Trauma does not merely reside in memory – it is structured into space, embedded in material and cinematic form. The Brutalist (2024) does not narrate trauma directly but inscribes it into spatial and visual architecture, constructing trauma as a superpositional phenomenon – both present and unspoken, remembered yet inaccessible. This paper introduces a dual-layered superpositional model, tracing trauma’s displacement across time and space while interrogating the film’s refusal of cathartic healing. The temporal displacement layer examines how trauma remains suspended: neither fully past nor fully present. The film fractures time through ambiguous chronology, elliptical disclosure, and displaced agency, enacting trauma’s delayed return. The spatial displacement layer advances a critical innovation: trauma is not merely remembered but materially embedded. Through mise-en-scène, spatial framing, and architecture, The Brutalist externalizes trauma into built environments, ensuring its structural persistence. The film also foregrounds cinema’s archival function as a spatial displacement technique, extending trauma beyond narration into filmic space itself. Ultimately, The Brutalist expands trauma theory beyond individual psychology, centering its structural, material, and historical dimensions. In doing so, the film does not simply depict trauma – it becomes an archive, preserving trauma’s continuing rupture as an enduring force.
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Teodora Crișan-Matcăbojă
Babeș-Bolyai University
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Teodora Crișan-Matcăbojă (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68dd89e6fe798ba2fc498283 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.37130/drhvol6iss1pp101-122
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