ABSTRACT

James M. Herzog's Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children will quickly take its place both as a landmark contribution to developmental psychology and as an enduring classic in the clinical literature of psychoanalysis.  We live in an era when a great many children grow up without a father, or, worse still, with fathers who traumatically abuse them.  Yet, society continues to ignore the emotional price that children pay, and often continue to pay throughout their lives, for this tragic state of affairs.  

Father Hunger will change this situation.  First drawn to his topic by observing the recurring nightmares of clinic-referred children of newly separated parents - nightmares in which the children's fear of their own aggression was coupled with desperate wishes for their fathers' return - Herzog went on to spend more than two decades exploring the role of the father in a variety of naturalistic settings.  He discovered that the characteristically intense manner in which fathers engaged their children provided an experience of contained excitement that served as a necessary scaffolding to the children's emerging sense of self and as a potential buffer against future trauma.
  
A brilliant observer and remarkably gifted, caring clinician, Herzog remains true to the ambiguities and multiple leves of meaning that arise in therapeutic encounters with real people.  He consistently locates his therapeutic strategies and clinical discoveries within a sophisticated observational framework, thus making his formulations about father hunger and its remediation of immediate value to scientific researchers.  A model of humane psychoanalytic exploration in response to a deepening social problem, Father Hunger is a clinical document destined to raise public consciousness and help shape social policy.  And in the extraordinary stories of therapeutic struggle and restoration that emerge from its pages, it is a stunning testament to the resiliency of the human spirit.
 
 

chapter 1|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|16 pages

Michael: No Face

chapter 3|16 pages

Father Hunger and Children's Dreams

chapter 4|8 pages

Michael: The Strange Nurse Dream

chapter 5|11 pages

Fathering Daughters and Fathering Sons

chapter 6|10 pages

Bart and the Killer Walrus

chapter 7|13 pages

Michael: Doing It

chapter 8|15 pages

Michael: Looking for Father

chapter 9|11 pages

ALI: The Mother Tongue

chapter 10|19 pages

ALI: Opa and the Man Goose

chapter 11|17 pages

The T Family

chapter 12|14 pages

DR. C: Trauma and Character

chapter 13|11 pages

ETTA: Something Is Happening

chapter 14|16 pages

Natalia and the Bacon Factory

chapter 15|16 pages

Expectant Fatherhood

chapter 16|40 pages

Tommy and the Black Lion

chapter 17|17 pages

How go Men Get into One Another?

chapter 18|10 pages

Boys Who Make Babies

chapter 19|44 pages

Jonah: Someone is Being Beaten

chapter 20|5 pages

Afterword