Friday, December 18, 2009

For the holidays, return to the home within

Article on holiday stress written by local psychologist Jacque Roller, Psy.D. in the Sarasota Herald (title links to online article). Dr. Roller is in private practice in Sarasota, FL.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Dr. Edward Kissi and Clinicians on Black Survivors of the Holocaust

Black Survivors of the Holocaust also titled Hitler's Forgotten Victims Afro-Wisdom Productions is a documentary about the offspring of African soldiers who stationed in Germany’s Rhineland, intermarried with German women and reared their Afro-German children as Black Germans. When Hitler came to power, many of these children were involuntarily sterilized as teenagers. The shame and humiliation haunted them throughout their lives. In addition, the documentary tells...Blacks who were actually interned in particular concentration camps in Germany during the war. Concentration camps set up by the Nazi regime also contained Black prisoners of war (continental Africans and Americans of African descent).

Dr. Edward Kissi looked at the experiences of Black people in Nazi Germany and Nazi concentration camps. He argued that the traditional view of the Holocaust as an exclusively Jewish experience has, inadvertently, relegated the similarly excruciating experiences of Black people in Nazi concentration camps to the margins of Holocaust history. Thus Blacks have become the hidden victims of the concentration camp horrors whose experiences are yet to be excavated from the camp archives and integrated into Holocaust historiography.

The idea that Black people died with Jews in the Dachau, Neuengamme and Mauthausen concentration camps in Germany has often been met with disbelief and skepticism. Dr. Kissi acknowledged the difficulties of conducting archival research on the subject of Blacks in the Holocaust. While the Nazis kept detailed records of the number of Jews sent to particular concentration camps, and how they were killed, concentration camp records have very little traces of the presence of Blacks. One reason, Kissi argued, is the refusal of the Nazi regime to admit that Germany's predominantly White population also included Blacks. By eliminating the notion of "Black Germans" in their concept of German nationality or citizenship, the Nazis made Blacks "the invisible Other" in German society. Thus, it is possible that the Nazis did not keep any meticulous records on Blacks in the concentration camps. A researcher looking for records pointing to the skin color of camp inmates may not find some. That researcher will need carefully-thought-out research methodology to discover and document the fate of some of the concentration camps' hidden victims (Blacks).


Dr. Jessica Rausch-Medina cautioned against painting people with a broad brush. Just as race is a constructed and artificial category, Jewish people are not all the same and differ depending on where they come from. When applied to the interracial people featured in the film, it is literally impossible to tell who is Black. Her second point was that history is remembered by individuals and societies whether through conscious effort or not and is evoked and mobilized during periods of natural crisis. She provided the example of the way Jews were treated during Argentina’s “dirty war” in the late 1970s in which Jews were treated as concentration camp victims had been treated in Auschwitz and then the Jewish citizens were “disappeared.”

Sheldon Wykell shared Dr. Rausch Medina’s view that race is and ethnicity are constructs that are used by regimes to manipulate reality to appear to resemble how they want it to seem. Mr. Wykell was moved by the similarities in suffering of the Black survivors and other survivors of the Holocaust who believed because they were Germans first that nothing adverse would happen to them. Both Mr. Wykell and Dr. Rausch Medina called for the need for reparations for the Black survivors.

From watching the film, Kim Vaz was struck by the fact of there are no ‘simple’ questions. For the Afro Germans who were sterilized in their youth, the seemingly simple question of “do you have children” is loaded with human rights violations. For this simple question contains personal, family, community, state and international implications of a child’s fundamental right to control her or his own body. The violation of the body that prevents a child from reproducing not simply a new physical life is at issue but more importantly is, the distortions done to the ability of individuals to give birth and rebirth to their own subjective experience over the course of an entire life. For Dr. Vaz, perhaps no one captured this idea better than Imre Kertesz, the Hungarian Noble Prize winner for literature in his autobiographical novel of his experience in the concentration camp he called Kaddish for an Unborn Child.

Presenters Biographies:

Edward Kissi is a historian who studies Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa and also genocide, from a global and comparative perspective. He is the author of Revolution and Genocide in Ethiopia and Cambodia, published by Lexington Books, in 2006. Edward has been teaching courses on African history and the history and theory of genocide in the Department of Africana Studies since Fall 2003. He was granted tenure and promotion to Associate Professor this past Summer. As a genocide scholar, Edward has always been interested in the Holocaust. In recent years, he has been looking at “Blacks in the Holocaust” as well as “Blacks and the Holocaust.” He is currently working on a second book which examines what people on the African continent, especially Ethiopian Jews, knew and thought about the annihilation of European Jews in the course of World War II. He, therefore, has knowledge about our theme today.

Kim Vaz, Ph.D., LMHC coordinated the Film Series: Fears of Difference, Diversity of Holocaust Experiences.

Jessica G. Rausch-Medina, M.D. Child, Adolescent Adult Psychiatrist, in private practice in Tampa since 1984, was at U.S.F. until 1992, completed all her training in Philadelphia, at Hahnemann Medical College. Went to Medical School in Argentina at the National University of Buenos Aires. Has very lose ties to the Holocaust, this has been an integral part of who she is.

Sheldon Wykell, MSW, LCSW graduated from the Jane Addams School of Social Work at the University of Illinois Chicago. He has 35 years in the field of clinical social work and social services administration. He is the former Executive Director of Jewish Family Service of Sarasota-Manatee. While at the Jewish Family Service in Chicago he directed Chicago office of HIAS, the immigrant resettlement program that historically has sponsored and managed the resettlement of Jews in America for over 100 years including before, during and after the Holocaust. Clinical practice includes work with a wide range of clients in individual and group therapy including couples, families, children, elderly, and chronically mentally ill. Currently in private practice in downtown St. Petersburg. Sheldon is a major film fanatic. He sees everything and feels the only thing missing from life in the St. Pete-Tampa area is an independent film house to see films like this.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Working with Patients who have Survived Childhood Sexual Abuse

Today, in Winter Park, FL, I had the pleasure of discussing with the Florida Organization for Relational Studies (FORS), an affiliate of The American Psychological Association’s Psychoanalytic Division (Division 39) the Davies and Frawley (1994) text Treating Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse. After laying the biological groundwork for dissociation:
Hormones triggered by stress impair hippocampal functioning, while neurotransmitter (NE) stimulates the amygdala. Generally speaking, the amygdala is responsible for procedural (behavior you can do without thinking, like riding a bike) memory, perceptional-sensory/body memories (like when the hair on the back of your neck stands up when you sense danger, even before you have a conscious recognition of danger), and emotional memory. The hippocampus is responsible for episodic (event) memory, for explicit, semantic (symbolically encoding, giving words to) memories, and for contextualizing events with their emotional significance.

When implicit, perceptual, affective memory is enhanced, but not linked to the event (such as childhood abuse), we have fragmented affective states without a link to their causes. And we have episodic memory of a moment (e.g. a flash of the abuser’s face) without link to its emotional significance or meaning. That these memories are not linguistically encoded has a huge impact on therapy which has traditionally relied on words and narrative. As a result, trauma in childhood impairs organization of memories.

Abuse is also an attack on subjectivity. Consequently, Intersubjectivity as a developmental achievement (the capacity to recognize the subjectivity of the other as well as the self) [subjectivity defined as the sense of self as a subject with an independent agency and desire] is impaired. Because therapy is an invitation to consider meaning from one’s own point of view, inviting a patient to hold forth her own reality can produce anxiety and panic. When the abuse was denied or invalidated by caretakers, the child’s sense of reality (reality testing) is also impaired.
To survive, a child must preserve the needed ties to caregivers and so takes upon herself (introjects) the sense of badness of the abuser, leading to decreased Self esteem and sense of self. The child maintains an illusion of control (‘if I caused it, then if I change it; if I can change the situation, then I am not helpless).
Without sound reality testing and the ability to trust her perceptions, adult survivors cannot adequately obtain gratification nor avoid danger. They tend to subjugate their reality to that of an Other, including complying with therapists’ interpretations. Not being recognized, comforted and protected, the isolation is profound. The world is seen as unsafe, and others, as betrayers.
There is also an impaired capacity to self regulate, such that any arousal is experience as hyperarousal. Therapy, inviting feeling, and intimacy, can lead to hyperarousal. To self soothe a survivor may engage in dangerous or self-abusive behavior to feel the subsequent calm (facilitated by the release of endogenous opioids) and to feel in control (turning passive into active), as well as attacking the abuser-introject, serving, at the same time, to attack the treatment and the therapist’s ability to contain and help.
The therapist can imagine out loud (symbolize in words) what the behaviors might be telling us.

“Behaviors have meaning. They tell us things that have yet to be put in words. When you miss sessions or come late or come high I think about how this unpredictability and instability is what you experienced when your parents could lash out for no reason or when they could not get up to get you to school. Since I am left confused, disappointed, and resentful about the interruption of our work here together, I can only imagine that you too might likely have felt these things (and more) at the hands of your parents. Maybe your lateness and missing sessions is your hope to help me see what it was like for you as a child.” [Note: in this way you highlight the behaviors without blaming. In fact, part of you is grateful to be getting the message. You also let the pt know that one can have negative feelings and still be invested in the relationship and the work. This kind of disclosure does not reveal personal content like where you went over the weekend or how many children you have. It reveals personal feeling states and thoughts about what is going on between the two of you, revelations that model the naming of feelings, their connection to events, and that having feelings does not self or other or the relationship.]

Or the therapist can make empathy-filled interpretations:

“It makes sense that, with the unpredictability of childhood events, you want to be the one who says when the pain starts or stops.”

Before traumatic experiences can be remembered, they must be reenacted. Through projective identification various roles in relational paradigms will be reenacted in complementary, simultaneous, ever-shifting, and overlapping fashion, like hot potatoes passing freely between patient and therapist. Davies and Frawley explicate many permutations of the Neglecting Adult -Neglected child; Abusing Adult -Abused child; idealized and omnipotent Rescuer-Entitled/needy child; and the Seducing Adult-Seduced child, all eight roles, representations of the patient’s child and adult selves, and of her object representations.
Sometimes the pt, unconsciously identified with the uninvolved parent, is the cold, rejecting, unavailable one, silent and withholding, disdainful, preoccupied, bored, hostile. The therapist, as the complementary neglected child, may feel compelled to try harder to reach the patient. When the therapist is reenacting the indifferent adult, her neutral ‘blank screen” may parallel the indifference and denial of the non-protecting parent.
When the patient is reenacting identification with her abuser, she may attack the therapist, the therapeutic frame, or engage in self-abuse. Privileging the love (attachment to the abuser), pain and terror around which the abusive behavior is organized may be easier for pt to engage.

“We all prefer to feel in control, even powerful, rather than feel so painfully vulnerable and helpless. Because I sometimes feel helpless to meet your demands, I wonder if these demands aren’t the additional communication to me that you really want me to know what it felt like to have your father make such controlling, angry demands on you. Also, all children wish to be loved by their parents, even abusing, out of control parents. Maybe if you can be like him sometimes, that allows you to feel a connection to him, and then it is not so sad to feel you never were close to your father.”

Or about the self abuse:

“I understand that this way you feel you are the one in control of the pain-- when it starts, when it stops-- just as your father had been when you were a child.”

As therapists, we are already drawn to the role of rescuer. The pressure to heroically save the abused plaintive child must be made explicit. To attempt re-parenting can interfere with mourning the lost childhood and the loss of the idealized parent. Instead the pt’s adult-self must be allowed to mourn. The therapist must accept that there will be constant tension between symbolic gratifications, frustrations, and interpretations.

“It may seem to you that the only way I can be with you is to be in the same geographic place, that it is not enough that I hold you in my mind or that you hold me in your mind. As much as we both might want to have dinner… together, to do so would have me feeling like your intrusive and inappropriate (father) and then you would begin to doubt the safety we are beginning to forge here.“

Thx needs to recognize pt as sexual subject, without the threat of action.

