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      CHILD SURVIVORS: STOLEN CHILDHOOD-SCENIC MEMORY OF THE SHOAH IN JEWISH CHILD OR ADOLESCENT SURVIVORS OF NAZI PERSECUTION.

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          Abstract

          Even today, there is inadequate awareness and recognition of Child Survivors whose psychic development was most seriously and lastingly marked and impaired by Nazi persecution. Based on their research the authors describe the delayed psychosocial consequences of the persecution of Child Survivors and postulate a fourth sequence of the traumatic process in old age. The authors discuss their involvement in the Child Survivors Conferences held in Berlin in 2014, and they describe micro-processes in the "scenic memory of the Shoah" related both to trauma transmission itself and to central conflicts in German-Jewish relations in post-Nazi Germany. Case vignettes illustrate the Child Survivors' scenic memory of the Shoah.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Psychoanal
          American journal of psychoanalysis
          Springer Nature
          1573-6741
          0002-9548
          May 02 2017
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Sigmund-Freud-Institut, Myliusstr. 20, 60323, Frankfurt/Main, Germany. gruenberg@sigmund-freud-institut.de.
          [2 ] Sigmund-Freud-Institut, Myliusstr. 20, 60323, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
          Article
          10.1057/s11231-017-9086-5
          10.1057/s11231-017-9086-5
          28465569
          59e30c81-54dc-407a-99dc-298de7187345
          History

          Holocaust,child survivors,delayed psychosocial consequences,extreme trauma,persecution

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