Psychoanalysis in China 2018
DOI: 10.4324/9780429478826-4
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China—a traumatised country? The aftermath of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) for the individual and for society

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…China has suffered almost continuous national trauma for the last 150 or more years, leading Plaenkers (2011Plaenkers ( , 2013 to suggest that it should be considered a traumatized society. The last years of the Qing Dynasty, from the midnineteenth to early twentieth century, were traumatic because of European invasions around the Opium Wars.…”
Section: Cultural and Individual Traumamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…China has suffered almost continuous national trauma for the last 150 or more years, leading Plaenkers (2011Plaenkers ( , 2013 to suggest that it should be considered a traumatized society. The last years of the Qing Dynasty, from the midnineteenth to early twentieth century, were traumatic because of European invasions around the Opium Wars.…”
Section: Cultural and Individual Traumamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been estimated something like 70 million people died in the era of Mao's rule despite the fact that China was never in a serious war in this period (Jung Chang & Halliday, 2005). Tomas Plaenkers and his colleagues at Frankfurt's Sigmund Freud Institute have conducted a pilot research project that shows what we also see in almost every clinical encounter in China: National trauma has an individual face (Plaenkers, 2011(Plaenkers, , 2013.…”
Section: Cultural and Individual Traumamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an earlier publication on Chinese trauma, Plaenkers () wrote that Mao, who held sway over one‐fourth of the world's population, was responsible for the largest famine in human history between 1958 and 1962, when approximately 35,000,000 to 45,000,000 people died. Then the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, resulting in mass mortality (the exact number of deaths is unknown), chaos in the near elimination of professional and leadership classes, and annihilation of much of China's traditional culture.…”
Section: The History and Influence Of Trauma In Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore the Chinese also named their country “Zhongguo,” meaning “the middle kingdom.” They have long lost this middle. Recovering the language of a history that has been so traumatic for so many could enable China with its long history of advanced civilisation to arise once again as “the middle kingdom.” [, p. 42]…”
Section: The History and Influence Of Trauma In Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
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