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Herrmann, Steven. Oakland, California. The Transformation of Violence: The Case of Jacob |
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| Home > Herrmann, Steven. Oakland, California. The Transformation of Violence: The Case of Jacob | |||||||
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Herrmann, Steven. Oakland,
California. The Transformation of Violence: The Case of Jacob Abstracts Volume 20 Number 1 2011 Keywords: Violence, trauma-defense, toxic complex, rage, dragon fight, anti-toxin, vocalism, feeling function. Abstract: This case study takes an in-depth look at the problem
of how to work directly with violence in Jungian child psychotherapy
with an emotionally disturbed boy during the transitional stage of
latency. This paper demonstrates how the patient, Jacob, used an
age-old myth of the dragon fight (the fight with the whale) to work
through his predisposition towards violence. Jacob turned to an
American myth, Moby-Dick, to enact his dragon fight during the first
stage of his psychotherapy; later, he turned towards a more
interactive form of vocalization of the primal-raging affects that
were troubling him during the second stage of therapy. Jacob’s
sandplay representations provide portraits of what the author terms
“crystalline anti-toxins.” Jacob uses such “anti-toxins” to
symbolically detoxify himself from poisonous affects, stemming from
his internal abandoning parents and their trauma-imprints in
infancy. Jungian child psychotherapy helps Jacob accept his
projected shadow material and integrate it into consciousness; he no
longer projects his evil outward, through acts of physical violence,
but he begins to re-collect it within, as an integral part of
himself. The sandplay study illustrates how a psychotherapist can
work metaphorically with the child’s parental complexes, to
liquidate even the most primal trauma-linked defenses, which
precipitate violence. Jacob’s sandplays form pictures of toxic
complexes charged with very early emotions, such as rage, grief, and
anger. The presence of corresponding “anti-toxins” also suggests
that early prevention through dream-work and sandplay may help
liquidate complexes that are filled with coagulated poisons. In the
sandplay narratives, Jacob describes what it actually is like for
him at a somatic level when his brain is filled with such raging
toxins. In the final trays, Jacob reveals how his body and psyche
are lit up by anti-toxins that he uses to liquidate his projected
evil and metabolize his predisposition towards violence through
vocalism and the function of feeling. |
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