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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Johanna DobrichPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9780367645755ISBN 10: 0367645750 Pages: 168 Publication Date: 08 April 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsChapter 1: Where Have All the Siblings Gone? Chapter 2: Sibling to Sibling: Co-Constructing our Subjectivities in Dialogue Chapter 3: The Silent Explosion: Impact of Early Developmental Experiences in Survivorship Chapter 4: Reversals in Caregiving: Loss Begets Loss Chapter 5: Answering the Call to Heal Chapter 6: Survivor Sibling’s in Treatment Chapter 7: Survivor Sibling’s as Analysts Chapter 8: Trans-generational Impacts Afterward: Sibling Self FoundReviews"Sibling relationships are the longest of human relationships; yet, they are rarely studied. Johanna Dobrich grew up with a severely disabled brother and artfully explores this life experience and it’s relationship to her work. In Survivor Siblings, she examines the experience of ambiguous loss embedded in these sibling relations. (For me, it was my little brother's polio). Johanna Dobrich has wisely uncovered a critical sibling experience that some of us have had, but she is the first scholar I know of who is looking into it. Bravo! We need to know ourselves before we can help others to know themselves. Dr. Pauline Boss, author AMBIGUOUS LOSS, 2000, Harvard University Press, 2000; LOSS, TRAUMA AND RESILIENCE, 2006, WW Norton. With a soulful, fierce intellect and unflinching honesty, Johanna Dobrich brings her reader into an intimate and keenly observed examination of the ways in which her experience as the sibling of a severely disabled brother has shaped both her psychic life and analytic understanding. In doing so, she creates a larger portal for considering how minds respond to developmental traumas that go unseen, unacknowledged and unformulated. This impressive book joins memoir and interview material with a rigorous engagement of contemporary relational thinking. The result is a richly textured tapestry that marries experience with theory to produce an inspiring clinical wisdom that demonstrates how healing the other and healing oneself is a false distinction. Whether or not you are a survivor sibling or even a sibling, you will find yourself in these pages and know yourself and analytic theory all the better for it. Martin Stephen Frommer, Ph.D. Faculty, Stephen Mitchell Relational Study Center Associate Editor, Psychoanalytic Dialogues This long-overdue book belongs in the library of all psychoanalytic therapists. It is a significant contribution to relational scholarship. It is also a gift to the many therapists who grew up alongside a damaged brother or sister, chose their profession partly because of their struggles and achievements as a sibling, and yet have never been fully able to tell their complex stories – partly because psychoanalysis itself lacked the space for such narratives. Dobrich has mined her own experience as a ""survivor sibling"" in a ground-breaking qualitative study. Her voice is intimate and compassionate, her interviews with colleagues of comparable backgrounds are riveting, and the illumination she offers to readers of any sibling background is profound. Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Rutgers Graduate School of Applied & Professional Psychology As a ""survivor sibling"" myself, I am deeply moved both by Johanna Dobrich’s description of her own experience as the sibling of a seriously disabled brother, and by the insights she has drawn from 15 deeply intimate interviews with other analysts, all of whom are fellow survivor siblings. Dobrich clearly portrays the pervasive impact on family life of the presence of a special needs child. Not only are the needs of normally-functioning children eclipsed in this family environment, but their sacrifice is typically unacknowledged by parents, who are themselves struggling for emotional survival. This demand for self-sacrifice, combined with ""interpersonal silence"" within the family, can make it very difficult for a survivor sibling to develop a separate sense of self. Dobrich does a wonderful job of drawing our attention, as analysts, to this emotional dilemma and to the extra importance of sibling relationships in any family history that has included co-existence with a disabled child. Sue Bloland, PhD Author of IN THE SHADOW OF FAME: A MEMOIR OF THE DAUGHTER OF ERIK ERIKSON 2005, Viking Publishers In Johanna Dobrich’s Survivor Siblings in Psychoanalysis: Ability and Disability in Clinical Process, we have a major and long-awaited new contribution that fills a tremendous gap in the fields of psychoanalysis. Lacking in all these different traditions is a sustained, coherent, and comprehensive account of what happens to a human subject, personally, relationally, and professionally, when she lives alongside and survives a disabled sibling. Beyond sublimation as de-instinctualization, what is her call when she herself becomes a Relational psychoanalyst? Dobrich provides a multitude of rich naïve descriptions from her research that are themselves a platform for thinking about difficulties in mentalization, microtraumatic attachments, identifications, and uncanny reactivations of maladaptive attachments across generations that