2021
DOI: 10.1177/02632764211039279
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Moral Injury and the Psyche of Counterinsurgency

Abstract: Public and clinical interest in a condition called moral injury – psychological distress resembling posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) but said to originate from shame, guilt, or transgression in war experience – explicitly links moral, psychological, and political dimensions of war-making in the context of the US’s post-9/11 wars. This article critically analyzes moral injury’s politics of psychological suffering, which tends to treat morality as a universal and apolitical terrain, by reading it against sol… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(63 reference statements)
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“…A study on morally injurious events during military missions demonstrates that when conflicts at the political level are not resolved (or only ostensibly through compromises), they will engender moral dilemmas for soldiers on the ground (Molendijk, 2019 ). Consequently, soldiers may develop feelings of abandonment and betrayal by the political leadership (Bica, 1999 ; Lifton, 1973 ; K. MacLeish, 2021 ; Molendijk, 2019 ). Regarding society as a whole, soldiers have reported resentment and alienation because of feeling misunderstood by civilians (Ferrajão & Aragão Oliveira, 2016 ; Worthen & Ahern, 2014 ).…”
Section: Results: Dimensions Of Moral Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A study on morally injurious events during military missions demonstrates that when conflicts at the political level are not resolved (or only ostensibly through compromises), they will engender moral dilemmas for soldiers on the ground (Molendijk, 2019 ). Consequently, soldiers may develop feelings of abandonment and betrayal by the political leadership (Bica, 1999 ; Lifton, 1973 ; K. MacLeish, 2021 ; Molendijk, 2019 ). Regarding society as a whole, soldiers have reported resentment and alienation because of feeling misunderstood by civilians (Ferrajão & Aragão Oliveira, 2016 ; Worthen & Ahern, 2014 ).…”
Section: Results: Dimensions Of Moral Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding society as a whole, soldiers have reported resentment and alienation because of feeling misunderstood by civilians (Ferrajão & Aragão Oliveira, 2016 ; Worthen & Ahern, 2014 ). Soldiers have said to perceive both the negative image of perpetrator and positive representations such as victim and hero as misrecognition (Farnsworth, 2014 ; Molendijk, 2018a ; see also, K. MacLeish, 2021 ). This indicates that distorting caricatures in societal discourses may be perceived as doing injustice to the soldiers’ experience.…”
Section: Results: Dimensions Of Moral Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This view informs much of the shame we will describe in this article and accounts for survivors' attempts to manage it, including their avoidance of relationships and manifestations of irritability. However, in general, psychological research on moral injury has not tracked individual differences in personally salient morals or people's 'local moral worlds' (see Kleinman 1999;MacLeish 2021;Mattingly 2014;Molendijk, Kramer, and Verwiej 2018). It thus risks overlooking the intersectional, culturally distinct factors that constitute shame, such as the particular factors that inform veteran men's experience of masculinity as well as the lived experience of identifying and being seen as culturally, ethnically, or racially different.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%