Finding words and images with which to describe and come to terms with a disaster is a
psychological necessity but it also inevitably manifests socio-cultural habits of thought and
political interests. Language shapes distorts and appropriates an occurrence that is not just
a shocking and all too real destruction of life property and the environment but also a
social construct. The 'unrepresentability' of the experience of a disaster and the textuality
of the represented event - and thus also the contradictions ruptures and silences inevitably
created by the tensions between 'reality' and 'representation' - are the focus of the essays
collected in this volume. Thirteen contributions by internationally active researchers in the
fields of literary and cultural studies history sociology and philosophy provide
interdisciplinary perspectives on the ways in which we write and think about the unimaginable.