Trauma, Perennial Mourning, Prejudice, and Border Psychology
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt The Anxious Generation av Jonathan Haidt (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 2283 kr"This is the right book for the right time. Vamik Volkan has dedicated his working life to understanding large-group psychology in order to provide politicians, decision makers and the wider public with knowledge about collective human behavior. The author describes various aspects of the psychology of refugees and immigrants, as well as those of people in host countries who receive them. This book helped me understand better what we are now witnessing in Germany and throughout Europe, and I consider the author's observations and conclusions to be vital to finding ways to deal with this refugee issue constructively. I recommend this book wholeheartedly, not only to psychoanalysts, but to a wider public as well."-- (12/01/2016) "Throughout his extraordinary career, Vamik Volkan has met with and listened to political leaders, refugees, traumatized groups, families, intellectuals, and ordinary citizens throughout the world. He has gathered a wealth of intimate, textured information about our collective engagement with the irrational, with a focus on the dynamics of large groups and the unconscious origins of ethnic identities in conflict. In this book, he links this perspective with his own experience as an immigrant, his detailed psychoanalysis of individual immigrants, and his clinical study of immigrant families, children and adults. Volkan has a profound understanding of loss, mourning, and the ways the trauma embedded in the immigration experience is passed on to the next generation. The book is a vivid and evocative portrait of immigration and the irrational and developmental sources of prejudice. With his understanding of the origins of hatred of the 'other', Volkan allows us to see through our clouded vision, opening the possibility of actually learning across difference."-- (12/01/2016)
Vamik D Volkan
Introduction , Newcomers , Psychoanalytic theories on adult immigrants and refugees , Mourning and perennial mourning , Newcomers linking objects, linking phenomena, and nostalgia , Relocated children and their unconscious fantasies , Living statues , Double mourning: adolescents as immigrants or refugees , A refugee familys story , Hosts , Prejudice on a psychoanalytic couch , The Other , Border psychology and fear of newcomers