'This fine collection of essays addresses the fundamental human experience of mourning. The volume ranges across disciplines, geographies, and histories, offering the reader challenges, surprises and often hope. In its inclusivity and scope, it is more than merely a welcome addition to a field of study, but opens up new ways of thinking about the possibilities of surviving the unbearable.'- Dr Julia Borossa, Associate Professor, Director of the Centre for Psychoanalysis, Middlesex University, Group Analyst'The illuminating cases presented in this volume outline the psychosocial consequences of political trauma under varying historical conditions, emphasising how individuals, groups, and entire societies respond to the hurts and pains lingering in the tormented aftermath of collective violence and personal violation. A poignant brilliance emerges out of the analytical sorrow communicated through the care-filled depictions of collective mourning and often its failures or inadequacies across cultures. This book helps to define the theoretical basis for further development of comparative mourning and bereavement studies.'- Professor Edward Weisband, Edward S. Diggs Endowed Chair in the Social Sciences, Department of Political Science, Virginia Tech'This book is the fruit of an innovative blending of psychoanalysis and politics, defying academic orthodoxy by creating a series of conferences on relevant social issues, inviting psychoanalysts, political scientists, and others to think together, crossing the boundaries of their discipline. Today, "Shared Traumas, Silent Loss, Public and Private Mourning" not only confront us daily through the physical violence of terrorist attacks but also collective political traumas such as Brexit and the election of Donald Trump. Whether we like it or not, our paradigm of the world has become globalised and traumatic events are now shared as never before. This inspiring collection of essays enriches our knowledge through past examples, and most importantly challenges us about our world today.'- Kathleen Kelley-Laine, Psychoanalyst, Societe Psychanalytique de Paris, France 'Auestad's important conference series Psychoanalysis and Politics, soon to celebrate ten years of existence, here delivers its most significant book to date. Shared Traumas, Silent Loss, Public and Private Mourning investigates a broad range of topics including memorial public art, war games, sex slaves, and political drama. The contemporary political situation has often been understood in terms of mourning, as a response to the loss of political ideals, of real and imagined communities, thus making trauma and mourning into key affects for an understanding of modernity. Although there is an emphasis on understanding mourning and its consequences from the post-Holocaust point of view, the book also engages with the effects of colonialism in its other, more encompassing dimensions outside of Europe. This book is thus situated at the crossroads of a more closely knit "European" identity and its opening onto a more global scene that it has always depended on but too rarely acknowledged.'- Dr Nicholas Smith, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, Sodertorn University, Stockholm