“Sometimes children learn that the only way anyone seems to pay attention to them is when something flirtatious or teasing is going on.”

“It is only natural that describing sexual activities is, however unwelcome, arousing. I am concerned on the one hand that you may feel rejected if I do not respond in kind to your overtures, but, on the other, am concerned that you may feel responsible for my arousal, the way you did about your father’s, and that would cause you to worry even more that you are dangerously seductive.”

Davies and Frawley use a Treatment Model of: Containment (of hyperarousal); Recovery, Disclosure, Elaboration (of trauma experiences); Symbolization and Encoding (putting into words, making explicxit); Integration (Contextualization); and Internalizing New Object Relationships. Taking for granted first co-creating a safe place, I like mnemonic devices, so I call it the four I’s: Identification (Recovery); Interpretation (putting into words); Integration; and healing as Internalization (of new relational paradigms).
In creating a safe space, the therapist must be comfortable with protracted chaotic reenactments and must maintain the frame, including the stopping and starting on time, and the patient respecting the therapist’s privacy, sleep, vacation. To foster safety, effects on both the therapist and pt of the daunting and protracted reenactments, must be discussed along with how to better negotiate tenacity for the therapeutic work and relationship. This includes inviting the patient to tell the therapist what the therapist does, or does not do, which leads to the therapist or the therapy being [inadvertently] experienced as re-traumatizing. Reality testing can be strengthened by asking what aspects of therapist’s behavior led pt to arrive at her conclusion. Treatment must be a MUTUAL process. The working alliance includes awareness of therapist’s contributions to the relationship. Two-person psychology means the therapist’s behavior is under scrutiny. If not part of the negotiation, then the one-sidedness parallels the abuser’s abrogation of responsibility. It is in negotiation, about the difference in how therapist and patient experience their relationship and each other, that the absence in childhood of toleration of difference is highlighted.
The therapist must ask herself: Can I tolerate the demands, survive the psychological assaults, complaints and invectives, participate in reenactments, work with the dissociated child-selves? Do I get angry when pt brings up… ? Am I reluctant to fully experience myself as a bad object? Am I un-comfortable with my own aggression and helplessness?

Discrepancies in therapist’s and patient’s experience create the potential for managing contradiction and the opportunity for strengthening the pt’s reality testing. To explore these discrepancies requires collaborative inquiry. It is the process, including validating (considering patient’s reality as something to be considered), not the content that is useful. The experience to agree, or disagree, without concomitant loss of integrity on either’s part, leads to mutual recognition, and to an increased subjectivity. It’s a paradox: one needs subjectivity to negotiate well, and negotiation develops/enhances subjectivity.
Empathic immersion and affective attunement foster capacity for self regulation; and diminish self doubt, and affective instability. Containment paves the way for recovery, disclosure and elaboration. As reality testing is strengthened and confidence in her memory increases, memories will emerge.
When you contain, listen and accept (believe), you change the original traumatic experience of isolation and despair and bring about a new object relations configuration, a change in internal structure. These MUST be repeatedly enacted.
Being curious about the meaning of the behavior helps the patient be curious about its meaning.

“This behavior is trying to tell us something, give us clues to something. You are telling us so emphatically through action, over and over again, it is as if you’ve had the experience of no one hearing or believing you.”

“You must have been very distressed, fearing being abandoned by me if you let us both know how angry you were at me. The cutting, by stimulating release of your body’s natural painkillers (opioids), temporarily relieves your fear and helps you feel in control.” [This type of empathic comment makes explicit the meaning of the behavior without passing judgment.]

In Tx: Ask questions and make interpretations to help make CS the roles being enacted.

“I have a theory about this recent cutting behavior, would you like to hear it? When I would not accommodate a change in appointment time I was the abuser who did not care about you, but cared only about herself. This understandably would make anyone angry. We have already discussed that you are uncomfortable with being angry at anyone, and prefer to be angry at yourself, take anger out on yourself. Could that be what was happening here, when after our last session you cut yourself? “

But the dangerous concreteness of self abuse can lead to the therapist’s dilemma which needs to be actively stated:

“I am concerned that should I under react and not step in to hospitalize you, then you could seriously, even fatally endanger yourself, but, on the other hand, I am concerned that if I over react and arrange to Baker act you, I become like your mother who never heard the meaning behind your crying and who got angrier at you and sent you away when you needed her help the most. So you and I together have to figure out what kind of danger you are in right now and what needs to be done about it.”

