Warriors between Worlds: Moral Injury and Identities in Crisis

Warriors between Worlds: Moral Injury and Identities in Crisis

Warriors between Worlds: Moral Injury and Identities in Crisis

Warriors between Worlds: Moral Injury and Identities in Crisis

Paperback

$44.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

The concept of moral injury emerged in the past decade as a way to understand how traumatic levels of moral emotions generate moral anguish experienced by some military service members. Interdisciplinary research on moral injury has included clinical psychologists (Litz et al., 2009; Drescher et al., 2011), theologians (Brock & Lettini, 2012; Graham, 2017), ethicists (Kinghorn, 2012), and philosophers (Sherman, 2015). This project articulates a new key concept—moral orienting systems— a dynamic matrix of meaningful values, beliefs, behaviors, and relationships learned and changed over time and through formative experiences and relationships such as family of origin, religious and other significant communities, mentors, and teachers. Military recruit training reengineers pre-existing moral orienting systems and indoctrinates a military moral orienting system designed to support functioning within the military context and the demands of the high-stress environment of combat, including immediate responses to perceived threat. This military moral orienting system includes new values and beliefs, new behaviors, and new meaningful relationships. Recognizing the profound impact of military recruit training, this project challenges dominant notions of post-deployment reentry and reintegration, and formulates a new paradigm for first, understanding the generative circumstances of ongoing moral stress that include moral emotions like guilt, shame, disgust, and contempt, and, second, for responding to such human suffering through compassionate care and comprehensive restorative support. This project calls for more effective participation of religious communities in the reentry and reintegration process and for a military-wide post-deployment reentry program comparable to the encompassing physio-psycho-spiritual-social transformative intensity experienced in recruit-training boot camp.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498554619
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 07/06/2021
Series: Emerging Perspectives in Pastoral Theology and Care
Pages: 130
Sales rank: 693,341
Product dimensions: 6.06(w) x 8.63(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Zachary Moon is assistant professor of practical theology at Chicago Theological Seminary and author of Coming Home: Ministry That Matters with Veterans and Military Families.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword

1. Introduction

2. Diagnosing Moral Injury

3. Moral Orienting Systems

4. Moral Mutations

5. First Life

6. In The Military Now

7. (Re)Turning Warriors

8. Conclusion

References

About the Author

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews