This document summarizes research on transgenerational trauma and how unprocessed events and traumas from past generations can manifest in current generations. It discusses a case study where a woman's daughter was experiencing nightmares and asthma attacks on the same date that an ancestor witnessed a traumatic event during WWI. The document also examines how authors like Eva Hoffman process latent traumas from their family's pasts that influenced their lives unconsciously. Research suggests distant descendants can experience symptoms connected to ancestral traumas even if the initial events occurred generations ago.
This document summarizes research on transgenerational trauma and how unprocessed events and traumas from past generations can manifest in current generations. It discusses a case study where a woman's daughter was experiencing nightmares and asthma attacks on the same date that an ancestor witnessed a traumatic event during WWI. The document also examines how authors like Eva Hoffman process latent traumas from their family's pasts that influenced their lives unconsciously. Research suggests distant descendants can experience symptoms connected to ancestral traumas even if the initial events occurred generations ago.
This document summarizes research on transgenerational trauma and how unprocessed events and traumas from past generations can manifest in current generations. It discusses a case study where a woman's daughter was experiencing nightmares and asthma attacks on the same date that an ancestor witnessed a traumatic event during WWI. The document also examines how authors like Eva Hoffman process latent traumas from their family's pasts that influenced their lives unconsciously. Research suggests distant descendants can experience symptoms connected to ancestral traumas even if the initial events occurred generations ago.
This document summarizes research on transgenerational trauma and how unprocessed events and traumas from past generations can manifest in current generations. It discusses a case study where a woman's daughter was experiencing nightmares and asthma attacks on the same date that an ancestor witnessed a traumatic event during WWI. The document also examines how authors like Eva Hoffman process latent traumas from their family's pasts that influenced their lives unconsciously. Research suggests distant descendants can experience symptoms connected to ancestral traumas even if the initial events occurred generations ago.
We may have no choice in having the events and traumas experienced by our
ancestors visited upon us in our own lifetime: Eva Hoffmans Lost in
Translation
Ann Ancelyne Schutzenberger, a leading figure in transgenerational psychoanalysis, summarizes her research findings by claiming that as mere links in a chain of generations we may have no choice in having the events and traumas experienced by our ancestors visited upon us in our own lifetime (202). She argues that traumatic events of the past that have been left unprocessed tend to resurface again in the present. A distant family member may re- enact the trauma, mostly in different guises and modes, around the same time as the traumatic event. She adds that the syndrome could [] manifest itself through a link in dates or periods, so that particular symptoms such as nightmares or panic attacks will occur or begin in the same month as the original trauma sustained by an ancestor (Health and Death 284). In her compelling work The Ancestor Syndrome: Transgenerational Psychotherapy and Hidden Links in the Family Tree Schutzenberger documents many cases from her own practice in support of the argument that unprocessed past events find ways of manifesting themselves in subsequent generations. One of these cases is about a woman comes to therapy because her daughter repeatedly suffered from nightmares and had asthma attacks. This condition set in right after she was born. Schutzenberger asks the woman to provide her with detailed information about the family history and produce a family tree testifying to traumatic happenings over many generations. In therapy she realizes that her daughter was born on April 26, the same date around which the Germans attacked France, and used poison gas for the first time. After doing some research into the family history, she finds out that one of her ancestors lived near Ypres where the Germans attacked the French on April 26. As there seemed to be a connective link between the birth of her daughter and the attack, Schutzenberger then asks the child to produce a drawing of her nightmares. When the child arrives in therapy, holding the drawing in her hand, she explains, This is a drivers mask with an elephants trunk on it. This is the monster which tortured me every night (Ulsamer 50). This example is worth concentrating on for a moment. The dream of the daughter contains an imagea drivers mask with an elephants trunkthat stands in communication with a family trauma. The clients grandfathers brother was gassed at Ypres. Her own great- grandfather was wounded at Verdun in 1916. The last attack on Ypres happened on April 26, her daughters birth date. This example, which is quite striking in its narrative elements as it conveys a series of accidental features that almost seem beyond credibility, suggests, nevertheless, that the phenomenon of transgenerational haunting can manifest itself by means of seemingly random dates, names, and places. Marianne Hirsch (The Generation of Postmemory) confirms the assumption that traumatic events can bring forth memories that clearly testify to earlier happenings. It is possible that offspring of trauma survivors or what she calls postgeneration or hinge generation may experience with varying degree of severity the effects of traumatisation even though the initial event occurred generations earlier (Hirsch 103). Hirsch writes,
