Multiple Selves, Multiple Voices
Description
Series Preface Mark G. Willaims xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xvi
Chapter 1 Dissociation 1
Chapter 2 A Reconsideration of Freud's Views of Trauma 16
Chapter 3 Back to Janet: Early Studies of Trauma, Repression and Dissociation 29
Chapter 4 The Effects of Trauma and Abuse on the Developing Self 41
Chapter 5 The Effects of Trauma and Abuse upon Internal and External Object Relations, Belief Systems, and Psychobiology 60
Chapter 6 Remembering, Forgetting and Confabulating: Terror in the Consulting Room 73
Chapter 7 Multiple Personality Disorder/Dissociative Identity Disorder 103
Chapter 8 What is Going on in Multiple Personality Disorder/Dissociative Identity Disorder? 121
Chapter 9 Therapeutic Considerations with MPD/DID 140
Chapter 10 Illustration of Therapy with MPD/DID: A Composite Fictitious Case - Discussion 160
Chapter 11 Reflections of Evil: The Mystery of Deep Perversion 170
Epilogue 185
Appendix: Guidelines for Patients Regarding Memories of Childhood Events 188
References 191
Index 203
Phil Mollon is a member of the Independent Group within the British Psychoanalytical Society. He is also a clinical psychologist, and trained in psychotherapy at the Tavistock Clinic.
A large number of difficult patients who self-harm and hear voices, but who are not schizophrenic, are sometimes diagnosed as having a borderline personality disorder, but may often be better understood as suffering from trauma-based dissociative disorder, the most extreme form of which is Multiple Personality/Dissociative Identity Disorder. This is a book of clinical, theoretical and historical importance. Drawing on exciting recent developments in work on trauma and dissociation, Phil Mollon provides a clinically based conceptual model and account of the therapeutic process with patients whose personalities are structured around trauma and pretence. The complexities and hazards of the process are fully considered, as are the problems of Recovered Memory and Pseudomemory. The author illustrates the concepts and process by a detailed account of therapy with MPD/DID, and the specific problem of the perverse sexual abuse of children is dealt with in a chapter on the nature of deep perversion and evil. Trauma and dissociation present challenges to both psychoanalysis and mainstream psychiatry and clinical psychology. Therapists, counsellors and nurses who work within the cognitive or analytic approaches to assessment and treatment will welcome this thoughtful and useful book.PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780471963301
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Psychology
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 153.50(W) x Dimensions: 227.00(H) x Dimensions: 13.10(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English