1st Edition
The Abused and the Abuser Victim–Perpetrator Dynamics
Introduction – The abused and the abuser: Victim–perpetrator dynamics Warwick Middleton, Adah Sachs, and Martin J. Dorahy
1. Weaponized sex: Defensive pseudo-erotic aggression in the service of safety Richard P. Kluft
2. Extreme adaptations in extreme and chronic circumstances: The application of "weaponized sex" to those exposed to ongoing incestuous abuse Warwick Middleton
3. Conflicts between motivational systems related to attachment trauma: Key to understanding the intra-family relationship between abused children and their abusers Giovanni Liotti
4. Through the lens of attachment relationship: Stable DID, active DID and other trauma-based mental disorders Adah Sachs
5. Dying for love: An attachment problem with some perpetrator introjects Valerie Sinason
6. Predicting a dissociative disorder from type of childhood maltreatment and abuser–abused relational tie Christa Krüger and Lizelle Fletcher
7. Victim–perpetrator dynamics through the lens of betrayal trauma theory Kerry L. Gagnon, Michelle Seulki Lee, and Anne P. DePrince
8. Shame as a compromise for humiliation and rage in the internal representation of abuse by loved ones: Processes, motivations, and the role of dissociation Martin J. Dorahy
9. Knowing and not knowing: A frequent human arrangement Sylvia Solinski
10. Mother–child incest, psychosis, and the dynamics of relatedness Joan Haliburn
11. Dissociation in families experiencing intimate partner violence Alison Miller
12. Organized abuse in adulthood: Survivor and professional perspectives Michael Salter
13. Treatment strategies for programming and ritual abuse Colin Ross
14. Issues in consultation for treatments with distressed activated abuser/protector self-states in dissociative identity disorder Richard A. Chefetz
15. Wilhelm Fliess, Robert Fliess, Ernest Jones, Sandor Ferenczi and Sigmund Freud Warwick Middleton
Endnote – A personal perspective: The response to child abuse then and now Jeffrey Masson
Biography
Warwick Middleton was the primary author of the first published series on patients with dissociative identity disorder to appear in the Australian scientific literature. For over 20 years, he has been the Foundation Director of the Trauma and Dissociation Unit, Belmont Hospital. He is a pioneer researcher in the area of ongoing incest during adulthood; he chairs the Cannan Institute; and is a past president of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation.
Adah Sachs is an attachment-based psychoanalytic psychotherapist. Her main theoretical contribution is outlining several subcategories of disorganised attachment, and linking those with childhood abuse and with trauma-based mental disorders. She is an NHS consultant and heads the Psychotherapy Service for Redbridge Borough, London, UK.
Martin J. Dorahy is Director of the clinical psychology programme at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, and current immediate past-president (2018) of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation. His published work has primarily explored cognitive and emotional underpinnings of dissociation and dissociative disorders, with a particular focus on shame. His clinical work is focused on the adult outcomes of abuse and neglect.