Postmemory describes the relationship that the generation after those who witnessed cultural or collective trauma bears to the experience of those who came before, experiences that they remember only by beans of the stories, images, and behaviors among which they grew up. But these experiences were transmitted to them so deeply and affectively as to seem to constitute memories in their own right. Postmemorys connection to the past is thus not actually mediated by recall but by imaginative investment, projection, and creation. (106/107) Her work on Holocaust survivors reveals that photography oftentimes serves to commemorate traumatizing events and, as such, constitute a chief linker by which, in the midst of family members, these memories are kept alive and passed on. What the work on secondary or vicarious traumatisation has brought forth is that distant offspring may be vulnerable to the effects that traumas have caused in the first place and generate, in their own right, symptoms that are either directly or associatively connected with these events. If the assumption proves correct that traumatic events can resurface again, thereby curbing the chronology of events in drastic ways, as Schutzenberger's research has shown, the notion of what an human being is, and what allows for the creation of self must be subjected to substantial revisionism. Eva Hoffmanns autobiography Lost in Translation: A Life in a New Language is a wonderful literary and historical document, which recounts, from the perspective of the narrator, the story of her family over some decades. In 1958 they emigrate from Cracow to Vancouver where they start a new life. Like Richard Rodriguez, for example, who, as the son of Mexican immigrants to the United States, learns a new language and excels at school, or Nathalie Sarraute, who leaves Russia with her father and appropriates French as her new language, Hoffman, too, gradually works her way up the academic ladder, attending the best colleges in the country, before she receives her doctorate in English. The rest of the narrative is a kind of Bildungsroman taking the reader, chronologically, to different places and offering insights into the personal world of the narrator: her first love affair, her talent for music, her work in New York. That's all there is to it, it seems, if there were not this latent feeling of unease flaring up, a kind of undercurrent of meaning, as if some events had not been fully disclosed. In fact, it is not the explicitly narrated events which make this autobiography so appealing. Rather, from the perspective of transgenerational studies, the reader gets acquainted with some narrative episodes, en passant, which precede the text and thus lie outside the boundaries within which the narrative is cast, that are of particular interest. Precisely because the silence that enshrouds these episodes creates in its absence of explicit information a vital source for creative reshaping in the form of rewriting, rethinking, and reacting that this narrative has much appeal. Hoffman explains, [S]ometimes, I think of him and Zofia and myself, and others likes us I know as part of the same storythe story of children who came from the war, and who couldnt make sufficient sense of several worlds they grew up in, and didnt know by what lights to act. I think, sometimes, we were children too overshadowed by our parents stories, and without enough sympathy for ourselves, for the serious dilemmas of our own lives, and how thereby couldnt live up to our parents desireamazing in its strengthto create new life and to bestow on us a new world. (230) In this passage Hoffman describes the impact of war on herself, her relatives and friends with much poise, sensing, however, that something had gone amiss in her world, anticipating what she later interprets as a world that returns all my sense of loss like a sudden punch in the stomach (92). What emerges from these lines is a profound sense of alienation and dislocation from one world to another affective, bodily and psychicwhere words go beyond the descriptive power they hold. In fact, the reader never finds out what the parents have experienced, but can only conjecture by the enumeration of fragmentary episodes what the past might have looked like when they escaped to Ukraine to hide out. It is precisely this openness of narratable logic that imposes a