Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream
Abstract
:Psychological Resilience: Susceptibility as Weakness
She clutched the edge of her desk, desperate to hold on to something, worried that if she let go, she might lose her balance and fall down. Panic churned and rolled in her lungs, and no sooner did she open her mouth again than it spilled out and gushed forth, an underground stream eager to break loose from its confines. A sound both familiar and too strange to be her own surged from somewhere inside her—loud, hoarse, raw, wrong. She screamed.([1] p. 26)
- that it creates a resilience imperative that is inadequate to addressing complex forms of trauma;
- that it implicitly (and sometimes explicitly) pathologizes certain individuals or groups as susceptible or vulnerable in a manner that stigmatizes them as weak, incapable or mentally ill and that such designations function to warrant paternalistic forms of “protection” and control;
- that insofar as psychological discourse conceives of resilience as psychical strength, and of susceptibility as weakness, it carries out a form of genesis amnesia, ignoring the conditions and resources necessary to build resilience, particularly the material and social resources external to the psyche of autonomous individuals;
- that, concomitantly, practices and programs focused on building resilience largely ignore glaring inequalities in access to the material resources, environment, community involvement and social support on which building resilience depends;
- that in purveying resilience as a tool for warding off susceptibility or mitigating the effects of harm, this discourse risks shifting responsibility for harm onto victims, encouraging endurance over agency, forgiveness over justice, and acceptance over confronting and challenging systemic enablers of harm; and
- that the discourse of resilience largely overlooks the fact that susceptibility denotes, not an incapacity, but a suite of capabilities: of taking, receiving, being affected by, or experiencing something, including the good, the salutary, and the true23.
Ecological Resilience: Susceptibility as Strength
Under and above the ground, we trees communicate all the time. We share not only water and nutrients, but also essential information. Although we have to compete for resources sometimes, we are good at protecting and supporting each other. … Defoliated by the wind, scorched by the sun, attacked by insects, threatened by wildfires, we have to work together. … We remain connected across entire swathes of land, sending chemical signals through the air and across our shared mycorrhizal networks.([1] p. 99)
Life below the surface, contrary to what most people think, is bursting with activity. A handful of soil contains more microorganisms than there are people in the world. Packed with bacteria, fungi, archaea, algae and those wriggly earthworms … all working toward converting organic material into nutrients on which we plants gratefully feed and thrive, the earth is complicated, resilient, generous.([1] p. 80)
is that humans deliberately avoid learning more about us, maybe because they sense, at some primordial level, that what they find out might be unsettling. Would they wish to know, for instance, that trees can adapt and change their behavior with purpose, and if this is true, perhaps one does not necessarily depend on a brain for intelligence? Would they be pleased to discover that by sending signals through a network of latticed fungi buried in the soil, trees can warn their neighbors about dangers ahead? … Or that many plants, when threatened, attacked or cut, can produce ethylene, which works like a type of anesthetic, and this chemical release has been described by researchers as akin to hearing stressed plants screaming?([1] pp. 44–45)
Towards a Politics of Susceptibility
Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1. | |
2. | The island evoked in Shafak’s title is Cyprus, a land “slashed through the heart” ([1] p. 11) as the fig tree puts it, by its partition into Greek and Turkish territories (η Κύπρος/Kibris). Shifting both geographically and temporally, the narrative moves between a present in which Ada, her father Kostas and the fig tree have lived in London in a home “engulfed in a miasma of grief” ([1] p. 11) since the death of Ada’s mother Defne and a Cypriot past that remains devastatingly present for Kostas and deeply engraved in the body of the fig tree but about which Ada knows little except the sense that she has inherited “an intangible and immeasurable sorrow” ([1] p. 18). On the history of divided Cyprus, see Papadakis [3], Ker-Lindsay [4], and Stevenson and Stevenson [5]. |
3. | |
4. | For recent work, see Vassallo, Edwards et al. [12], Harms [13], Harris, Brett et. al. [14], Renda, Vassallo et. al. [15], Moore and Woodcock [16], Mucci [17], Yang, Zhou et al. [18], Cohen, Eshel et al. [19], Bain and Lunde [20], Fang, Lu et al. [21], Geçdi and Tanriverdi [22], Richardson [23], Pashak, Tunstull et al. [24], APA [25,26,27], and Center on the Developing Child [28]. |
5. | |
6. | |
7. | |
8. | |
9. | See Belsky and Pluess [46]. |
10. | See Vassallo, Edwards et al. [13], Harms [14], Harris, Brett et al. [15], Renda, Vassallo et al. [16], Moore and Woodcock [17], Mucci [18], Yang, Zhou et al. [19], Cohen, Eshel et al. [20] Bain and Lunde [21], Fang, Lu et al. [22], Geçdi and Tanriverdi [23], Richardson [24] Pashak, Tunstull et al. [25], APA [26,27,28], and Center on the Developing Child [29]. |
11. | See Goleman [47]. |
12. | While psychologists with legitimate expertise should not be held accountable for the ways in which their thought is misrepresented, neither can a cultural critique dismiss the extraordinary impact of the popularized, truncated and corrupted versions of these ideas that are widely disseminated in digital and social media environments where complex thought is algorithmically discouraged and claims to expertise are unregulated, and that immeasurably augment the force of the “resilience imperative” that, I am arguing, Ada’s scream resists. For a sampling of mainstreamed versions of resilience, see Schiraldi [48], Patterson [49], Fostering Resilience [50], Spotify [51], TikTok [52], and X (Formerly Twitter) [53]. |
13. | |
