"Living with" the past: coping and patterns in families of Holocaust survivors.

Abstract:

:This exploratory study looks at how families of Holocaust survivors work through the traumatic past by considering the coping patterns adapted by family members. Life-story interviews (Rosenthal, 1993) with 57 individuals from 20 families, in which there were two to three generations, were used in order to learn about the significance they attach to the Holocaust past. The interviews were analyzed using Rosenthal's methods and Danieli's (1988) typology of post-war adaptation (victim families, fighter families, those who made it, and numb families). Results showed that in order to differentiate between the coping styles exhibited by the families, two new categories had to be added to Danieli's typology. These were entitled "life goes on" and "split families." It was concluded that survivor families exhibit heterogeneity in the ways in which they cope with the Holocaust past.

journal_name

Fam Process

journal_title

Family process

authors

Chaitin J

doi

10.1111/j.1545-5300.2003.42208.x

keywords:

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2003-07-01 00:00:00

pages

305-22

issue

2

eissn

0014-7370

issn

1545-5300

journal_volume

42

pub_type

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