Department of Psychology , Yeshiva University , Bronx , New York 10461, USA.
J Trauma Dissociation. 2013;14(2):127-37. doi: 10.1080/15299732.2013.724345.
This qualitative research study deals with female survivors of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda. It examines dissociation and identity change in these women before, during, and after the genocide. Three theories were used to frame the findings. The 1st was assumptive world theory ( R. Janoff-Bulman, 1992 ), which postulates that traumatic events may shatter people's everyday assumptions about the world. The 2nd was catastrophic dissociation theory ( G. Boulanger, 2007 ), which refers to the gradual breakdown of the self as it repeatedly "experiences its psychic foundations in ways that do not happen in the average expectable life" (G. Boulanger, 2008 ,p. 646). The 3rd was structural dissociation theory ( O. Van der Hart, E. R. S. Nijenhuis, & K. Steele, 2006 ), which postulates that when people encounter events that they cannot integrate into their mental lives, their personality may fragment and divide. The data were transcripts of interviews with 30 female genocide survivors. Data analysis revealed that these women experienced trauma-induced identity transformations. Before the genocide, they existed as a "Civilized Self," with a stable identity in a secure, assumptive world. During the genocide, they existed as a "Survivor Self," the massive trauma of the genocide having disrupted their prior self-experience and identity. After the genocide, they existed as an "Aftermath Self," in which their Civilized and Survivor Selves coexisted in an unintegrated, dissociated form.
本定性研究探讨了 1994 年卢旺达针对图西族种族灭绝事件中的女性幸存者。它考察了这些女性在种族灭绝之前、期间和之后的分离和身份变化。三个理论框架用于阐述研究结果。第一个是假设世界理论(R. Janoff-Bulman,1992),该理论假设创伤事件可能会粉碎人们对世界的日常假设。第二个是灾难性分离理论(G. Boulanger,2007),它指的是自我的逐渐崩溃,因为它反复“以平均可预见的生活中不会发生的方式体验其心理基础”(G. Boulanger,2008,第 646 页)。第三个是结构分离理论(O. Van der Hart、E. R. S. Nijenhuis 和 K. Steele,2006),该理论假设当人们遇到他们无法融入其心理生活的事件时,他们的个性可能会分裂和分裂。这些数据是对 30 名种族灭绝女性幸存者的访谈记录。数据分析显示,这些女性经历了创伤引起的身份转变。在种族灭绝之前,她们是一个“文明的自我”,在一个安全、假设的世界中拥有稳定的身份。在种族灭绝期间,她们作为“幸存者自我”存在,种族灭绝的巨大创伤扰乱了她们以前的自我体验和身份。种族灭绝后,她们作为“余波自我”存在,她们的文明和幸存者自我以未整合的、分离的形式共存。