Title: Healing Their Wounds: Psychotherapy with Holocaust Survivors and Their Families
Abstract: Foreword by Martin S. Bergmann Preface by Paul Marcus and Alan Rosenberg Background The Holocaust Survivor and Psychoanalysis by George M. Kren Holocaust Survivors and Their Children: A Review of the Clinical Literature by Arlene Steinberg Classical Theory Therapeutic Work with Survivors and Their Children: Recurrent Themes and Problems by Martin E. Jucovy Transposition Revisited: Clinical, Therapeutic and Developmental Considerations by Judith S. Kestenberg Self-Psychology The Emerging Self in the Survivor Family by Joan T. Freyberg Treatment Issues with Survivors and Their Offspring: An Interview with Anna Ornstein by Paul Marcus and Alan Rosenberg Group and Family Approaches Group Treatment as a Therapeutic Modality for Generations of the Holocaust by Eva Fogelman A Family Therapy Approach to Holocaust Survivor Families by Esther Perel and Jack Saul Pastoral Perspectives The Holocaust Survivor in the Synagogue Community: Issues and Perspectives on Pastoral Care by Rabbi Gerald C. Skolnik The Rabbi and the Holocaust Survivor by Rabbi Martin S. Cohen Empirical Studies Transgenerational Effects of the Concentration Camp Experience by Moshe Almagor and Gloria R. Leon Clinical and Gerontological Issues Facing Survivors of the Nazi Holocaust by Boaz Kahana, Zev Harel, and Eva Kahana Special Problems Alternative Therapeutic Approaches to Holocaust Survivors by Robert Krell The Religious Life of Holocaust Survivors and Its Significance for Psychotherapy by Paul Marcus and Alan Rosenberg Mourning the Yiddish Language and Some Implications for Treatment by Janet Hadda From Jew to Catholic--and Back: Psychodynamics of Child Survivors by Margrit Wreschner Rustow Selected Bibliography Index
Publication Year: 1989
Publication Date: 1989-11-03
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 82
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