This volume examines the long-term consequences of the Holocaust
on survivors and their children some four decades after the war.
This book represents the culmination of nine years of collaborative
effort, consisting primarily of findings drawn from two sample
surveys of Jewish residents in Montreal. This volume covers new
research topics that have been neglected in the survivor
literature, including personality, familial interactions,
vocational achievements, sociopolitical attitudes. an excellent
source of material from a sociopolitical and psychological
perspective. The assessment of the impact of a political movement
on the attitudes and psychological status of a minority population
is informative. The study of a large group of Holocaust survivors
adds significantly to the scientific literature in this area.
"Contemporary Psychology"
The first empirical study of the psychological consequences of
the Holocaust across three generations, this book assesses the
long-term and intergenerational effects of severe victimization and
of other forms of exposure to excessive, prolonged stress. Although
there can be no doubt that there are negative psychological and
physical consequences for the survivors of the Holocaust, the
authors present evidence here that contradicts the dominant thrust
of previous studies, which emphasized dysfunction in the family
life of survivors and psychological impairment in their children.
In addition to an intensive study of Holocaust survivors and their
families, this book provides a yardstick against which the
long-term and cross-generational impact of other potentially
traumatic situations--war, earthquakes, flood, fire, assault, and
so on--may be measured.
The authors' research for this volume spans the disciplines of
psychology, psychiatry, sociology, history, and ethnic studies. The
book, however, is written in an accessible style easily understood
by the nonprofessional reader. The culmination of a nine year
collaborative effort, "Trauma and Rebirth" consists, primarily, of
findings drawn from two sample surveys of Jewish residents in
Montreal. One survey focuses on Holocaust survivors, the second on
children of survivors. Both include control groups, and draw from
unbiased, nonclinical, and non-self-selected populations. Students
and scholars of modern Jewish life and the Holocaust, or anyone
interested in the study of trauma and victimization, will find
"Trauma and Rebirth" an invaluable resource.
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