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Article
Perpetual War with the Brother Nation: An Analysis of Ukrainian Veterans, Cultural Identity and Historical Trauma
Journal of War and Culture Studies (2018)
  • Roberto Cancio, Loyola Marymount University
  • Anastasiia Kuptsevych-Timmer, University of Miami
  • Marisa Omori, University of Miami
Abstract
Understanding historical and cultural dimensions of pain is an area relatively understudied by scholars. This is particularly the case for those affected by war, such as combat veterans. Using in-depth interviews, this study analyses interpretations of the pain by Ukrainian combat veterans serving in the current war in the east of Ukraine. Our findings reveal two core themes that shape meanings of pain: Ukrainian cultural identity and historical trauma. Being Ukrainian is a salient construct, shaped by respondents’ identities as soldiers, nationality, and the understanding of pain as an integral part of Ukrainian soldiers’ identity. Historical trauma is experienced more broadly as a nation and is drawn from shared experiences of pain that transcend through history, as Ukraine has wavered between legitimacy as a sovereign state and colony of a ‘brother-nation’ to Russia.
Keywords
  • Ukrainian-Russian War,
  • veterans,
  • cultural identity,
  • historical trauma,
  • pain,
  • grounded theory,
  • symbolic interactionism
Publication Date
December 17, 2018
DOI
10.1080/17526272.2018.1558536
Citation Information
Roberto Cancio, Anastasiia Kuptsevych-Timmer and Marisa Omori. "Perpetual War with the Brother Nation: An Analysis of Ukrainian Veterans, Cultural Identity and Historical Trauma" Journal of War and Culture Studies (2018) p. 1 - 18
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marisa-omori/4/