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Sebastian Junger's Tribe: On Homecoming And Belonging

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Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is typically used to categorize Veterans. The common population neglects to submit survivors of sexual abuse in their childhood in the term of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD. Rather these survivors ridden with trauma from their abuse are swept under the carpet and kept out of conversation. It is as if that one assumes if they don’t talk about these transgressions, they will cease to exist altogether. In Sebastian Junger’s Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging, he provocatively insists to categorize individuals into communities. Junger submits that returning to the ideal of communities of like-minded people with similar experiences will promote a connection of better understanding throughout modern society. …show more content…

It could be argued that he shouldn’t be asked to document the struggles of a trauma he did not endure. This logic indicates that Junger’s novel should have examined solely the effects of PTSD on veterans and those involved in War time. Throughout the novel, he pinpoints specific communities and people that are completely different from him who have stories that do not align with his own in the slightest. Adding in more information on the community that has the most difficulty in finding each other, CSTS, would have strengthened his argument and raised conversation for any who read his novel. He interviewed well over one hundred people for this book and one of them could have easily been a survivor of Childhood Sexual Abuse. This book is about community. How are we to uphold this standard if we make a direct choice to silence this tribe? Their community is recognized, but what of their plight do we know now thanks to this novel? CSTS don’t feel like they belong. A novel with the subtitle “On Homecoming and Belonging,” should have taken the opportunity to supply CSTS with the community they cry for. To prove his thesis, he ought to have included CSTS, one of the most oppressed, forgotten, and silenced tribes because they have never felt as though they belong anywhere or will be accepted

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