ABSTRACT This paper explores the ethical and political implications of trauma becoming the dominant frame in professional and cultural discourse. Although the term trauma has gained widespread use in clinical practice, education and public life, we argue that it risks flattening lived experience, relocating harm inside individuals and obscuring acts of violence, responsibility and resistance. Through a dialogical form, we examine what is lost when trauma replaces more specific words, such as rape, racism or violence and consider what alternative frames—story‐informed, justice‐informed and solidarity‐based—might make possible. Drawing on the work of Michael White, Kathie Crocket, David Newman, Angel Yuen, Vikki Reynolds, Alan Jenkins, Alan Wade, Jenny Snowdon, Loretta Pederson and others, we weave Jacques Derrida's concept of deconstruction with narrative practices, such as double listening, response‐based enquiry and documenting small pieces of justice. We argue that words are never neutral: they perform, they shape how responsibility is named and what accountability may come to require, and they influence who is seen or silenced. Our purpose was not to offer closure, but to open commitments and questions. We invite practitioners to resist the reduction of lives into trauma, to centre people's responses, values and acts of living, and to come alongside those whose stories call for clarity, dignity and justice.
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Natasha Bastion
Leah Esme Gillanders
Jenny Snowdon
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy
University of Waikato
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Bastion et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b4ada918185d8a398014d1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/anzf.70070
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