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Physiology, Family Relationships, Motherhood, Developmental Psychology, Gerontology
Mother-Daughter Relationship by Gerd H. Fenchel — book cover

Mother-Daughter Relationship

by Gerd H. Fenchel
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Overview

This book explores the mother-daughter bond within the life cycle, from early development on into the turbulence of adolescence and the ambivalence of separation then to the daughter's marriage and maternity, and finally, thoughtfully, to reparative opportunities inherent in the mother's aging and dying.

Incl. love, admiration & identification; child abuse; female kin; ambivalence & separation; women's relationships w/men.

Synopsis

This book explores the mother-daughter bond within the life cycle, from early development on into the turbulence of adolescence and the ambivalence of separation then to the daughter's marriage and maternity, and finally, thoughtfully, to reparative opportunities inherent in the mother's aging and dying.

About the Author, Gerd H. Fenchel

Gerd H. Fenchel, Ph.D., is dean of the Washington Square Institute in New York.

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Editorials

Zvi Lothane M.D.

Freud freely admitted he had to wait for women analysts to teach him about female sexuality. He would have also agreed he had much to learn from women about the mother–daughter relationship, so crucial for women's development. This gap has been masterfully closed by the seminal work of the authors represented here, who bring a wealth of clinical experience, research data, and feminine empathy to illuminate the intricacies of the mother–daughter relationship.

Ramon C. Ganzarain

Since the 'style of loving in the transference is quite similar to the early attachment style,' a deep understanding of mother–daughter relationships becomes indispensable for doing effective psychoanalytic work with women patients. Hence, all mental health professionals will benefit from these refined appraisals by well-known, well-selected authors of the developmental consequences of the mother's 'large narcissistic investment in her child, particularly her daughter.'

Charlotte Prozan

Mothers, culturally bound by a patriarchal system, have not been the subjects of their own lives. In this welcome addition to the mother-daughter literature, the authors explore the psychodynamics of the relationship, starting with childhood and proceeding through adolescence, marriage, motherhood, and aging. Clinical examples illustrate classical and developing perspectives on the themes—love and separation, identification and envy, idealization and competition—that make up the intense and ambivalent bond between mothers and daughters. All authors stress the lasting effect of that bond and reveal how psychotherapy can lead to insight and understanding. Dr. Fenchel is to be congratulated for this selection of outstanding and original thinkers on this subject.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1998
Publisher
Aronson, Jason Inc.
Pages
348
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780765701015

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