8 - 8:30 a.m.
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Breakfast
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9 - 9:15 a.m.
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Welcome
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9:15 - 10:30 a.m.
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CONTEXT II: TRAUMA DEFINITIONS AND DIMENSIONS
The Narrative of Emotional Injury
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Pete Hamill, Journalist and Author
The republic of trauma
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Elana Newman, McFarlin Chair of Psychology, University of Tulsa and Research Director, Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
Approach and avoidance in trauma narratives: Scientific and clinical perspectives
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Jonathan Shay, Psychiatrist and 2009 Omar N. Bradley Chair of Strategic Leadership at the US Army War College and Dickinson College
Fearless speech: The cycle of narrative communalization of trauma is political at every step!
Moderator: Stefanie Friedhoff, Conference Director, Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard
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9:45 - 10 a.m.
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Break
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10 - 11:30 a.m.
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CONTEXT III: TRAUMA AND THE INDIVIDUAL
Story After Silence
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Richard Mollica, Director, Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma and Professor, Harvard Medical School
The major elements of the trauma story as illustrated by the Cambodian-American Women’s Oral History Project
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Alexander McFarlane, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Adelaide, Australia
The failure of language to speak of trauma
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Julia Lieblich, Author and Professor of Journalism, Loyola University
Storytelling as an act of courage — lessons from a book project
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Esad Boškailo, Psychiatrist and Associate Director, Residency Training Program, Maricopa Integrated Health System, Mesa, Ariz.
Dancing with memories: Talking, and not talking, about my year in six Bosnian concentration camps
Moderator: Kalpana Jain, Global Health Journalist
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11:30 - 11:45 a.m.
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Break
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11:45 a.m. - 1 p.m.
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CONTEXT IV: TELLING THE STORIES OF TRAUMA
PART 1: TRUTH COMMISSIONS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE TESTIMONIES
Speaking Horror: Truth, Accountability and Reconciliation
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Seamus Kelters, Television Producer, BBC, Ireland and Author of “Lost Lives”
One book, a thousand victims, a million words — writing for a divided society
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Marc Cooper, Journalist, Author and Director, Annenberg Digital News, University of Southern California
Chile: From massacre to collective memory
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Anna Di Lellio, Lecturer in International Affairs, The New School, N.Y., and former Media Commissioner of Kosovo
Memory entrepreneurs and the dynamics of truth after conflict
Moderator: Jack Saul, Professor of Clinical Population and Family Health and Director, International Trauma Studies Program, Columbia University
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1 -2 p.m.
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Lunch
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2:45 - 5 p.m.
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CONTEXT V: TELLING THE STORIES OF TRAUMA
PART 2: ARTISTS
Artistic Expression: Trauma as Muse
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E. Ann Kaplan, Professor of English and Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, Stony Brook University
Can trauma be represented? Aesthetic strategies and ethical issues
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Rose Moss, Novelist
Blood and salt: Art and trauma
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Roya Hakakian, Poet and Journalist
Trauma? What trauma?
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Lori Grinker, Photographer and Author
Using the human body as the narrative device to portray the horrors of war
Moderator: Alicia Anstead, Editor, Inside Arts Magazine, and Freelance Journalist
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3:3 - 3:45 p.m.
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Break
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3:45 - 5:15 p.m. |
CONTEXT VI / PRACTICE I: TELLING THE STORIES OF TRAUMA
PART 3: JOURNALISTS
Documenting Violence: Investigating, Narrating and Challenging its Roots
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Julia Reynolds, Criminal Justice Reporter, The Monterey County Herald, Monterey, Calif.
Staying sane on the crime beat
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Rachel Dissell, Reporter, The Plain Dealer, Cleveland, Ohio
Covering Johanna: How a victim’s poems forced us to report her story in new ways
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Donna De Cesare, Photographer and Professor of Documentary Photography, University of Texas
Time for grace: How to establish collaboration with your protagonists when covering the impact of violence
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Luis Rodriguez, Journalist, Poet and Author
Hearts and hands: Creating community in violent times
Moderator: Margarita Martinez, Freelance Filmmaker and Journalist
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5:15 - 6:30 p.m. |
NETWORKING DINNER
Aiyara Thai Cuisine in Harvard Square
16-18 Eliot St., 2nd Floor, Cambridge, Mass.
www.aiyarathaicuisine.com; 617-497-8288
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