Immigration as a Vessel for Transformation |
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Authors: | Isabelle M. DeArmond |
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Abstract: | French cultural complexes revolve around competitively affirming superiority of culture, including language, competing with American complexes of supremacy and heroism. Immigration often resonates with personal histories of separation. Through the lens of my personal experiences as a French immigrant and my clinical experiences working with immigrants, I explore the interplay of personal and cultural complexes in the analytic field through transference and countertransference, and the meaning of immigration and distance for the development of the personality. Leaving enables the immigrant to safely explore relationships. As a self-imposed rite of passage, immigration prunes branches for growth. Idealization of the transference and the risks of the polarization of cultures and of the feeling of “us and them” are the main ethnocultural elements coloring transference and countertransference reactions with this population. Immigration, a symbol of separation and often a striving for wholeness, has the power to shape one's cultural and personal identity and ferment individuation, with personal and cultural histories cross-fertilizing each other. |
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