profound incertitude about what had actually happened before the narrative sets in. Not being able to make sufficient sense of the worldis a key statement in the narrative because it recaptures the conditions under which Hoffman grew up; a condition which can be best characterized as absence of explicit meaning in the aftermath of trauma. Citing Nicolas Abraham, Schutzenberger recounts the story of a man who knew nothing about his grandfather. In his pastime he loved chasing butterflies and collecting stones. As a geologist, this leisurely activity was nothing out of the ordinary. This man sought professional help. Abraham suggested exploring the family history and identifying hidden links by going back several generations. The patient then found out that he had a grandfatherhis mothers fatherwhom nobody had ever mentioned. After seeing the grandfathers family, he learned that this grandfather had purportedly done shameful things (bank robbery) and was sentenced to forced labor, to break rocks (casser les cailloux); a term for forced labor in French. The grandfather was then executed in the gas chamber. The non-figurable fate of the grandfather comes into view at the moment it transposes the very dislocation it has brought forth into the life of a distant offspring. Schutzenberger, quoting Abraham, writes, What does our man do on weekends? A lover of geology, he breaks rocks, and catches butterflies and proceeds to kill them in a can of cyanide (47). Precisely because the traumatic disappearance of the grandfather has been left unprocessed, hushed up, as it were, it resurfaces in modes that are not causally, but associatively, bound to the initial event, whereby it transposes itself into the present in modes not immediately recognizable. Who would believe that the geologists pastime and his grandfathers death would be associated with each other? The non-figurable fate of Hoffmans father, who experienced massive dislocation and the danger of extermination, comes into view precisely because the narrative goes beyond what is explicitly narrated and creates an organizing principle that lies outside its textual confines. The power of this organizing principle can be gleaned from the following example. Hoffman writes, Everyonethis is common wisdomis involved in an illicit activity of some kind (15). What kind of illicit activity it was remains an open question, and whether this illicit activity is associated with survival strategies is not answered either. Howe ever, if this illicit activity served to ward off personal danger in the face of terror because it allowed her father to survive, then, this seemingly insignificant phrase draws on a subtext the content of which is too traumatic to be broached. Hoffman brings the non-figurable into view by recreating a glaring absence of explicitness in an elegantly crafted narrative and making it part of its very structure. I come from the war. It is my true origin. But as with all our origins, I cannot grasp it. Perhaps we never know where we come from; in a way we are all created ex nihilo (23), she adds, yet this origin lies beyond what she knows or has experienced herself. The absence of explicitness is also what causes the transmission of transgenerational haunting to operate in the first place. Serge Tisseron argues that children who are exposed to traumatic events through indirect or secondary exposure relate to what he calls une vacuole (a psychic inclusion) of anxiety-provoking and incomplete fragments (127). The parent becomes the mediating link through which the traumatic experience is kept alive or reactivated. Tisseron suggests that the presence of anxiety-provoking fragments makes it impossible for the child to fully symbolize what has factually happened. The parents most often refuse to talk about a traumatic event, yet, as studies about family secrets have shown (Bradshaw), these events do not lose potency even if or just because they are silenced and hushed up. While an earlier generation fails to assimilate the trauma, the next generation will take up on it and try to assimilate it by generating fantasy scenarios of what might have happened earlier. Hoffman writes, And as I listen, I lower my head in acknowledgement that thisthe pain of thisis where I come from, and thats useless to get away (25). The silence which is cast over the war is significant precisely because it is potent enough to create room for the emergence of scenarios that fit what the protagonist has heard or assumed to be true. It would be erroneous to assume that Eva Hoffmanns narrative details the transmission of traumatic happenings over several generations. She only provides allusions to horrific events, as mentioned earlier, that remain outside the textual boundaries. The organizing principle outside these confines comes close to transgenerational haunting. When Hoffman is born the idea of inheriting something which she has not experienced first hand comes about when her parents give her a name, Ewa Alfreda, which is clearly indebted to and marked by people of an earlier generation. She is named after her grandmothers, of whom, Hoffman