000 01645cam a2200229 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aHamel, Carole
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aBetrayal and Violence
260 _c2009.
500 _a78
520 _aThe author introduces the subject with quotes from patients reflecting feelings of betrayal, feelings which herald a break-up with the couple or the group. This sometimes necessary violence allows one to escape, more or less consciously, from an alienating denial pact, and to the negative of transmission, therefore enabling the person to become a subject. At other times, betrayal is an attack on thinking, on the very process of becoming a subject (or becoming an individual being). The author talks about a family where betrayal is the main issue in the transference-counter-transference relationships. The feeling of betrayal shown by the father when he stopped therapy was also felt by the therapist. Through the example of this treatment, containing the odd acting-outs, the author carries on with her “therapeutic romance”, trying to analyze how these “acting-outs” could express this paradox: “Being together kills us, being apart is fatal.”
690 _aviolence
690 _abetrayal
690 _aacting out
690 _anegative pact
690 _anegative therapeutic relationships
690 _atransference-counter-transference relationships
786 0 _nLe Divan familial | o 23 | 2 | 2009-09-01 | p. 155-167 | 1292-668X
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-le-divan-familial-2009-2-page-155?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c464301
_d464301