Using verbatim accounts of therapy sessions, Dina Wardi shows how, as adults, children of Holocaust survivors suffer from trauma unconsciously transmitted to them by their parents, and how they can benefit from professional help.
Using verbatim accounts of therapy sessions, Dina Wardi shows how, as adults, children of Holocaust survivors suffer from trauma unconsciously transmitted to them by their parents, and how they can benefit from professional help.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
The International Library of Group Psychotherapy and Group Process
Born in Italy in 1938, Dina Wardi was taken to Israel by her Zionist parents at the age of one year and thus escaped the fate of her people in the Holocaust. She lives in Jerusalem, where she conducts her psychotherapeutic practice.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter 1 Survivor parents - uprooting and separation traumas Chapter 2 Designating the children as 'memorial candles' Chapter 3 The dialogue between survivor mothers and their infants Chapter 4 Identification with death Chapter 5 The aggressor and the victim Chapter 6 Self-esteem and sexual identity Chapter 7 Parting from the role of 'memorial candle'
Introduction Chapter 1 Survivor parents - uprooting and separation traumas Chapter 2 Designating the children as 'memorial candles' Chapter 3 The dialogue between survivor mothers and their infants Chapter 4 Identification with death Chapter 5 The aggressor and the victim Chapter 6 Self-esteem and sexual identity Chapter 7 Parting from the role of 'memorial candle'
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