Trauma, Loss, and Resilience
How people remember and respond to stress and trauma has garnered much attention and controversy in the field of psychology. These debates have reached well beyond therapists' offices and academic departments, figuring prominently in the media, policy debates, and judicial decisions. Through a review of theory, research, and clinical case reports, this course aims to provide a nuanced examination of traumatic stress research. The course will begin with a historical exploration of how the mental-health community has defined and treated trauma over the past century, including the sociocultural forces that shaped these definitions and interventions. We will also delve into more current issues involving trauma, specifically post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Readings will survey a range of topics, drawing on cognitive, developmental, neuroscientific, and psychoanalytic perspectives. We will discuss and question: What are the impacts of stress and trauma across the lifespan? How is trauma processed cognitively, and what brain regions are involved in trauma-related distress? What is the impact of trauma and loss on mental and physical health? What is an appropriate response to trauma, and who decides? Are there outcomes to stress and trauma other than distress? Is memory for trauma special? Are horrific experiences indelibly fixed in a victim’s memory, or does the mind protect itself by banishing traumatic memories from consciousness? How do those working in the field of traumatic stress cope with secondary exposure? Why are some people able to experience repeated exposure to trauma without significant impairment? Conference work will offer students the opportunity to apply ongoing issues in trauma and resilience research to a wide range of disciplines, including science, law, medicine, art, media, politics, and ethics.
Psychology courses
- Art and Visual Perception
- First-Year Studies: Health, Illness, and Medicine in a Multicultural Context: A Service Learning Course
- First-Year Studies: Synapse to Self: Neuroscience of Self-Identity
- Framing the Body: The Intersection of Psychology and Medicine
- Global Child Development
- Home and Other Figments: Immigration, Exile, and Uprootedness
- Individualism and/or Diversity Reconsidered
- Intersections of Multiple Identities
- Language Research Seminar
- Mindfulness: Neuroscientific and Psychological Perspectives
- Moral Development
- Narrative Neuropsychology
- Parents and Peers in Children’s Lives
- Pathways of Development: Psychopathology and Other Challenges to the Developmental Process
- Personality Development
- Play in Developmental and Cultural Context
- Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy and Practice
- Principles of Psychology: Brains, Minds and Bodies
- Psychology of Religious Experience
- Sex is not a Natural Act: Social Science Explorations of Human Sexuality
- Telling One’s Story: Narratives of Development and Life Experience
- The Changing Self: Narratives of Personal Transformation
- The Developing Child: Perspectives from Experience, Observation, and Theory
- The Empathic Attitude
- The Neurobiology of Mental Health
- Theories of Development
- The Talking Cure: The Restoration of Freedom
- Trauma, Loss, and Resilience