Replacing a the sadomasochistic struggle with collaborative effort may take years of active interpretation and repetition, containment and self soothing.

All the self states need to participate in treatment. “Neutrality” now comes to stand for the therapist’s capacity to keep fluid these ever changing re-enactments. Here neutrality means equidistance from all the multiple selves that are patient and therapist. Working through, for patients with dissociation, means integrating episodic memories with their dissociated emotional and cognitive significance, as well as integrating dissociated self and object representations.
It is from mis-attunement and correction, rupture and repair, from failing but surviving, that recognition and mutual respect arise. The child-self, previously existing only in the context of the abusive internalized object relationship, now can be integrated into the whole personality and child-like creativity and spontaneity are there to be expressed without fear of fragmentation of the self or without fear that disappointment will devastate. Integration of self and object representations is an aspect of healing, and it is heralded by mourning. Both the child and adult selves have struggled to come to terms with the horrific, deadening realities: That the abuse occurred; that childhood was destroyed and is never to be reclaimed. The pateint has come to terms with the finality and irreversibility of loss.
Treatment is a negotiation between two people each of whom requires a mutual recognition of difference, and allowing for each person to impact and influence the other. New object relationships accept both loving and hating identifications. Acceptance changes intrapsychic and interpersonal reality. Patient has seen that her own hate does not destroy the other and that the therapist’s anger is not accompanied by the attempt to destroy the pt. The experience in treatment to agree, or disagree, without loss of integrity on either’s part, leads to mutual recognition, and an increased subjectivity.
Healthy, mature self-organization is an amalgam of widely varying self- and object representations, each unique in its affect and ideational content, some even contradictory but no longer mutually exclusive. Internalization of new object relationships now allow for different self-states to have mutual understanding, respect, and affection (adult/child) for each other. There is increased tolerance and empathy. Now the child-self confers on the adult survivor increased vitality, passion-without-shame, play, fantasy, creativity, imagination, and ambition. The increased capacity to tolerate contradiction, love and anger, in self and others, and intersubjective experience, leads to an increased capacity for intimacy (exploring interiority of another and allowing an Other in) (both sexual and non-sexual).
Healing, like treatment, is an ongoing process, an ongoing dialogue between self states. It is not a finished product. Because treatment is co-created, no two therapists will have traveled the same path with a given patient. The acceptance of defeat without dissolution, failure, but survival, exists. Now there is a philosophical expansion of a profound appreciation for life, and for connection with an Other.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Recommended book: Identical Strangers


Identical Strangers by Elyse Schein and Paula Bernstein.

I was intrigued and fascinated by this book written by identical twins who had been separately adopted at birth for a "twin study": Their website is http://www.identicalstrangersbook.com/about.html It presents a balanced perspective on nature-nurture contributions on behavior.

Recommended by John Lambert, LCSW

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

NPR talks about Carl Jung's Secret Book


"Jung said his 'red book,' in which he recorded his visions, was the basis of everything else he did. But it was locked away in a Swiss vault. Now it's out."




Sunday, November 15, 2009

Book Review: Literature and the Brain


In Literature and the Brain (©2009 The PsyArt Foundation, Gainesville, FL) Norman N. Holland combines his love of ideas, questions, and answers with his love for literature. Like Malcolm Gladwell's Blink or The Tipping Point, Holland’s is the perfect vacation or bedtime reading for the learned person interested in human behaviors, in this case, in thinking about literature. This is not a book that analyzes particular pieces of literature, as many of his other books do, but one that asks questions such as “Why do we feel real emotions at things we know are fictional” and what allows us to suspend disbelief, as well as explores “how the brain both enables and limits us in creating and responding to literature.”

