Hurting Memories and Beneficial Forgetting: Posttraumatic Stress Disorders, Biographical Developments, and Social Conflicts

Hurting Memories and Beneficial Forgetting: Posttraumatic Stress Disorders, Biographical Developments, and Social Conflicts

Linden, Michael
Rutkowski, Krzysztof

48,83 €(IVA inc.)

Memories are indispensable for individuals as well as social groups. Forgetting not only means loss of functioning but also loss of identity. Memories can also be hurting and cause problems, as research on posttraumatic stress disorders (PTSD) has shown. This is true for individuals as well as social groups and even societies. Memories and especially negative memories can escape the control of the individual. Many political conflicts can only be understood when taking history and memories into account. In this volume a comprehensive scientific overview is given on the development of hurting memories in individuals and societies. Consequences are described, i.e. from mental disorders in individuals, like PTSD or other neurotic disorders, to societal tensions and conflicts, from South Africa to Northern Europe. Additionally, beneficial forgetting is discussed, from treatments of individuals to reconciliation between social groups. The contrasting of hurting memories and beneficial forgetting can help to understand, that memories can have positive and negative results and that it is difficult to decide when to support memories and when forgetting. Bringing individual and societal memories in coincetion - the benefit is a new perspective on the interactrion between individuals and society. Pointing to possible negative consequences of memory - the benefit is a new perspective of an important but under recognized scientific and clinical problem. Presenting modes of treatment and reconciliation for individuals and social groups - an overview which can not be found elsewhere. INDICE: 1. Neural Signature of Emotional Memories and their Effects on Emotional Responding 2. Memory and Meaning 3. Retraumatization and Sensitization 4. Pathological modes of remembering. The PTSD experience 5. Prejudices, stereotypes and symbolized thinking as condensed memories 6. Paramnesias, suggested and false memories and their individual and societal consequences 7. Pharmacology of learning and forgetting 8. Not remembered trauma - lifelong symptoms 9. Sexual childhood abuse and enduring personality change 10. Spectrum of posttraumatic mental reactions and disorders 11. Working with unconscious and explicit memories in psychotherapy 12. Exposure and eye movement desensitization 13. Narrative psychotherapy 14. Wisdom psychotherapy 15. Memories as cause of political conflicts and wars 16. Coping with hurting memories in large social settings - how truth commissions work and what they achieve 17. Forgiveness in post-apartheid South Africa

  • ISBN: 978-0-12-398393-0
  • Editorial: Elsevier
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 240
  • Fecha Publicación: 14/01/2013
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés