1st Edition

Transgenerational Trauma A Contemporary Introduction

By Jill Salberg, Sue Grand Copyright 2024
    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this book, Jill Salberg and Sue Grand offer an overview of the psychoanalytic work on transgenerational trauma, rooting their perspective in attachment theory, and the social-ethical turn of Relational psychoanalysis.

    Transgenerational Trauma: A Contemporary Introduction is a cutting-edge study of trauma transmission across generations. Salberg and Grand consider how our forebears' trauma can leave a scar on our lives, our bodies, and on our world. They posit that, too often, we re-cycle the social violence that we were subjected to. Their unique approach embraces diverse psychoanalytic and psychodynamic theories, as they look at attachment, legacies of violence, and the role of witnessing in healing. Clinical and personal stories are interwoven with theory to elucidate the socio-historical positions that we inherit and live out. Social justice concerns are addressed throughout, in a mission to heal both individual and collective wounds.

    Transgenerational Trauma: A Contemporary Introduction offers a nuanced and comprehensive approach to this vital topic, and will be of interest to psychoanalysts, psychologists and other mental health professionals, as well as students and scholars of trauma studies, race and gender studies, sociology, conflict resolution, and others.

      

    Introduction

    Legacies of Trauma Histories: Melancholic Hunger: Personal Story

    Michael O’Loughlin

    1. Historical Overview of Theories of Trauma and Transgenerational Transmissions

    Jill Salberg

    Legacies From Traumas of Slavery and Attachment Ruptures and Repairs: Personal Story

    Frederick Douglass

    Legacies From Slavery: Traumas Enacted, Attachment Ruptures Repaired: Personal Story

    Kirkland Vaughans                                                                                                                                                                                                                        

    2. Between Silence and Words: Attachment, Trauma and the Mode of Transgenerational Transmissions

    Jill Salberg

    3. The Wound and Its Social Imperatives

    Sue Grand

    4. When Wounds Touch: Witnessing and Enacting as Embodied Healing Processes

    Jill Salberg

    Legacies From Trauma of Immigration, Violence, Loss, and Shame: Personal Story

    Rossanna Echegoyén

    5. Legacies of Violence: Our Perpetrator Fragments

    Sue Grand

    Transgenerational Figures and Figurations in My Representational World: Personal Story

    Maurice Apprey                                                                 

    6. Social Justice: Conflict Resolution and Transgenerational Studies

    Sue Grand     

                                                   

    Biography

    Jill Salberg is Faculty at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis. She is the editor of Psychoanalytic Credos: Professional Journeys of Psychoanalysts (2022) and Good Enough Endings (2010).

    Sue Grand is Faculty at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis. She is the author of The Hero in the Mirror: From Fear to Fortitude (2009) and The Reproduction of Evil (2002). She has co-edited two books with Lewis Aron and Joyce A. Slochower: Decentering Relational Theory: A Comparative Critique and De-Idealizing Relational Theory: A Critique From Within (both 2018).

    Jointly they are the editors of Wounds of History: Repair and Resilience in the Trans-Generational Transmission of Trauma (2017) and Transgenerational Trauma and the Other: Dialogues across History and Difference (2017), both won the Gradiva award in 2018.

    “In this timely volume, Salberg and Grand expand the intellectual and moral frame of witnessing professionals to encompass transgenerational trauma in many cultures throughout the world. As they encourage us to face our own histories, including our own internalized perpetrators, they maintain our hope for a better world.”

    Judith L. Herman, M.D., author of Trauma and Repair and Trauma and Recovery

    “Salberg and Grand trace the psychical transformations of trauma theory from historical, antecedent and embryonic versions to mature conceptual renditions of ideas in this relatively new domain of psychoanalytic inquiry. The result is a rich account that lends itself to the teaching of psychoanalytic concepts and to clinical practices where narratives of generational trauma show themselves. The authors’ consistently lucid clinical narratives, in particular, display phenomena that are engaging, powerful, and, above all, demonstrate why this new domain deserves every attention it now commands.”

    Maurice Apprey, PhD, DM, FIPA, Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, University of Virginia School of Medicine, and Training and Supervising Psychoanalyst, Contemporary Freudian Society

    “In their important new book, Jill Salberg and Sue Grand deepen our understanding of the transgenerational legacies of trauma by taking us beyond the binary of victim and perpetrator. Full of rich and evocative examples, Grand and Salberg demonstrate what it means to recognize and disclose the traumas that reside within us. They address descendants of victims and perpetrators alike, and show us how to hold the complexity of these positions, rather than side with one over the other. Our conversation will become much richer as a result. Transgenerational Trauma: A Contemporary Introduction is a significant contribution and essential reading for anyone who is interested in understanding how today’s crisis-ridden world has been shaped by legacies of trauma.”

    Roger Frie, Professor of Education, Simon Fraser University

    “In their book, Transgenerational Trauma: A Contemporary Introduction, Jill Salberg and Sue Grand move beyond the classical silence of the analyst, towards the empathic dialogic internal listening and witnessing that is essential to relieve psychic pain. Grounded in relational and attachment theory, they offer a historical and theoretical journey through our field’s transgenerational resistances to exploring trauma as a dynamic and analytic entity. Salberg and Grand share their and other clinicians’ narratives with poignancy and nuance, capturing the affective resonance and necessary engagement that transforms both members of the analytic couple. Created as a teaching series, it does that and much more.”

    Dionne R. Powell, author of  From the Sunken Place to the Shitty Place: The Film GetOut, Psychic Emancipation and Modern Race Relations from a Psychodynamic Clinical Perspective (Psychoanal. Q.), Co-Chair of the Holmes Commission on Racial Equality in American Psychoanalysis

    "No topic is more urgent and timely in contemporary psychoanalysis than the transgenerational transmission of trauma. In this volume, two leading lights, Jill Salberg and Sue Grand, provide a scholarly yet readable overview of the breadth and depth of the field. The theoretical chapters are interspersed with moving personal testimonials.  While attentive to the legacies of perpetrators as well as victims, the authors never lose sight of the beacon of social justice that guides them in their clinical odysseys.”

    Peter L. Rudnytsky, Head, Department of Academic and Professional Affairs, American Psychoanalytic Association, and author of Mutual Analysis: Ferenczi, Severn, and the Origins of Trauma Theory