To answer and explore some of these, Holland elucidates workings of the brain and looks at our relation to reality in general. Apparently, when our brain is cognizant that it cannot (or needs not) act or change the outcome of a situation, for example, on a work of art as when viewing a movie in a theater, then the motor cortex 'relaxes' allowing the limbic system its freer emotional expression.
He describes four changes in the brain when we are transported by reading a book or watching a play: our perception changes in relation to the body, to the environment, in reality testing, and in our emotions.

Holland provides biological and evolutionary reasons why we can lose awareness of our bodies and the world, and why we can cease to judge reality, allowing us to react emotionally toward fictional characters as if they were real. He explores why literary works engender such strong emotions by explaining the functioning of the brain, its cortical and subcortical workings. Holland says that the sole purpose of the brain is to move the body as in the four F’s learned by all medical students: feeding, fighting, fleeing, and sexual reproduction [the latter ‘F’ an example of the joy of surprise, as in a joke or well-turned phrase. ]


In explaining how the retina and the occipital brain perceive electrical physiological processes as something “out there,” he begins:

“Sensing objects as ‘out-there’ in a not-me world is useful, even essential, for survival. I have to know that somewhere beyond my skin is a mountain lion, a banana split, or Marilyn Monroe, depending on which basic need I am trying to satisfy at the moment.”


In Literature and the Brain Holland makes complex ideas accessible to the lay person. It is a rich book of neurological and psychoanalytic ideas about emotion and motivation, combined with thoughts from philosophers and poets, and peppered with humor. His avuncular writing style leads the reader into comfortable conversation with the author. Sometimes there are lovely metaphors: “A poem lies inert, like Sleeping Beauty, until we love it into life.” [Loving both poems and fairy tales, and with its allusion to sexual awakening, this one delighted me, despite the unconscious misogyny intimating that women find life from men.] Sometimes there is frank science: "...the brain stores information: not in the cells, but in the patterns of linkage between cells." But, throughout, there is the desire to read and understand more.

For the psychoanalyst, there are both ideas to fortify traditional views (about free association; the structural theory of id, ego, and superego; repression; and sublimation) and contemporary ones (cultural construction of our worlds; subjectivity; and negotiation of agreement about understanding) as well as those to support both (implicit learning and varying memory systems; how our brains are interconnected, porous to another’s person’s feelings). And when Holland writes about our enjoyment of tragedies (such as Hamlet) “…we fit them into our schemas for understanding the world. By making sense of them, we tame them.,” we think not only of Piaget, or Stolorow, or even Maurice Sendak, but we also resonate with what goes on, in part, in treatment with our patients. Later, privileging the left brain and insight, Holland notes how “Symbolization makes meaning possible,” however idiosyncratic and personal that meaning may be. But he also notes the importance of implicit connection, what Benjamin may write about as the joy of two subjects sharing a moment of like-mindedness, when he quotes the student Ellen “…this book [referring to the cartoons of Kliban] proves that someone else sees what I see.”


SEEKING behaviors and CONSUMMATORY behaviors, essential to the survival of the species, shed light on why we make meaning from and sense of literary works. Authors create a problem and we hunger for its resolution. We seek to learn the meaning of things. We seek to be reassured. Seeking satisfactions and getting them both bring us pleasure. I took pleasure in reading Literature and the Brain. In it we “discover this mysterious, magical treasure,[the] Mind.”

review by Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Upcoming National Convention on Trauma: American Psychoanalytic Association, Division 39 (Psychoanalytic Division)

2010 August APA Convention - Division 39 Program


CREATIVITY IN THE TREATMENT OF TRAUMA
Thinking Outside the Box

A major challenge to contemporary psychoanalysts is the treatment of patients who have suffered severe early trauma. Contributions from differing schools of psychoanalytic thought, and from other fields such as cognitive science and infant research, have expanded our therapeutic armamentarium and made psychoanalysis available to previously inaccessible cases. Psychoanalysis has matured to the point where we can now have meaningful discussions -- not duels -- about differing ways of working with more challenging situations.

