ABSTRACT

The impact of trauma can be both destructive and transformative. This important new book presents not only a range of theoretical frameworks through which different trauma can be understood, from the effects of childhood abuse to those of war and catastrophes, but also gives readers insights into how trauma presents itself in the consulting room.

In each chapter the author uses clinical vignettes and detailed case histories to discuss the multiplicity and complexity of the trauma involved, eschewing a simple binary conception of internal vs external forces. A wide range of topics are covered, including: the lasting imprint of early trauma such as neglect or abuse on subsequent development; the somatic solution involved in life-threatening illness; unmetabolized mourning and embodied memory; the vibrating relationship between catastrophic external forces such as intergenerational effects; and the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the lasting effect of war on combatants and their families.

Each chapter is screened through a different theoretical viewpoint, from Freud and Fairburn to Winnicott, Bion and Ogden, while the work of several contemporary theorists is also discussed. Crucially, the final section of the book looks at those issues faced by analysts when working with traumatized patients, highlighting the key idea of dissociation, the dilemma around empathy and the factors that affect the patient’s unconscious meaning.

Trauma and the Destructive-Transformative Struggle: Clinical Perspectives illuminates the resilience needed by both patient and analyst. It will be a vital resource for both clinical practitioners specializing in trauma and psychoanalytic researchers in the field of trauma studies.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

The legacy of early trauma

chapter 1|19 pages

From the black hole to the last frontier

The trauma of childhood abuse and the oedipal stage of development

chapter 2|16 pages

The trauma of Otherness and the struggle for connection

Schizoid and sadomasochistic defenses against contact with the Other

chapter 3|14 pages

Stubborn love

part II|2 pages

Embodied assaults

chapter 5|15 pages

When life intrudes

Experience of trauma in the body

chapter 8|14 pages

Trauma and embodied memory

part III|2 pages

Political catastrophes

chapter 9|6 pages

Trauma and the fate of nations

chapter 10|11 pages

Learning to live with ghosts

Linking trauma to an intergenerational collective past

chapter 11|12 pages

Trauma, destruction and PTSD

Vignettes of resiliency and transformative potential

chapter 12|15 pages

Moral injury, the moral defense, and the collapse of emotional containment

An intersubjective alternative to PTSD in the treatment of wartime trauma

part IV|2 pages

Technical issues/analytic resilience