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Fully revised and updated, Genealogy, Psychology and Therapy highlights the importance of genealogy in the development of identity, and the therapeutic potential of family history in cultivating well-being.

Produktbeschreibung
Fully revised and updated, Genealogy, Psychology and Therapy highlights the importance of genealogy in the development of identity, and the therapeutic potential of family history in cultivating well-being.
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Autorenporträt
Paula Nicolson retired from her post as professor and former department head at Royal Holloway, the University of London in 2011. She is a Fellow and Chartered Psychologist of the British Psychological Society, the Academy of Social Sciences and the author of many academic papers, press articles and books. She now divides her time between writing academic books, novels and plays.
Rezensionen
"A must-read for genealogists asking, 'Who Do I Think You Were?'. Psychologist Paula Nicolson shows us the power of family history, especially when we combine it with psychology to understand the intergenerational effect of trauma. Every family has members traumatized by war, violence, migration, poverty, loss, or addiction. Do you know that intergenerational trauma unwittingly causes emotional issues, disruption, and dysfunction within families and incurs personal trauma? If you want to recognize and understand the effect of traumatic events on your ancestors, yourself and living family, this book is for you."

- Helen Parker-Drabble is a former therapist, a family historian and author of 'Who Do I Think You Were?®'A Victorian's Inheritance.

"I enjoyed reading this book very much! It's both intriguing and compelling but more so it is informative - not only about Paula Nicolson's own family history. Its insights apply to most of us. This book directs us towards an empathic understanding of our family's past accompanied by a sense of healing and forgiveness."

- Dr. Emanuela Barasch Rubinstein, author of Delivery and other novels

"This book opens a whole new perspective on understanding trauma. Using an exploration of her own and others' genealogy Nicolson convincingly explains how trauma is intergenerational. Like a detective story, she investigates, contextualises and analyses the 'knowledge' we have about our family, forensically uncovering the pathways and the place trauma has had in shaping our identities and place. Family systems are described as porous, leaching and determining the historical material that flows through our familial networks and across time. Using the frameworks of Freud, Klein, Erikson, Bion and Bowlby, Nicolson explains the psychological mechanisms of how the trauma of loss, migration, kinship, persecution and ill-health flows through and influences the psychology of future generations. It is impossible to read this book and not engage in your own project of 'self in history', examining the folklore of your own family in new ways and sparking a new curiosity. Professionally, I now see 'taking a family history' in a totally new light."

- Prof Jan Burns, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology, Canterbury Christ Church University.

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