Reencounter With History and Memory Through a Therapeutic Process |
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Authors: | Elena Gómez Juana Kovalskys |
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Affiliation: | Latinoamerican Institute of Mental Health and Human Rights (ILAS), University Alberto Hurtado, Santiago, Chile |
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Abstract: | In this co-authored paper, two clinical cases of extreme trauma from political persecution are presented, both of which were treated at ILAS, a center dedicated to treating survivors of such traumatization in Chile. In the first instance we refer to a woman who has been imprisoned and tortured in the first years of the dictatorship and who seeks psychotherapy 30 years after her experience. In the second case we refer to the daughter of whose parents were both detained and disappeared who seeks psychotherapy after she testifies in a film about the political repression in Chile. Both come to therapy many years after their original experience, triggered by testimony they gave for a documentary film about the Coup d’Etat in Chile. Using our understanding of intersubjective theory, most important the aspects of recognition and witnessing, we underscore the crucial role of the social context of the therapeutic dyad that allows the silence to lift. This gives way to the reparative function that words have when spoken to a live available person who represents society at large. |
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