Trauma—The Spiral of Interpersonal Violence from a Feminist-Psychoanalytic Perspective

Authors

  • Christina Kleiser DOC-Stipendiatin der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften/Institut für Zeitgeschichte der Universität Wien, derzeit Forschungsaufenthalt am Berliner Kolleg für Vergleichende Geschichte Europas und am Centre Marc Bloch, Berlin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14766/389

Keywords:

Feminismus, Gewalt, Soziale Arbeit, Geschlecht, Gender

Abstract

The psychotherapist Michela Huber has written an almost 600 page “standard work” of trauma therapy that is as sensitive as it is engaged. The deserved distinction was awarded by the Austrian Network for Trauma Therapy. From the standpoint of so-called empathetic abstinence, Huber explains in a demanding yet understandable manner how trauma occurs and what its effects are, what one can expect of trauma therapy and what needs to take place if the complex dynamic of interpersonal violence between perpetrator, victim, and survivor is to be broken. She wrote for victims and their families, for colleagues, and for all those who are interested in the subject in any form. The two-volume collection of the experiences, incite, and results of the most recent psychotraumatology is a strongly recommended read for all of those who deal with the phenomenon of trauma from a philosophical, cultural, literary, historical, and/or gender theoretical perspective.

Published

2005-11-09

Issue

Section

Offener Teil