The Traumatic Neuroses of War


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About The Book

2012 Reprint of 1941 Edition. Exact facsimile of the original edition not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. Most PTSD authors agree that Abram Kardiners Traumatic Neuroses of War is the seminal psychological work on PTSD. In this work Kardiner distilled much psychiatric thought on the traumatic syndrome resulting from World War II with what he had termed neurosis of war. The symptoms of this syndrome included features such as fixation on the trauma constriction of personality functioning and atypical dream life. Kardiner provided powerful new insights in these classic texts on the phenomenology nosology and treatment of war-related stress thereby anticipating virtually every aspect of contemporary research on PTSD. Although Kardiner had observed war neuroses since 1925 when he was attending specialist at the U.S. Veterans Hospital he was only able to theorize them to his satisfaction after he had written The Individual and His Society which dealt with the problems of adaptation. He came to see that in the traumatic neurosis of the war the defensive maneuver to ward off the trauma sometimes destroyed the individuals adaptive capacity. Thus the traumatic neurosis of war was the result of an adaptive failure not a conflictual illness. So concluding Kardiner re-introduced the concept of traumatic neurosis into psychoanalytic theory.
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