dc.description.abstract | Since the fall of my junior year here at Miami, I have spent much of my time devoted to
studying the topic of shell shock in the United States, specifically examining the ways in which
newspapers facilitated the spread of information— and misinformation— about the diagnosis
during the World War I years. My research journey began in Dr. Andrew Offenburger’s course
“Raiders of the Lost Archive”, where we were tasked with locating a research topic of our choice
using the online newspaper repository Chronicling America as our main source base. Fascinated
by the idea of how wars can produce a sense of collective national trauma— a topic introduced
to me in the “History of the World Wars” course I took the previous year with Dr. Stephen
Norris— I decided to explore the relationship between the collective trauma of modern warfare
and the psychological trauma of shell shock. This project has since evolved into my
undergraduate thesis for the History Honors Program, titled “Documenting Shell Shock:
Developments in the Public Perception of Psychological Trauma in the United States,
1915-1922.” The thesis provides a chronological examination of shell shock in the United States
through newspapers, beginning with the earliest reports out of Great Britain in 1915 and
continuing into the interwar period to examine the lasting effects of wartime trauma on American
recovery efforts. The first two chapters are included in my submission. | en_US |