a patient can resubjectivize in a clinical relationship. This book is timely, supremely relevant and a pleasure to read. Maurice Apprey, Professor of Psychiatry, Member of the Academy of Distinguished Educators, University of Virginia School of Medicine, is a training and supervising analyst of the Contemporary Freudian Society." Sibling relationships are the longest of human relationships; yet, they are rarely studied. Johanna Dobrich grew up with a severely disabled brother and artfully explores this life experience and it's relationship to her work. In Survivor Siblings, she examines the experience of ambiguous loss embedded in these sibling relations. (For me, it was my little brother's polio). Johanna Dobrich has wisely uncovered a critical sibling experience that some of us have had, but she is the first scholar I know of who is looking into it. Bravo! We need to know ourselves before we can help others to know themselves. Dr. Pauline Boss, author AMBIGUOUS LOSS, 2000, Harvard University Press, 2000; LOSS, TRAUMA AND RESILIENCE, 2006, WW Norton. With a soulful, fierce intellect and unflinching honesty, Johanna Dobrich brings her reader into an intimate and keenly observed examination of the ways in which her experience as the sibling of a severely disabled brother has shaped both her psychic life and analytic understanding. In doing so, she creates a larger portal for considering how minds respond to developmental traumas that go unseen, unacknowledged and unformulated. This impressive book joins memoir and interview material with a rigorous engagement of contemporary relational thinking. The result is a richly textured tapestry that marries experience with theory to produce an inspiring clinical wisdom that demonstrates how healing the other and healing oneself is a false distinction. Whether or not you are a survivor sibling or even a sibling, you will find yourself in these pages and know yourself and analytic theory all the better for it. Martin Stephen Frommer, Ph.D. Faculty, Stephen Mitchell Relational Study Center Associate Editor, Psychoanalytic Dialogues This long-overdue book belongs in the library of all psychoanalytic therapists. It is a significant contribution to relational scholarship. It is also a gift to the many therapists who grew up alongside a damaged brother or sister, chose their profession partly because of their struggles and achievements as a sibling, and yet have never been fully able to tell their complex stories - partly because psychoanalysis itself lacked the space for such narratives. Dobrich has mined her own experience as a survivor sibling in a ground-breaking qualitative study. Her voice is intimate and compassionate, her interviews with colleagues of comparable backgrounds are riveting, and the illumination she offers to readers of any sibling background is profound. Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Rutgers Graduate School of Applied & Professional Psychology As a survivor sibling myself, I am deeply moved both by Johanna Dobrich's description of her own experience as the sibling of a seriously disabled brother, and by the insights she has drawn from 15 deeply intimate interviews with other analysts, all of whom are fellow survivor siblings. Dobrich clearly portrays the pervasive impact on family life of the presence of a special needs child. Not only are the needs of normally-functioning children eclipsed in this family environment, but their sacrifice is typically unacknowledged by parents, who are themselves struggling for emotional survival. This demand for self-sacrifice, combined with interpersonal silence within the family, can make it very difficult for a survivor sibling to develop a separate sense of self. Dobrich does a wonderful job of drawing our attention, as analysts, to this emotional dilemma and to the extra importance of sibling relationships in any family history that has included co-existence with a disabled child. Sue Bloland, PhD Author of IN THE SHADOW OF FAME: A MEMOIR OF THE DAUGHTER OF ERIK ERIKSON 2005, Viking Publishers In Johanna Dobrich's Survivor Siblings in Psychoanalysis: Ability and Disability in Clinical Process, we have a major and long-awaited new contribution that fills a tremendous gap in the fields of psychoanalysis. Lacking in all these different traditions is a sustained, coherent, and comprehensive account of what happens to a human subject, personally, relationally, and professionally, when she lives alongside and survives a disabled sibling. Beyond sublimation as de-instinctualization, what is her call when she herself becomes a Relational psychoanalyst? Dobrich provides a multitude of rich naive descriptions from her research that are themselves a platform for thinking about difficulties in mentalization, microtraumatic attachments, identifications, and uncanny reactivations of maladaptive attachments across generations that a patient can resubjectivize in a clinical relationship. This book is timely, supremely relevant and a pleasure to read. Maurice Apprey, Professor of Psychiatry, Member of the Academy of Distinguished Educators, University of Virginia School of Medicine, is a training and supervising analyst of the Contemporary Freudian Society. Sibling relationships are the longest of human relationships; yet, they are rarely studied. Johanna Dobrich grew up with a severely disabled brother and artfully explores this life experience and it's relationship to her work. In Survivor Siblings, she examines the experience of ambiguous loss embedded in these sibling relations. (For me, it was my little brother's polio). Johanna Dobrich has wisely uncovered a critical sibling experience that some of us have had, but she is the first scholar I know of who is looking into it. Bravo! We need to know ourselves before we can help others to know themselves. Dr. Pauline Boss, author AMBIGUOUS LOSS, 2000, Harvard University Press, 2000; LOSS, TRAUMA AND RESILIENCE, 2006, WW Norton. With a soulful, fierce intellect and unflinching honesty, Johanna Dobrich brings her reader into an intimate and keenly observed examination of the ways in which her experience as the sibling of a severely disabled brother has shaped both her psychic life and analytic understanding. In doing so, she creates a larger portal for considering how minds respond to developmental traumas that go unseen, unacknowledged and unformulated. This impressive book joins memoir and interview material with a rigorous engagement of contemporary relational thinking. The result is a richly textured tapestry that marries experience with theory to produce an inspiring clinical wisdom that demonstrates how healing the other and healing oneself is a false distinction. Whether or not you are a survivor sibling or even a sibling, you will find yourself in these pages and know yourself and analytic theory all the better for it. Martin Stephen Frommer, Ph.D. Faculty, Stephen Mitchell Relational Study Center Associate Editor, Psychoanalytic Dialogues This long-overdue book belongs in the library of all psychoanalytic therapists. It is a significant contribution to relational scholarship. It is also a gift to the many therapists who grew up alongside a damaged brother or sister, chose their profession partly because of their struggles and achievements as a sibling, and yet have never been fully able to tell their complex stories - partly because psychoanalysis itself lacked the space for such narratives. Dobrich has mined her own experience as a survivor sibling in a ground-breaking qualitative study. Her voice is intimate and compassionate, her interviews with colleagues of comparable backgrounds are riveting, and the illumination she offers to readers of any sibling background is profound. Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Rutgers Graduate School of Applied & Professional Psychology As a survivor sibling myself, I am deeply moved both by Johanna Dobrich's description of her own experience as the sibling of a seriously disabled brother, and by the insights she has drawn from 15 deeply intimate interviews with other analysts, all of whom are fellow survivor siblings. Dobrich clearly portrays the pervasive impact on family life of the presence of a special needs child. Not only are the needs of normally-functioning children eclipsed in this family environment, but their sacrifice is typically unacknowledged by parents, who are themselves struggling for emotional survival. This demand for self-sacrifice, combined with interpersonal silence within the family, can make it very difficult for a survivor sibling to develop a separate sense of self. Dobrich does a wonderful job of drawing our attention, as analysts, to this emotional dilemma and to the extra importance of sibling relationships in any family history that has included co-existence with a disabled child. Sue Bloland, PhD Author of IN THE SHADOW OF FAME: A MEMOIR OF THE DAUGHTER OF ERIK ERIKSON 2005, Viking Publishers In Johanna Dobrich's Survivor Siblings in Psychoanalysis: Ability and Disability in Clinical Process, we have a major and long-awaited new contribution that fills a tremendous gap in the fields of psychoanalysis. Lacking in all these different traditions is a sustained, coherent, and comprehensive account of what happens to a human subject, personally, relationally, and professionally, when she lives alongside and survives a disabled sibling. Beyond sublimation as de-instinctualization, what is her call when she herself becomes a Relational psychoanalyst? Dobrich provides a multitude of rich naive descriptions from her research that are themselves a platform for thinking about difficulties in mentalization, microtraumatic attachments, identifications, and uncanny reactivations of maladaptive attachments across generations that a patient can resubjectivize in a clinical relationship. This book is timely, supremely relevant and a pleasure to read. Maurice Apprey, Professor of Psychiatry, Member of the Academy of Distinguished Educators, University of Virginia School of Medicine, is a training and supervising analyst of the Contemporary Freudian Society. Author InformationJohanna Dobrich is a licensed clinical social worker and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City specializing in the treatment of dissociative disorders, trauma, and loss/bereavement. She teaches postgraduate courses and supervises those in advanced training at the Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Study Center (PPSC), the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy (ICP) and the National Institute for the Psychotherapies in New York City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |