Grubrich-Simitis Ilse
German Psychoanalytical Association, Frankfurt am Main.
Psychoanal Q. 2010 Jan;79(1):37-69. doi: 10.1002/j.2167-4086.2010.tb00439.x.
Repetition of experience endured by the first generation has frequently been observed in descendants of Holocaust survivors. Such repetitions are associated with an erosion of the ability, in the area of the trauma, to distinguish more or less reliably between external and internal reality. This in turn results from the defensive need, in the affected families, to dissociate from such extreme traumatic experiences. Clinical material is presented to show that, at a certain phase in psychoanalytic work with patients belonging to subsequent generations, interpretive activity may need to be temporarily suspended in order to facilitate reality testing and the recognition of the Shoah as an objective historical fact.
大屠杀幸存者的后代中经常可以观察到第一代人所经历的经历的重复。这种重复与在创伤领域区分外部和内部现实的能力受到侵蚀有关。这反过来又源于受影响家庭中与这种极端创伤经历解离的防御需求。文中展示了临床资料,表明在对后代患者进行精神分析工作的某个阶段,可能需要暂时中止解释活动,以促进现实检验以及将大屠杀视为客观历史事实的认知。