14. | The complex trauma expressed in Ada’s scream is comprised of directly experienced events and an ongoing home life that is permeated by her parents’ traumatic symptoms: living with her mother’s depression and alcoholism, finding her mother unconscious, attempting to rescue her and dealing with her subsequent death and losing the close relationship she’s previously had with her father. Ada has also inherited a suite of traumas, the symptoms of which she has lived with since birth, without an understanding of their precipitating events: her parents’ traumatic experiences in the ethnic violence of 1970s Cyprus, their loss of family members, close friends and a child, the illicit nature of their relationship between a Turkish woman and a Greek man, their subsequent 25-year separation and the ongoing pain of Defne’s work as a forensic archaeologist for the Cypriot Commission for Missing People (CMP), locating bodies of the missing and reckoning with the bereaved. On the arguments for recognizing complex PTSD in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), see Mucci [18]. |
15. | Ada’s sensitivity and openness enable her intelligence and creativity and facilitate her ability to learn, but they also, as with all forms of susceptibility, entail risk. See discussion below; Belsky and Pluess [46], Petheridge [41], and Anderson [38]. The pedagogical questions raised by this scene—in which a classroom fails to sustain one of its members through misunderstanding rather than malice—merit further consideration. |
16. | These passages are narrated in a style indirect libre that depicts Ada’s point-of-view not merely by relaying her immediate thoughts but also through a narrative voice that translates her inchoate thoughts and feelings and the unconscious matrix that subtends them. |
17. | |
18. | On the continued trajectory of the butterfly in Ada’s notebook, see [1] pp. 15–16, 25 and 137. On butterflies and Ada’s family history, see [1] pp. 127, 188, the chapter entitled “Butterflies and Bones” (pp. 212–224) and p. 261. For the story of the heirloom inlaid with butterflies, a gift from Kostas to Defne, and then from Aunt Meryem to Ada, see [1] pp. 77, 122 and 127. On the fig tree’s relationships with, and memories of, butterflies, see [1] pp. 3, 31, 33–34, 34, 150, 154, 155–157, 190 and 259–262. On Kostas and the ecological butterfly, see [1] pp. 122, 154, 158 and 217–220. |
19. | On postmemory, see Hirsch [62]. |
20. | |
21. | This position is in part consonant with Mucci’s advocacy for DSM recognition of “complex PTSD” that encompasses genetic, epigenetic and environmental sources of trauma and recognizes “the intersection[s] between developed or inherited psychological factors and external resilience” ([18] p. 12). |
22. | The critiques I am posing here, I wish to make clear, are theoretical and not therapeutic ones; I do not presume to make judgements about the clinical efficacy of any therapeutic tools or methods or of the value of resilience therein. |
23. | See Belsky and Pluess [46] for a significant exception to this contention. |
24. | |
25. | |
26. | See Shafak [1] p. 64 on the former and 217 on the latter. |
27. | My analysis of Ada’s experience is intended neither as a screed against social media nor as a denial that it may facilitate supportive and sometimes life-sustaining social contacts, that it can create and sustain communities and that it has played a crucial role in organizing collective action and social justice advocacy. However, it does recognize that social network platforms by design privilege the quantity of contacts over the quality of relationships (tallying likes, hits or retweets); discourage sustained dialogues and complex thought and disaggregate social environments by decreasing the time spent in direct human interaction, isolating individuals physically and often emotionally, expunging from social experiences a shared sensorial environment and through algorithmic content selection and recommendations, reducing the diversity of interpersonal encounters. On the epistemological and sociopolitical effects of social media, see Kitchens et al. [74], Hari [75], Donovan et al. [76], Reyman et al. [77], and Sparby [78]. For an overview of research on social media’s impact on youth mental health, see the U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory [79]. On the cognitive and mental health impacts, see also Reyman et al. [77], Hari [75], Tibber et al. [80], Ugwu et al. [81], Ionescu et al. [82] and Winstone et al. [83]. |
28. | The butterflies flitting through Shafak’s novel reference Ada’s memories, parts of her family history that remain unknown to her, and signs of her future—including the trip to Cyprus (the migratory return) that she and her father are planning at the end of the novel. From the point of view of the fig tree, who understands “what resilient migrants [butterflies] are” ([1] p. 259), they suggest that Ada may be stronger and more resilient than she recognizes. |
29. | |
30. | If that external force in Meryem’s mind is a djinn, and if Ada deems such an explanation ludicrous, Aunt Meryem’s conviction nonetheless leads to dialogue and experiences from which both parties learn and from which they both gain new perspectives and resilience. |
31. | Drawing on Wilkinson and Pickett’s arguments [85] for the many ways that greater equality strengthens societies, and on Schlossberg’s expanded vision of environmental justice [71], Agyeman et al. advocate for numerous forms of sustainability that would contribute to psychological resilience: investment in capabilities and co-production; more equitable sharing of resources, costs and responsibilities; changes in market structures and property rights; equal access to resources, technologies, information, representation, participation and justice; prosecutable corporate responsibility for environmental and social harms or for injuries to persons or geographies affected by their supply and production chains and implementation of assessments based on “a dashboard” of environmental, economic, social and psychological indicators. |
32. | The 3rd edition of this book [84] focuses on the exclusion of these factors from the diagnostic classification system in the DSM-5 which dispensed with the “multi-axial system” of previous versions of the DSM [86,87], on the grounds that it had an insufficient scientific basis, that healthcare professionals found it unnecessary and that it muddied the clarity of diagnostic categories. On the history of the multi-axial system see Verywell Mind [88]. |
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Saunders, R. Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream. Philosophies 2024, 9, 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9030068
Saunders R. Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream. Philosophies. 2024; 9(3):68. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9030068
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaunders, Rebecca. 2024. "Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream" Philosophies 9, no. 3: 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9030068
APA StyleSaunders, R. (2024). Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream. Philosophies, 9(3), 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9030068