{"title":"离开,失去和找到家:透过创伤的阴影","authors":"Anne J. Adelman","doi":"10.1080/07351690.2023.2235274","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTThe author, having grown up in the shadow of the Holocaust, formed a sense of home around the idea that the past was a broken and vanished continent. In this article, the author explores the challenges of leaving home, the trauma of losing home, and the reparation of finding home across the intergenerational trauma and loss.KEYWORDS: HomeHolocausttraumaparentinglossmourningseparationintergenerational repair Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011).Additional informationNotes on contributorsAnne J. AdelmanAnne J. Adelman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and Supervising and Training analyst at the Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis, and a recipient of that institute’s award for excellence in teaching in 2019. She is also a Teaching Analyst at the Contemporary Freudian Society. She has published several articles and is the coauthor and editor of four books.Footnote11 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011). As Co-Editor of JAPA Review of Books, she launched a feature column called “Why I Write,” inviting analysts to reflect on the experience of writing. She is a cochair of the New Directions in Writing Program and maintains a private practice in Chevy Chase, Maryland.","PeriodicalId":46458,"journal":{"name":"Psychoanalytic Inquiry","volume":"6 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Leaving, Losing and Finding Home: Through the Shadow of Trauma\",\"authors\":\"Anne J. Adelman\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/07351690.2023.2235274\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTThe author, having grown up in the shadow of the Holocaust, formed a sense of home around the idea that the past was a broken and vanished continent. In this article, the author explores the challenges of leaving home, the trauma of losing home, and the reparation of finding home across the intergenerational trauma and loss.KEYWORDS: HomeHolocausttraumaparentinglossmourningseparationintergenerational repair Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011).Additional informationNotes on contributorsAnne J. AdelmanAnne J. Adelman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and Supervising and Training analyst at the Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis, and a recipient of that institute’s award for excellence in teaching in 2019. She is also a Teaching Analyst at the Contemporary Freudian Society. She has published several articles and is the coauthor and editor of four books.Footnote11 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
【摘要】作者在大屠杀的阴影下长大,围绕着过去是一个破碎和消失的大陆的观念形成了一种家的感觉。在这篇文章中,作者探讨了离开家的挑战,失去家的创伤,以及跨越代际创伤和损失的寻找家的补偿。关键词:家庭大屠杀、创伤、父母抚养、损失、悲伤、分离、代际修复披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1《当花园不再是伊甸园:更多来自生活的精神分析故事》,克里·马拉维斯塔和琳达·卡内菲尔德著(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2022年)。对养育青少年和年轻人的精神分析思考:现代爱、失去和渴望的变化模式(Routledge, 2018)。《哀悼中的治疗师:来自遥远的附近》,克里·马拉维斯塔著(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2013年)。穿着我的图图去分析和其他故事,与克里马拉维斯塔和凯瑟琳安德森(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2011)。安妮·j·阿德尔曼博士是华盛顿巴尔的摩精神分析中心的临床心理学家、监督和培训分析师,也是该研究所2019年卓越教学奖的获得者。她也是当代弗洛伊德学会的教学分析师。她发表了几篇文章,是四本书的合著者和编辑。脚注11:《当花园不是伊甸园:更多来自生活的精神分析故事》,克里·马拉维斯塔和琳达·卡内菲尔德著(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2022年)。对养育青少年和年轻人的精神分析思考:现代爱、失去和渴望的变化模式(Routledge, 2018)。《哀悼中的治疗师:来自遥远的附近》,克里·马拉维斯塔著(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2013年)。穿着我的图图去分析和其他故事,与克里马拉维斯塔和凯瑟琳安德森(哥伦比亚大学出版社,2011)。作为《JAPA书评》(JAPA Review of Books)的联合编辑,她开设了一个名为“我为什么写作”的专题专栏,邀请分析人士反思写作的经历。她是写作新方向项目的联合主席,并在马里兰州的切维蔡斯拥有一家私人诊所。
Leaving, Losing and Finding Home: Through the Shadow of Trauma
ABSTRACTThe author, having grown up in the shadow of the Holocaust, formed a sense of home around the idea that the past was a broken and vanished continent. In this article, the author explores the challenges of leaving home, the trauma of losing home, and the reparation of finding home across the intergenerational trauma and loss.KEYWORDS: HomeHolocausttraumaparentinglossmourningseparationintergenerational repair Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011).Additional informationNotes on contributorsAnne J. AdelmanAnne J. Adelman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and Supervising and Training analyst at the Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis, and a recipient of that institute’s award for excellence in teaching in 2019. She is also a Teaching Analyst at the Contemporary Freudian Society. She has published several articles and is the coauthor and editor of four books.Footnote11 When The Garden Isn’t Eden: More Psychoanalytic Stories from Life, with Kerry Malawista and Linda Kanefield (Columbia University Press, 2022).Psychoanalytic Reflections on Parenting Teens and Young Adults: Changing Patterns of Modern Love, Loss and Longing (Routledge, 2018).The Therapist in Mourning: From the Faraway Nearby, with Kerry Malawista (Columbia University Press, 2013).Wearing my Tutu to Analysis and Other Stories, with Kerry Malawista and Catherine Anderson (Columbia University Press, 2011). As Co-Editor of JAPA Review of Books, she launched a feature column called “Why I Write,” inviting analysts to reflect on the experience of writing. She is a cochair of the New Directions in Writing Program and maintains a private practice in Chevy Chase, Maryland.
期刊介绍:
Now published five times a year, Psychoanalytic Inquiry (PI) retains distinction in the world of clinical publishing as a genuinely monographic journal. By dedicating each issue to a single topic, PI achieves a depth of coverage unique to the journal format; by virtue of the topical focus of each issue, it functions as a monograph series covering the most timely issues - theoretical, clinical, developmental , and institutional - before the field. Recent issues, focusing on Unconscious Communication, OCD, Movement and and Body Experience in Exploratory Therapy, Objct Relations, and Motivation, have found an appreciative readership among analysts, psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and a broad range of scholars in the humanities.