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Thinking about Thinking: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Finding Continuity in US Military Veterans' Embodied Minds

This article examines American military veterans' metacognition – their 'thinking about thinking'. After sustaining mild traumatic brain injuries (mild TBI), some veterans experience impaired memory, poor concentration and other cognitive problems that surface when they begin attendin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cambridge anthropology 2018-03, Vol.36 (1), p.80-98
Main Author: Zogas, Anna
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This article examines American military veterans' metacognition – their 'thinking about thinking'. After sustaining mild traumatic brain injuries (mild TBI), some veterans experience impaired memory, poor concentration and other cognitive problems that surface when they begin attending colleges and trade schools. In response, clinicians at a specialized TBI clinic at a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Centre created a programme that encourages veterans to become reflexive about their cognition. Symptoms that veterans experience as cognitive impairments are reframed by clinicians as conflicts between their military-minded bodies and their new civilian environments. We have seen the growing influence of the neuro-disciplines on the government of populations, but newly materialist understandings of the mind also shift the boundaries of what constitutes 'the body', suggesting new terrains for the disciplinary techniques of institutions. Analysing veterans' experiences of their injuries and clinicians' efforts to help them reveals cognition as a site of discipline.
ISSN:0305-7674
2047-7716
DOI:10.3167/cja.2018.360106