ABSTRACT

Identity, Attachment and Resilience provides a timely foray into the new field of psychology and genealogy, exploring the relationship between family history and identity. The field encompasses family narratives and researches family history to increase our understanding of cultural and personal identity, as well as our sense of self. It draws on emotional geography and history to provide rich yet personalised contexts for family experience.

In this book, Antonia Bifulco researches three generations of her own Czechowski family, beginning in Poland in the late nineteenth century and moving on to post-WWII England. She focuses on key family members and places to describe individual experience against the socio-political backdrop of both World Wars. Utilising letters, journals and handwritten biographies of family members, the book undertakes an analysis of impacts on identity (sense of self ), attachment (family ties) and resilience (coping under adversity), drawing out timely wider themes of immigration and European identity.

Representing a novel approach for psychologists, linking family narrative to social context and intergenerational impacts, Identity, Attachment and Resilience describes Eastern European upheaval over the twentieth century to explain why Polish communities have settled in England. With particular relevance for Polish families seeking to understand their cultural heritage and identity, this unique account will be of great interest to any reader interested in family narratives, immigration and identity. It will appeal to students and researchers of psychology, history and social sciences.

chapter 1|22 pages

Trust

Introducing family narratives

section I|72 pages

Poland

chapter 2|26 pages

Autonomy

Living under partition (1886–1913)

chapter 3|21 pages

Initiative

Fighting on the Eastern Front (1914–20)

chapter 4|23 pages

Industriousness

Life in independent Warsaw (1921–39)

section II|64 pages

Poland and England

chapter 5|21 pages

Confusion

Nazi occupation of Warsaw (1939–43)

chapter 6|18 pages

Identity

Resistance in France (1939–43)

chapter 7|23 pages

Isolation

England fights, Warsaw rises (1943–45)

section III|78 pages

England

chapter 8|22 pages

Intimacy

Marriage and migration (1945–50)

chapter 9|28 pages

Generativity

Family reunion and loss (1951–71)

chapter 10|23 pages

Integrity

Reminiscence and reflection (1972–2016)