{"first_publish_date": "1996", "title": "Transformations", "covers": [1637554], "lc_classifications": ["RC560.I53 S54 1996"], "key": "/works/OL3258745W", "authors": [{"type": {"key": "/type/author_role"}, "author": {"key": "/authors/OL531021A"}}], "dewey_number": ["616.85/8360651"], "type": {"key": "/type/work"}, "subjects": ["Rehabilitation", "Countertransference (Psychology)", "Incest victims", "Adult child sexual abuse victims", "Adult child abuse victims", "Incest", "Psychoanalysis", "Psychoanalytic Therapy", "Countertransference", "Inceste", "Groupes Balint", "Contre-transfert (Psychologie)", "PSYCHOLOGY", "Psychopathology", "General", "Psychotherapy"], "description": {"type": "/type/text", "value": "In recent years, memories and reconstructions of incestuous child abuse have become common features of psychoanalytic treatment. Among some clinicians, such abuse is suspected even when there is little evidence. How does the analyst distinguish between incest real and imagined, and how do recovered memories of incest affect the analyst?\n\nIn this poignant and beautifully written study, Elaine Siegel brings new insights to bear on these timely questions. An inveterate note taker, Siegel discloses the countertransferential ruminations and associations to the occurrence of incest at various stages during the treatment process over the course of 30 years of clinical work.\n\nThe manner in which her \"analytic instrument\" evolved and was shaped by her analysands' stories makes for a fascinating subtext in a book that addresses itself to the differences and similarities during treatment of real and imagined incestuous abuse.\n\nAmong the powerfully disturbing clinical cases at the heart of this study are two reports detailing the lengthy analyses of women who found corroboration for multigenerational incest. Siegel also presents two cases in which patients retracted their claims of incest toward the end of their treatments.\n\nThrough the medium of these and other reports, Siegel explores how psychoanalysts are struggling both to understand incestuous abuse and to accommodate their treatment techniques to shifting societal perspectives."}, "latest_revision": 7, "revision": 7, "created": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2009-12-10T03:07:00.434004"}, "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2024-07-31T09:27:10.176211"}}