Trauma Theory Literary Critics — Comparative Structural Chart (Memory, Wound, Representation, and the Limits of Narrative)

Trauma theory in literary criticism investigates how extreme experiences—war, genocide, violence, displacement, and catastrophe—are registered in language as fragmentation, repetition, silence, and narrative rupture. It is grounded in psychoanalysis, historiography, and cultural memory studies.


1. CATHY CARUTH — Trauma as Belated Experience

DimensionPosition
Core focusPsychological and narrative structure of trauma
OrientationFoundational trauma theory (psychoanalytic)
Key conceptBelatedness (Nachträglichkeit)
View of traumaNot fully experienced in the moment
MethodPsychoanalytic reading of literature and testimony
Key worksUnclaimed Experience
Narrative modelDelayed return of the traumatic event
Language modelIndirect, fragmented representation
Signature traitTrauma resists immediate comprehension

Core structure:

Event → repression → delay → return of memory


2. DOMINICK LA CAPRA — Acting Out vs Working Through

DimensionPosition
Core focusHistorical trauma and ethical memory
OrientationHistoriographic trauma theory
Key conceptActing out vs working through
View of traumaRepetitive psychological return vs critical processing
MethodHistorical-psychoanalytic analysis
Key worksWriting History, Writing Trauma
Narrative modelEthical distinction in memory practices
Language modelTestimony and critical reflection
Signature traitEthical recovery through narration

Core structure:

Trauma → repetition → processing → ethical resolution


3. SHOSHANA FELMAN — Testimony and the Crisis of Witnessing

DimensionPosition
Core focusTestimony, literature, and witnessing trauma
OrientationPsychoanalytic + literary theory
Key conceptCrisis of testimony
View of traumaBreaks language and knowledge systems
MethodLiterary-psychoanalytic reading
Key worksTestimony: Crises of Witnessing
Narrative modelBroken narrative of witness accounts
Language modelIncomplete and fractured speech
Signature traitLiterature as witness to the unspeakable

Core structure:

Event → witnessing → language failure → testimony


4. DORI LAUB — Witness, Memory, and Holocaust Testimony

DimensionPosition
Core focusSurvivor testimony and memory formation
OrientationClinical + literary trauma theory
Key conceptSecondary witnessing
View of traumaRequires relational articulation
MethodPsychoanalytic listening to testimony
Key worksTestimony: Crises of Witnessing
Narrative modelCo-constructed memory narrative
Language modelFragmented survivor speech
Signature traitListening as ethical reconstruction

Core structure:

Survivor → memory → witness → reconstructed narrative


5. RUTH GINSBURG — Trauma, Memory, and Feminist Testimony

DimensionPosition
Core focusGendered trauma and cultural memory
OrientationFeminist trauma theory
Key conceptGendered witnessing
View of traumaStructurally gendered experience
MethodFeminist literary analysis
Key worksEssays on Holocaust and gender memory
Narrative modelGendered fragmentation of memory
Language modelSilenced or marginalized testimony
Signature traitTrauma shaped by gender structures

Core structure:

Violence → gendered memory → silencing → narrative recovery


6. KAI ERIKSON — Collective Trauma and Social Disruption

DimensionPosition
Core focusSocial and collective trauma
OrientationSociological trauma theory
Key conceptCollective trauma
View of traumaDisrupts community identity
MethodSociological field analysis
Key worksEverything in Its Path
Narrative modelCommunity breakdown narratives
Language modelSocial storytelling of rupture
Signature traitTrauma as social rather than individual

Core structure:

Disaster → social rupture → collective memory → identity shift


7. JOSHUA HIRSCH — Postmemory and Generational Trauma

DimensionPosition
Core focusSecond-generation trauma memory
OrientationCultural memory studies
Key conceptPostmemory
View of traumaInherited through imagination and narrative
MethodLiterary-cultural analysis
Key worksAfterimage
Narrative modelMemory transmitted across generations
Language modelMediated and reconstructed memory
Signature traitTrauma without direct experience

Core structure:

Past trauma → transmission → imagination → inherited memory


8. STRUCTURAL MAP OF TRAUMA THEORY

AxisDominant ModeThinkers
Belated traumaDelayed experienceCaruth
Ethical memoryWorking through traumaLa Capra
Testimony crisisLanguage breakdownFelman
WitnessingRelational memoryLaub
Gendered traumaFeminist memoryGinsburg
Collective traumaSocial disruptionErikson
PostmemoryGenerational inheritanceHirsch

CORE INTELLECTUAL STRUCTURE OF TRAUMA THEORY

Trauma theory redefines literature as:

A site where extreme experience resists direct representation and returns through fragmentation, repetition, and testimony

More precisely:

  • Trauma is delayed and not fully experienced (Caruth)
  • Memory oscillates between repetition and working through (La Capra)
  • Language breaks down in witnessing (Felman, Laub)
  • Trauma is social and collective, not only individual (Erikson)
  • It is transmitted across generations (Hirsch)

FINAL SYNTHESIS

Trauma theory critics collectively redefine literature as:

  • A medium of broken memory and fragmented narration
  • A space where experience exceeds language
  • A site of witnessing and ethical responsibility
  • A field where memory is delayed, inherited, and reconstructed
  • A structure shaped by silence, repetition, and narrative fracture

Deep structure:

Event → rupture → memory distortion → testimony → partial recovery