traumascape

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

trauma +‎ -scape, coined by Maria M. Tumarkin.

Noun[edit]

traumascape (plural traumascapes)

  1. A landscape, real or figurative, defined by the traumatic events that have occurred there.
    • 2005, Maria M. Tumarkin, Traumascapes: The Power and Fate of Places Transformed by Tragedy:
      New York's latest traumascape was a site every bit as extraordinary as its counterpart in Stalinist Moscow. Not simply a monstrous and spectacular eyesore, it was a place of immense power, a vortex sucking everything into itself.
    • 2007, Magali Compan, Katarzyna Pieprzak, Land and Landscape in Francographic Literature:
      In his short story, the Vietnam War becomes an amalgam of all modern wars and genocides and Vietnam itself an extended traumascape.
    • 2018, Dinesh Bhugra, Kamaldeep Bhui, Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry, page 382:
      In other words, most (in)dependent and intervening variables in current stress models are heavily influenced by the work of culture. The individual level of perceiving and dealing with threats interacts with the collective level of the traumascape.