1st Edition

Global Perspectives on Dissociative Disorders Individual and Societal Oppression

Edited By Vedat Sar, Warwick Middleton, Martin Dorahy Copyright 2014

    Dissociative disorders are one of the psychiatric consequences of childhood psychological trauma. While oppression is an aspect of traumatic conditions, dissociation undermines resistance to oppression throughout a person’s lifespan. Neither oppression nor dissociation are restricted to particular cultures, and both can affect the individual as well as societies.

    This collection engages with the universality of dissociative disorders and their close relationship to oppression. The chapters cover extreme examples such as ongoing incest in adulthood, children and adults forced to kill others, and abusive states in interrogation. Further subjects examined include the utilization of dissociation in postmodern societies to maintain oppression, the oppressive conditions of asylum seekers and the consequences of oppression as they are dealt with in psychotherapy. The final chapter considers how a paedophile pandering network employed multi-layered oppression to prevent the public becoming aware of the widespread and organised abuse of children.

    This book will engender interactions between trauma investigators – those whose approach is close clinical observation, those who use instruments to survey groups of individuals, those whose research takes the form of investigative journalism, and those who examine the truth embedded or hidden in documents created for multiple, and at times, disturbing political purposes.

    Portions of this book were originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Trauma & Dissociation. It also includes material from other sources.

    Global Perspectives on Dissociative Disorders: Individual and Societal Oppression Vedat Sar, Warwick Middleton and Martin Dorahy

    1. Stimulus Deprivation and Overstimulation as Dissociogenic Agents in Postmodern Oppressive Societies Vedat Sar and Erdinc Ozturk

    2. The Role of Abusive States of Being in Interrogation Frank W. Putnam

    3. Parent–child Incest that Extends Into Adulthood: A Survey of International Press Reports, 2007–2011 Warwick Middleton

    4. Ongoing Incestuous Abuse During Adulthood Warwick Middleton

    5. Dissociation and Symptoms of Culture-Bound Syndromes in North America: A Preliminary Study Colin A. Ross, Elizabeth Schroeder and Laura Ness

    6. Ethnic Syndromes as Disguise for Protest Against Colonialism: Three Ethnographic Examples Elizabeth Hegeman

    7. Dissociation and Identity Transformation in Female Survivors of the Genocide Against the Tutsi in Rwanda: A Qualitative Research Study Denise H. Sandole and Carl F. Auerbach

    8. Transference-Focused Psychotherapy with Former Child Soldiers: Meeting the Murderous Self Nel Draijer and Pauline Van Zon

    9. Boundary Modifications in the Treatment of People with Dissociative Disorders: An International Perspective Adah Sachs

    10. Seeking Asylum—Trauma, Mental Health, and Human Rights: An Australian Perspective Louise Newman

    11. The Franklin Scandal: The Cover-Up of a Child Abuse and its Analogues to Dissociative Identity Disorder Nick Bryant

    Biography

    Vedat Sar, MD, is a Professor of Psychiatry in Istanbul University, Turkey. He has previously been president of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD) and president elect of the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). He has published numerous studies on adult psychiatric consequences of childhood trauma and dissociative disorders covering diagnosis, epidemiology, neurobiology, and treatment. He has been awarded the Cornelia Wilbur Award and Morton Prince Award for Scientific Achievement for his work on dissociative disorders.

    Warwick Middleton, MB BS, FRANZCP, MD, is Adjunct Professor at La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia, at the University of New England, Armidale, USA, and at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. He is Associate Professor at the School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Australia. Professor Middleton has made substantial and ongoing research contributions to the fields of bereavement, trauma, dissociation and psychotherapy. He currently chairs the Cannan Institute and is Director of the Trauma and Dissociation Unit, Belmont Hospital, Brisbane, Australia, and is a Board member and Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation.

    Martin Dorahy, PhD, DClinPysch, is Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. He is on the board of Directors of the International Society for the Study of Dissociation. He has published widely on dissociative disorders and complex trauma. He maintains a private practice focused on adult outcomes of complex childhood trauma.