Wheeler, Translator's Introduction. Heimannsberg, Schmidt, Psychological Symptoms of the Nazi Heritage: Introduction to the German Edition. Picker, Psychotherapy and the Nazi Past: A Search for Concrete Forms. Anhalt, Farewell to My Father. Salm, I Too Took Part: Confrontations with One's Own History in Family Therapy. Speier, The Psychoanalyst Without a Face: Psychoanalysis Without a History. Hecker, Family Reconstruction in Germany: An Attempt to Confront the Past. Massing, Effects of Lingering Nazi Worldviews in Family Life. Bornebusch, "How Can I Develop on a Mountain of Corpses?" Observations from a Theme-Centered Interaction Seminar with Isaac Zieman. Behrendt, Unwilling to Admit, Unable to See: Therapeutic Experiences with the National Socialist "Complex." Stierlin, The Dialogue Between the Generations About the Nazi Era. Heimannsberg, The Work of Remembering: A Psychodynamic View of the Nazi Past as It Exists in Germany Today. Wielpuetz, The Difficulty of Speaking the Unspeakable: How an Article Entitled "The Nazi Past in Psychotherapy." Bar-On, Holocaust Perpetrators and their Children: A Paradoxical Morality. von Schlippe, "Guilty!" Thoughts in Relation to My Own Past: Letters to My Son. Harris, Translator's Afterword.
Barbara Heimannsberg and Christoph J. Schmidt have private psychotherapy practices in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
"We know fragments of the Jewish horrors of the holocaust and the echoing reverberations. We need to hear, post-Holocaust, about the German Nazi dynamics and their echoes in the perpetrators and their children and grandchildren. In The Collective Silence we hear from therapists who dare to struggle with the family throes growing out of the silence of guilt. Read and weep -- again!" - Carl A. Whitaker, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin
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