| Literature DB >> 22943578 |
Luciana Lorens Braga1, Marcelo Feijó Mello, José Paulo Fiks.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the past five decades, clinicians and researchers have debated the impact of the Holocaust on the children of its survivors. The transgenerational transmission of trauma has been explored in more than 500 articles, which have failed to reach reliable conclusions that could be generalized. The psychiatric literature shows mixed findings regarding this subject: many clinical studies reported psychopathological findings related to transgenerational transmission of trauma and some empirical research has found no evidence of this phenomenon in offspring of Holocaust survivors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22943578 PMCID: PMC3500267 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-12-134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Sample of data analysis: construction of categories
| Participant11: | c1: Transmission of family secrets | c2: Parenting style |
| c2: Impaired parental function | c1, c3, c4: Transgenerational transmission of trauma | |
| c3: Transmission of fear and of a terrifying world view | ||
| c4: Transmission of mistrust and anticipation of disasters | ||
| Participant 5: “ | c5: Symbolic dimension of art | c5, c6: Pathways of psychical work over by offspring |
| c6: Art as a possibility of representing the catastrophe | ||
| Participant 4: “ | c7: Resilient expressions in parents’ lives | c7, c8: Intergenerational transmission of resilience |
| c8: Pathways of resilience in offspring |
Final typology of conceptual categories
| 1. Communication style | 1.1 Open, loving, everyday communication |
| | 1.2 Communication through formal records and documents |
| | 1.3 Indirect communication |
| | 1.4 Catastrophic, fragmented communication |
| | 1.5 Secrets, silence and the unsaid |
| Experience of trauma | 2.1 Terrifying world view: attempts to anticipate disaster |
| | 2.2 Psychical deterritorialization: lack of rootedness and sense of belonging |
| | 2.3 Presentification of the traumatic parental |
| | 2.4 experience |
| | 2.5 Experiences of guilt, victimization and submission |
| | 2.6 Fear of being recognized by external identifiers |
| | 2.7 Attempts to explain parental survival and impact on the second generation |
| Mechanisms of psychical working over and resilience | 3.1 Search for a radical singularity from the parental history |
| | 3.2 Visitation of sites related to the traumatic parental experience |
| | 3.3 Art as a possible means of representing the catastrophe |
| | 3.4 Sense of belonging to a group: bonding and social support |
| 3.5 Defense of universal, humanistic values |
Model for transgenerational transmission: experience of trauma and resilience patterns
| 1. WORKING OVER (by survivors) | Inability to work over: | Psychical working over ability intact: |
| | · psychopathological disorders | · personal narratives |
| | · somatic symptoms | · documentary records |
| | | · cultural rituals |
| | | · collective memory |
| | | · defense of universal values |
| 2. COMMUNICATION (from survivors to their offspring) | · indirect communication | · open, loving, everyday communications |
| | · fragmented discourse | |
| | · silence, secrets, the unsaid | · use of humor as a symbolic resource |
| 3. REPERCUSSIONS (in the lives of survivors’ offspring) | · fear of being identified by external indicators | · imaginary resources |
| | | · artistic creation |
| | · psychical deterritorialization | · appropriation of parental resilience patterns |
| | · experiences of guilt, victimization and submission | |
| | · presentification of parental trauma | · field visits and search for knowledge of the Holocaust |
| | · terrifying worldview | · collective bonding and social support |
| · universal values and social and political activism | ||