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How trauma became a weapon in the culture wars, by the acclaimed author of Virtue Hoarders
What happens when an idea born of genuine suffering is weaponized as a tool of social control? Traumatized is the story of how shell shock became PTSD, how Oprah turned pain into profit, and how “authenticity” became the ultimate brand. It is a history of surveillance capitalism’s greatest coup: convincing us that wounds define us and that accommodating each other’s trauma is more important than challenging the powerful.
Catherine Liu delivers an unflinching diagnosis of our current crisis, rooted as it is in the collapse of liberal politics, the ascendance of performance fragility, and the rise of emotional display as a surrogate for political action. Sharp, provocative, and urgently necessary, Traumatized argues that we must reject a politics of permanent victimhood since it destroys solidarity and leaves us defenseless against the systems that cause real harm.
Catherine Liu is one the most courageous, brilliant, and radical thinkers in America today. In elegant, scorching, and completely unapologetic prose, Liu demonstrates how therapeutic models of selfhood have been weaponized as tools of class domination, leaving the left in a state of political crisis.
Historically rooted, intellectually provocative, highly recommended.
At a time when pain and anguish are regarded as ‘lived truth,’ if not the foundational texts of our very selves, Liu has the insight and critical analysis to back up, take a look around, and investigate trauma in a way that really asks the question: Who hurt you?
Resuscitating the legacy of critical theory, Liu demonstrates how the turn to ‘trauma’ results in our paralysis in the face of forces that undermine democracy and destroy our humanity.
Liu makes a compelling case that turning the traumatically personal political is keeping us from addressing the systemic issues that make life in America so hard and—dare I say it—traumatic.
Liu, profoundly and powerfully, takes on the worldwide epidemic of trauma scripts. Her insights, honesty, passion, and courage shine throughout this important book.
Traumatized should be essential reading for social workers, psychotherapists, and anyone concerned with how suffering, politics, and solidarity are constructed contemporarily.
In her follow-up to 2021’s Virtue Hoarders, Catherine Liu charts the rise of trauma as a 'tool of social control,' which she argues is surveillance capitalism’s greatest coup. I’m always seated for a sharp breakdown of any of the many ways powerful people turn the masses against each other (and what we masses can do about it).