Fr. 103.00

Fathers Who Fail - Shame and Psychopathology in the Family System

English · Hardback

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Description

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Despite the burgeoning literature on the role of the father in child development and on fathering as a developmental stage, surprisingly little has been written about the psychiatrically impaired father. In Fathers Who Fail, Melvin Lansky remedies this glaring lacuna in the literature. Drawing on contemporary psychoanalysis, family systems theory, and the sociology of conflict, he delineates the spectrum of psychopathological predicaments that undermine the ability of the father to be a father. Out of his sensitive integration of the intrapsychic and intrafamilial contexts of paternal failure emerges a richly textured portrait of psychiatrically impaired fathers, of fathers who fail.

Lansky's probing discussion of narcissistic equilibrium in the family system enables him to chart the natural history common to the symptomatic impulsive actions of impaired fathers. He then considers specific manifestations of paternal dysfunction within this shared framework of heightened familial conflict and the failure of intrafamilial defenses to common shame. Domestic violence, suicide, the intensification of trauma, posttraumatic nightmares, catastrophic reactions in organic brain syndrome, and the murder of a spouse are among the major "symptoms" that he explores. In each instance, Lansky carefully sketches the progression of vulnerability and turbulence from the father's personality, to the family system, and thence to the symptomatic eruption in question. In his concluding chapter, he comments tellingly on the unconscious obstacles - on the part of both patients and therapists - to treating impaired fathers. The obstacles cut across different clinical modalities, underscoring the need for multimodal responses to fathers who fail.

List of contents










I: Introduction  1. Symptom,System, and Personality in Fathers Who Fail  II: General  2. The Paternal Imago  III: Defenses Against Shame: Narcissistic Equilibrium in the Family System  3. Shame in the Family Relations of the Borderline Patients  4. Blame in the Marital Triad  5. Preoccupation as a Mode of Pathologic Distance Regulation  6. The Explanation of Impulsive Action  7. The Borderline Father: Reconstructions of Young Adulthood  IV: Shame and Symptom Formation  8. The Psychiatrically Hospitalized Father  9. Violence, Shame, and the Family  10. Shame and Domestic Violence  11. Murder of a Spouse: A Family Systems Viewpoint  12. Shame and the Problem of Suicide: A Family Systems Perspectives  13. Escalation of Trauma in the Family of the Patient with Organic Brain Disease  14. Posttraumatic Nightmares and the Family (with Judith F. Karger)  V: Treatment Difficulties  15. Conflict and Resistance in the Treatment of Psychiatrically Hospitalized Fathers (with Ellen Simenstad)

About the author










Melvin R. Lansky, M.D., is Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at UCLA Medical School.  He is founder and director of the Family Treatment Program at the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center and Training and Supervising Analyst at the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute.  Among his numerous articles on topics in psychoanalysis, applied analysis, and family psychiatry, are prize-winning essays on the regulation of narcissistic equilibrium in families.

Product details

Authors Melvin R Lansky, Melvin R. Lansky
Publisher Routledge
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.10.1992
 
EAN 9780881631050
ISBN 978-0-88163-105-0
No. of pages 270
Dimensions 157 mm x 235 mm x 19 mm
Weight 546 g
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > General
Non-fiction book > Psychology, esoterics, spirituality, anthroposophy > Psychology: general, reference works

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