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Analysis of the Incest Trauma
A01=Arnold W. Rachman
A01=Susan A. Klett
Arnold W. Rachman
Author_Arnold W. Rachman
Author_Susan A. Klett
Budapest School
Category=JMAF
child abuse research
childhood
Childhood Sexual Seduction
Childhood Sexual Trauma
clinical case analysis
Developmental Arrest
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
erotic
Erotic Transference
False Memory Syndrome
Ferenczi's Clinical Diary
Ferenczi's Confusion
Ferenczi's Ideas
Ferenczi's Relaxation Therapy
Ferenczi's Work
ferenczis
Ferenczi’s Clinical Diary
Ferenczi’s Confusion
Ferenczi’s Ideas
Ferenczi’s Relaxation Therapy
Ferenczi’s Work
IGE
Incest Survivors
Incest Trauma
institutional sexual abuse analysis
Izette De Forest
measures
memory repression theory
Negative Maternal Transference
non-interpretative
Non-interpretative Measures
Oedipal Theory
paradigm
psychoanalytic trauma studies
Seduction Hypothesis
sexual
Sexual Seduction
Soma's Mother
Soma’s Mother
survivor resilience psychology
survivors
Susan A. Klett
therapeutic intervention methods
tongues
Tongues Paradigm
Tongues Theory
transference
Trauma Analysis
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780367103194
- Weight: 840g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 14 Jun 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Childhood sexual abuse within the family of origin and society's institutions, such as the church, education, sports, and the world of celebrity, has been neglected as a significant issue by psychoanalysis and society. The incest trauma needs to be understood as one of the most significant problems of contemporary society. This book is an attempt to re-establish incest trauma as a significant psychological disorder by tracing the evolutionary trajectory of psychoanalysis from the Seduction Theory to the Oedipal Therapy to the Confusion of Tongues Theory. By examining the theoretical, emotional, interpersonal, and political issues involved in Freud's abandoning the Seduction Hypothesis and replacing it with the Oedipal Complex, we can see how system building became more important than the emotional welfare of children. In a series of chapters the authors demonstrate this neglect of the incest trauma.
Susan A Klett
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