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How to Be After: War, Trauma and Mig...
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Lacey, Caroline.
How to Be After: War, Trauma and Migration of the Salvadoran Diaspora.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
書名/作者:
How to Be After: War, Trauma and Migration of the Salvadoran Diaspora.
作者:
Lacey, Caroline.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, , 2015
面頁冊數:
178 p.
附註:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 54-05.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International54-05(E).
標題:
Journalism.
標題:
Multimedia communications.
標題:
Cultural anthropology.
ISBN:
9781321841541
摘要、提要註:
This thesis looks for the reverberations of El Salvador's civil war (1980--1992) within the Salvadoran Diaspora in Washington, D.C. It examines the complexities of repression and marginalization with the Salvadoran psyche following the failures of the post-war truth and reconciliation process. The persistence of grief and trauma, of being stuck in a state of limbo---between nations, time and memory---are painfully present in the immigrant community. Over a fifth of El Salvador's population lives in the United States, with over 500,000 living in D.C. Forced from their homes by rampant violence, and now living in a country that denies their human rights grievances, the lack of refugee status cripples healing. Presented as a lens-based documentary project, archival video and collaborators' personal artifacts, the project locates the paradoxes and pain within the Salvadoran community in the aftermath of war and migration.
How to Be After: War, Trauma and Migration of the Salvadoran Diaspora.
Lacey, Caroline.
How to Be After: War, Trauma and Migration of the Salvadoran Diaspora.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2015 - 178 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 54-05.
Thesis (M.A.)--The George Washington University, 2015.
This thesis looks for the reverberations of El Salvador's civil war (1980--1992) within the Salvadoran Diaspora in Washington, D.C. It examines the complexities of repression and marginalization with the Salvadoran psyche following the failures of the post-war truth and reconciliation process. The persistence of grief and trauma, of being stuck in a state of limbo---between nations, time and memory---are painfully present in the immigrant community. Over a fifth of El Salvador's population lives in the United States, with over 500,000 living in D.C. Forced from their homes by rampant violence, and now living in a country that denies their human rights grievances, the lack of refugee status cripples healing. Presented as a lens-based documentary project, archival video and collaborators' personal artifacts, the project locates the paradoxes and pain within the Salvadoran community in the aftermath of war and migration.
ISBN: 9781321841541Subjects--Topical Terms:
181510
Journalism.
How to Be After: War, Trauma and Migration of the Salvadoran Diaspora.
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