ethnographic and epidemiological methods to consider lived experiences of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) among Anglo-American, Mexican-American, and African-American male veterans of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. F ieldwork in San Antonio, Texas will explore how PTSD-diagnosed male veterans and their families understand and respond to trauma-related mental illness, as well as how PTSD illness experiences are shaped by individual and family members’ met and unmet expectations of veterans’ military service and performance of adult male roles within the family, particularly as related to work and economic providership. Interviews and participant observation conducted in clinical, family, and community settings will consider how veterans and their families situate lived experiences of PTSD, combat trauma, and personal and family well-being in the context of lay and clinical ethnopsychiatries around PTSD, expectations and experiences of military service in the “War on Terror,” and cultural norms for successfully functioning as an adult male. Findings will provide insight into individual- and family-level negotiations around illness, work, and gender roles; the negotiation of explanatory models of illness within pluralist cultural settings; and the ways in which cultural representations of war and PTSD are adopted, resisted, and lived out by a multiethnic group of participants.

By examining how patterns of work and socioeconomic status shape the experience of individuals and families dealing with combat-related PTSD, this research contributes to research on working families already ongoing at the MARIAL Center. The planned study will elaborate a multifaceted and diachronic view of how work is done and made sense of within families whose expectations and practices have been shaped by past military work, who have suffered the disruptions of long-term deployment, and whose well-being remains enduringly altered as a result.

Erin Finley, from the Department of Anthropology at Emory University, seems to be conducting the  research study.  Her contact information is available on the website, linked here.

Blogged Reports from Brown Conference

Rhode_island_flag For those of you who like me are crying salty tears about missing what sounds like it was a stupendous conference at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island over the weekend, here are a couple of first-person reports from the same blogger about what the conference was like to attend. It really sounds fantastic.  I still wish I'd been able to go.  (Sigh.)  (The conference was on first person narratives coming back from the war in Afghanistan and Iraq, featuring many of the authors who wrote them, as well as interested others.)

First person report about the events of the first day; first person report about the events of the second day.  (Referencing those blog posts here does not imply an endorsement of the rest of the blog's contents -- I'm particularly interested in, as I hope you would be, the impressions from going to that conference itself.)

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The_war_tapesIf you've never seen "The War Tapes," by Deborah Scranton, one of the featured speakers at the conference, now might be a good time to try to find it on DVD.  Scranton is a filmmaker who put video cameras in the hands of various New Hampshire National Guard members, as the war in Iraq was beginning, and asked them to record what they saw, with the permission of their superiors.  What came back was some interesting footage, which she put together into a documentary that covers how three "regular guys" go to Iraq and get changed by the experience.  I saw the film at one of its first screenings on Cape Cod last year, met one of the featured participants, Sgt. Steve Pink, and really was impressed.  Apparently Scranton was a live wire at the conference, and one of it's most interesting participants.  (Here's a link to Scranton's blog, which includes a link to buying the DVD.) (The movie has since gone on to win a number of awards, including "Best Documentary," Tribeca Film Festival, and "Best International Documentary," BritDoc Festival.)

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