Because early experiences of pain may be before the time of speech, feelings may not be available for discussion and interpretation. Ways in which therapists creatively connect with and help transform early experiences will be the theme of this conference.

Information for submissions is available on the APA web site, http://www.apa.org/convention/2010/
Chairs: Sandy Shapiro, MD , shapiro@ucsd.edu and Holly McMillan, hollism@san.rr.com

Monday, November 9, 2009

“The Shared Labor of Relational Mourning:” Watching and Witnessing the Trauma Imposed by Germany’s Paragraph 175

Paragraph 175 is a documentary film researched and tenderly presented by Klaus Müller and directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. It chronicles the experiences of the 100,000 men as well as the women who were persecuted under this criminal code. This was the third film in the Fears of Difference: Diversity of the Holocaust Experience Film Series.

Tamara Zwick, Ph.D. an Assistant Professor of European History at the University of South Florida provided the historical context in which to view the film. Paragraph 175 was the anti-sodomy ordinance with origins dating back to 1871, the year of German unification. In Berlin, the ordinance was not enforced as the liberal climate was welcoming of gays and lesbians. Berlin was considered the Gay Eden.

As political and economic instability increased in the Republic, the enforcement of heterosexual norms increased through enforcement of the code and through the protonatalist movement women's behavior was tightly regulated. Women would find it harder to have abortions and contraception and would be given prizes for procreating.

Mental Health Counselor, William Spell’s comments are below.

Audience questions and comments included the following:

One audience member was curious about the reception Dr. Zwick’s students give to the film when she screens it in class. She uses it to introduce failures in humane treatment in historical periods and some students are hostile and don’t see the importance of using such a film in an instructional context. Mr. Spell added that the film allows viewers to join with the tellers in finding solace in community.

Another audience member brought up the recent documentary Outrage illustrating the viciousness of closeted homosexuals. Mr. Spell noted that 13 states continue to have Sodomy laws. And Florida is the only state that does not allow gays to adopt. More and more states are outlawing gay marriage and the continuation of hate crimes such as the one committed against Ryan Skipper in Winter Haven, FL constitute negative trends in becoming a more inclusive nation. Yet, other audience members noted that there is a balance. With young people’s attitudes reflecting more acceptance of sexual difference and the increase in anti-discrimination laws, progress is happening.

One audience member asked about the meaning of the film for the gay movement. The audience discussed this question in regard to how education helps change attitudes. One response is to keep Foucault’s explanation in mind that educational institutions defined and made certain sexualities normative in order to pathologize some. Education should teach us to open our minds and hearts to the multiplicity within ourselves.

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Tamara Zwick, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of European History at the University of South Florida where she offers courses in European and German social and cultural history, gender history, and Holocaust historiography. Her major research focuses largely on the intersections of kinship, gender, and class in northern Germany. She is currently at work on a manuscript titled Writing Between the Lines: Women, Kinship, and Bürgertum in Early Nineteenth-Century Hamburg. She has previously published articles on memory at the concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau and on bourgeois culture as a written practice.

William Spell received his B.A. in Sociology and Religion from the University of Florida. He received his Masters of Arts in Mental Health Counseling, (M.A.) from Rollins College and currently is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor in Private Practice in Winter Park, FL. From 1992-2004 William worked as a School-Based Family Counselor for the Citizen's Commission for Children, Orange County, FL. He considers his recent and ongoing study of psychoanalytic theory and practice to be an opportunity for enhancing personal and professional growth. Currently he is a member of the International Association of Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, a Member of Florida Organization for Relational Studies (FORS), and a Corresponding Member of Tampa Bay Psychoanalytic Society. He is an Allied Professional Member of the American Psychological Association's Division of Psychoanalysis (39) and serves on the Committee on Sexualities and Gender Identities which sponsors program development at Division meetings.


Picture: Heinz Dörmer, 1928, age 18. Dörmer was 10 when he joined the German Youth Movement in 1922. He eventually became a group leader before his troop was forced by the Nazis to join the Hitler Youth.
Photo courtesy of Schwules Museum, Berlin