English

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Etymology

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From trauma +‎ core.

Noun

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traumacore (plural not attested)

  1. (countable, psychology) A repressed memory of an event that when triggered becomes the primary reason for feeling traumatized.
    • 1999, Pynchon Notes - Issues 42-43, page 246:
      In an immobilization taken up in Kafka's story by the literal fixation of the victim to the bed, the traumacore fixates the victim of trauma to a specific temporal slot in its development (the traumatime and the traumasite), to which it returns, against its conscious will, freezing again and again into a traumatized tableau vivant.
    • 2001, American Studies in Scandinavia - Volumes 33-34, page 134:
      According to Berressem, the ultimate 'traumacore' in Pynchon's poetics is the fall into language, subjectivity and culture, a fall that entails the realization of death, not face to face but rather in the face of the letter.
    • 2003, Wolfram Mauser, Joachim Pfeiffer, Trauer, page 91:
      The traumacore functions, therefore, as an always already excluded, crossed out origin, such as the event of my own birth.
    • 2005, Niran Abbas, Mapping Michel Serres, page 63:
      While the infinitely "small" time of the clinamen designates for Lacan the time of the "traumacore," it designates for Lucretius the birth of complexity.
  2. (uncountable) A genre of Internet art where cutesy, childish visuals are juxtaposed with the anguish of trauma and abuse.
    Hypernym: ventcore