Provide more effective services for the victims of this underreported, rarely investigated form of sexual abuse! Until recently, mother-child incest was considered to be virtually nonexistent. The majority of the sexual abuse literature focused on male-perpetrated abuse or father-daughter incest. Mother-Daughter Incest: A Guide for Helping Professionals fills that gap in the literature, making an important contribution to knowledge and therapeutic practice by adding the voices of these survivors to the dialogue. This important new book describes the phenomenon and aftermath of mother-daughter incest, focusing on the victim’s perception of and reaction to her experience. This book’s unique approach integrates psychological theory and practical interventions with the words of the survivors themselves. Their revealing and moving first-person testimonies keenly articulate daughters’ reactions to sexual abuse at the hands of their mothers, their past and present relationships with their mothers, and their perceptions of the impact of their mothers’ abuse on their lives. This vital book explores: the unique dynamics, psychological impact, and sequelae of this type of incest factors that contribute to the underreporting and underinvestigation of mother-daughter incest the significance of the mother-daughter bond, plus cultural definitions and expectations of motherhood—key factors in society’s denial of the existence of this kind of abuse the stigmatization that survivors must endure if they reveal their experiences to others psychological theory—developmental, object-relations, self-in-relation (relational), and attachment—and what they tell us about mother-daughter relationships common themes encountered in therapy with survivors—acute shame, helplessness, isolation, betrayal and grief, identity issues, impaired sexual development, difficulty coping, and parenting concerns—and how to address them ways in which survivors attempt to regulate their internal emotional states strategies for helping a survivor to take charge of her life the ways in which survivors are likely to relate to their therapists and how survivors may expect therapists and other helping professionals to perceive them transferential-countertransferential dynamics between client and therapist and their effect on the process and outcomes of therapy—and nine strategies for minimizing countertransference There is no other resource like Mother-Daughter Incest: A Guide for Helping Professionals. Whether you are a therapist, social worker, medical or mental health professional or a student in any of those fields, this book will inform and educate you in ways that you’ll be thankful for if you ever have a client who is a survivor of this kind of abuse. --- from the publisher Contents Preface Acknowledgments Part I: The Enigma of Mother-Daughter Incest Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The Essential Human Connection PART II: COMMON THEMES AMONG DAUGHTERS Chapter 3. Acute Shame Chapter 4. Trapped with No Place to Go Chapter 5. Double-Crossed: Betrayal and Grief Chapter 6. Identification with and Differentiation from Mother Chapter 7. Impaired Sexual Development Chapter 8. Difficulty Coping PART III: COMMON THEMES AMONG MOTHERS Chapter 9. Emotionally Needy and Unstable Mothers Chapter 10. Boundary Violations PART IV: SPECIFIC COUNSELING INTERVENTIONS Chapter 11. Stigmatization Chapter 12. Identity Development Chapter 13. Parenting Chapter 14. Treating the Adult Victim Part V: Special Issues Chapter 15. Stepmothers versus Biological Mothers Chapter 16. Therapist Gender Chapter 17. Transference Chapter 18. Countertransference Chapter 19. Theoretical Frameworks and Treatment Approaches Chapter 20. Conclusion Bibliography Index Reference Notes Included Reviews “A VALUABLE RESOURCE FOR CLINICIANS AND FOR SURVIVORS. . . . Helps fill the gap for in-depth information on the impact of mother-daughter incest on the victims' psychological, social, emotional, and sexual development. The author gives us a theoretically sound and practically helpful framework for understanding mother-daughter incest, and discusses issues that professionals should anticipate.” -Helen Stolte, MA, Psychologist & District Counselor, Ecole Sperling School, Burnaby, British Columbia “AN INVALUABLE THERAPY TOOL. . . . THE DEFINITIVE RESOURCE for therapists working with mother-daughter incest. . . . Ogilvie presents a solid theoretical background of developmental, object-relations, self-in-relation, and attachment theories that explain the dynamics of this rare but devastating abuse. She then moves beyond theory and presents a working model to guide therapists. THIS BOOK WILL BECOME STANDARD READING IN MY GRADUATE TRAINING COURSES FOR MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS.” -Gina M. Pallotta, PhD, Licensed Psychologist; Associate Professor of Psychology & Clinical Graduate Director, California State University, Stanislaus |