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The study group on the psychological effects of the Holocaust on the children of Holocaust survivors at the American Psychoanalytic Association is still meeting. New generations of psychoanalysts who attend the study group become aware that doing psychoanalysis or psychotherapy with any historically traumatized population cannot be accomplished without knowing the history.
Fogelman, E. (2020). Judith Kestenberg: A psychohistorical advocate for Holocaust child survivors and their children. Clio’s Psyche, 26(3), 353-358. https://doi.org/10.70763/c157297d1a1ff043255bfb18530caaa2
The physician and psychoanalyst Judith Kestenberg created a method of body movement analysis called the “Kestenberg Movement Profile” (KMP). She proposed an innovative approach to prevention and intervention in early childhood development and conducted extensive research on child survivors of the Holocaust and on the children of survivors. This latter research produced a great deal of knowledge about the psychological effects of severe childhood trauma. Most of the published material about Kestenberg addresses the KMP. However, her research on child survivors of the Holocaust and on the children of survivors is still the subject of little systematic research in the fields of psychology and psychoanalysis. This article aims to present the course of Kestenberg’s research and characterise her work on child survivors of the Holocaust, with a view to contributing to the appreciation and dissemination of her work.
Caropreso, Fátima. “The Research Trajectory of Judith Kestenberg: From the Study of Movements to Research with Child Victims of the Holocaust.” S: IMON Shoah: Intervention. Methods. Documentation. 11.1 (2024): 67-90.
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