says, I have only the dimmest memories (16), but, who, most likely, died in the concentration camps. The daughter thus starts life by inheriting a legacy which is too burdensome to carry and too difficult to integrate in life. Her activate a wishful thinking so as to commemorate the loss of close and dear family members. Hoffman perpetuates the legacy of significant relatives of an earlier generation to whom she is bound by her first name. Christian Flavigny ascribes the choice of first names particular power. Through the identifying referent (rfrent identitaire) the child is irrevocably marked with a reference, phantasmal and/or mythic (120), to something that has occurred in the past. The name given to a child represents the name previously given to other family members and contains in it the echoes of a stranger. This stranger remains connected with a distant offspring through the first name they share. The name thus functions like a seal (121), Flavigny asserts. Although the reader does not find out precisely what happened to these women, it can be gleaned from the authors own remark (my parents honored the dead) that they must have died during or shortly after the war. To make matters more complicated, Hoffman adds that her father out of an excess of happiness mistakes herself, the first born, for a son. The question arises who is who, and what do the ones who are named actually represent? Would it be fair to speculate, along the same theoretical lines, that through wishful thinking on her fathers behalf the daughter represents another family membera brother, a father, or an uncle?whose absence and loss have furrowed the psyche of the survivors so as to commemorate them at unexpected moments? Again the text remains silent. What the reader is left with is a feeling of unease and disquiet because the text in its richly layered fabrics of allusions clearly moves beyond that which is explicitly narrated. What other family members died, and how they died can only be reconfigured speculatively by means of allusions, first names, and historical events. It seems highly probable; however, that the father had lost close family members whose absence fundamentally altered the fabrics of his family history. Although her stay in Canada and success in the United States as a scholar are highly fascinating, paralleling narratives, such as Agate Nesaules A Woman in Amber: Healing the Trauma of War and Exile or Loung Ungs First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers, making apparent that Hoffman has found a new identity, it is the sparsely articulated war stories, the events that preceded the narrative, which gives it a richness that comes from afar, sustained by the dead to which this autobiography is dedicated. The lack of explicit information constitutes this undercurrent of meaning which subtends the narrative, imposing through its subsidiary structure a kind of reading that makes an opening into the outside from which place the narrative is secretly organized. This kind of subsidiary structure has a framing function and parallels, in many regards, the transmission of transgenerational mandates that may surface to haunt the living. Hoffman wonders, How will I ever pin down the reality of what happened to my parents (23), the forces of which are beyond her control.
Works Cited
Flavigny, Christian. Le Prnom comme illustration de la Transmission psychique. Filiations Psychiques. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 2000.115-121. Hirsch, Marianne. The Generation of Postmemory. Poetics Today 29.1 (Spring 2008): 103-128. Hoffman, Eva. Lost In Translation: A Life In a New Language. New York: Penguin, 1990. Tisseron, Serge. Le Chien et le Parapluie. Les Processus de Symbolisation entre les Gnrations. Filitations Psychiques. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 2000. 117-131. Schtzenberger, Anne Ancelin. The Ancestor Syndrome: Transgenerational Psychotherpay and the Hidden Links in the Family Tree. Trans. Anne Trager. London, New York: Routledge, 1998. . Health and Death: The Hidden Links Through the Family Tree. Psychodrama with Trauma Survivors: Acting Out Your Pain. Eds. M. K. Hudgins and Peter Felix Kellermann. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 1988. 283-299. Ulsamer, Bertold. The Healing Power of the Past: A New Approach to Healing Family Wounds: The Systemic Therapy of Bert Hellinger. Nevada City, CA: Underwood Books, 2005.
Step Into the Light: Transforming the Transgenerational Trauma of Your Family Tree: Exploring Systemic Healing, Inherited Emotional Genealogy, Entanglements, E
Rapid Core Healing Pathways to Growth and Emotional Healing: Using the Unique Dual Approach of Family Constellations and Emotional Mind Integration for Personal and Systemic Health.
Invisible Connections: A Guide to Using Systemic Constellations in Families and Organizations to Create the Personal and Professional Relationship You Want
Learning To Do, Learning To Live Together and Learning To Be. Learning To Know by Combing A Sufficiently Broad Genera. Knowledge With The Opportunity To Work in Depth On Small Number of Subjects