Semenova, Viktoria. Wounded memory and collective identity. In: Collective Memories in War, ed. by Elena Rozhdestvenskaya, V. Semenova, I. Tartakovskaya, K. Kosela. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2016. P. 125-139. Semenova, Viktoria. Wounded memory and collective identity. In: Collective Memories in War, ed. by Elena Rozhdestvenskaya, V. Semenova, I. Tartakovskaya, K. Kosela. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2016. P. 125-139.Глава из книги: Rozhdestvenskaya E., Semenova V., Tartakovskaya I., Kozela K. (eds). Collective Memories in War. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2016. 196 pp.ISBN 978-1-13-893548-8Posted on site: 10.12.15 AbstractThe chapter deals with the problem of trauma memory and its place in collectie identification process based on the veteran's narraties about Afghan war. The focus of the chapter mainly is devoted to the process of trauma narration: how and what is said or what are they silent about and how it is connected with collective identity and forms the boundaries between "we" and "they". It also turns to the connection between national memories and local memories in situation of unstable discrurse of local war.Авторы:Семенова В.В.Content (in russ)hide table of contentsshow table of contents Table of Contents Introduction Part I: Policy of History and Memory in Different Socio-Cultural Contexts 1.The Politics of History in Poland and Germany,Michał Łuczewski, Paulina Bednarz-Łuczewska, Tomasz Maślanka 2. Collective memory and its Cultural Antecedents in Russia,Michail Chernysh 3. Between Past and Present: The forming of views on history in the Czech Republic, Jiří Šubrt Part II: Cultural Memory Through School Textbooks 4. Discourse Analysis of School History Textbooks in Russia: Representation of the Afghanistan War, Elizaveta Polukhina, Alexander Malyugin 5. Between Memory and History - cultural memory in Polish school history books in the years 1945-2011. Analysis of three historical events, Ilona Gołębiewska 6. From Soviet to Ukrainian History Textbooks: Conflicts of interpretation, Oksana Danilenko Part III: Memory Representations in Social Space 7. The Space of Memory in Afghanistan War Museum,Irina Tartakovskaya, Elena Rozhdestvenskaya 8. War After War. The WWII memorials as memory sites - the case of Warsaw, Krystyna Ewa Siellawa-Kolbowska 9. Local Authorities, Memory Sites and the City Space, Anna Strelnikova Part IV: Narrating Memory 10. Wounded Memory and Collective Identity, Victoria Semenova 11. Afghan Veterans: Resonance of memory,Elena Rozhdestvenskaya 12. Veteran Web Sites as Mirrors for a Forgotten War, Irina Ksenofontova Part V: Memory and Gender 13. Constructing Masculinity from the War Spirit, Irina Tartakovskaya 14. Body, Memory and Emotions of Male Members of the Army with Direct Experience of War, Alexandrina Vanke