Abstract

Trauma exposure has been associated with a host of negative outcomes (e.g., diminished social functioning). Recently, however, trauma has been found to correspond with a small number of positive outcomes, including an increase in prosocial behavior. In this article, we consider how this heightened prosociality is maintained following the initial trauma. We argue that a redemptive narrative, wherein the tragedy experienced is framed as leading to the prosocial behavior in question, is necessary to sustain this prosocial shift. Constructing such a narrative infuses the resulting behavioral pattern with a sense of meaning and purpose. This process is illustrated through examination of a life narrative generated by a highly prosocial individual who, earlier in her life, had suffered the death of her daughter. Discussion concerns the social and personal antecedents of the redemptive story, the applicability of this story to various types of traumas, and the relation between the construction of this story and well being.

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