1st Edition

Sexual Abuse And Eating Disorders

Edited By Mark F. Schwartz, Leigh Cohn Copyright 1996
    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    Sexual Abuse and Eating Disorders is the first book to fully explore the complex relationship between sexual abuse and the eating disorders. The book encom­passes the compelling writings of 26 specialists who thoughtfully consider the numerous questions surrounding this controversial topic: Why would early trauma influence eating behavior? What is the association between eating disorders and sexual abuse? What impact does the controversy surrounding false memory have on the thinking about this association? Working from the premise that children exposed to inescapable stress throughout childhood will be at risk for compulsivity and reenactment of trauma by self-abuse syndromes, this collection provides provocative answers to these and many other questions. Taken as a whole, this book provides an important global view of the topic. Chapters focus attention on the prevalence of sexual abuse among individuals with eating disorders; how a history of sexual violence can serve as a predictor of subsequent food-related syndromes; trauma-based theory, dissociation, abreactive, and ego-states therapy; and a practical and theoretical exploration of the sexual self of an eating-disordered person. New perspectives on body image, feminist approaches to treatment, false memory, and the sexual self, as well as a first-person narrative that powerfully links the two phenomena, round out the discussion. Finally, a dialogue about the controversies surrounding sexual abuse and eating disorders and an examination of false memory syndrome constitute the fitting finale for this stimulating presentation.

    Schwartz, Cohn, Introduction: Eating Disorders and Sexual Trauma. Bill, Prologue: From Sexual Abuse to Empowerment. Part I: Prevalence and Prevention. Vanderlinden, Is Sexual Abuse a Risk Factor for Developing an Eating Disorder. Rorty, Yager, Speculations on the Role of Childhood Abuse in the Development of Eating Disorders Among Women. Miller, Prevalence and Process of Disclosure of Childhood Sexual Trauma Among Eating-Disordered Women. Reto et al., Dissociation and Physical Abuse as Predictors of Bulimic Symptomatology and Impulse Dysregulation. Weiner, Stephens, Sexual Barrier Weight: A New Approach. Stermac et al., Sexual Abuse, Eating Disorders, and Prevention: Political and Social Realities. Part II: Clinical Perspectives and Treatment Strategies. Schwartz, Gay, Physical and Sexual Abuse and Neglects and Eating Disorder Symptoms. Costin, Body Image Disturbance in Eating Disorders and Sexual Abuse. Mehler, Weiner, Medical Presentations of Covert Sexual Abuse in Eating Disorder Patients. Zerbe, The Emerging Sexual Self of the Patient with an Eating Disorder: Implications for Treatment. Kearney-Cooke, Striegel-Moore, Treatment of Childhood Sexual Abuse in Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa: A Feminist Psychodynamic Approach. Part III: Dialogue. Chewnig-Korpach, Sexual Revictimization: A Cautionary Note. Wooley, Recognition of Sexual Abuse: Progress and Backlash. Schwartz, Galperin, Reenactment and Trauma. Chewning-Korpach, O'Shaughnessy, In Response to Wooley and to Schwartz and Galperin. Cohn, Schwartz, Epilogue: Delayed Memory Syndrome.

    Biography

    Mark F. Schwartz, Sc.D., is Clinical Co-Director, Masters and Johnson Trauma, Dissociative Disorders and Sexual Compulsivity Programs, St. Louis, MO. Leigh Cohn, M.A.T., is Executive Editor of Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention. He lectures extensively on eating disorders and is the author of numerous books.