Author: | Christopher Bonovitz, Jerrold Brandell, Jane Hanenberg, Paul Hymowitz, Carole Lapidus, Cathy Siebold, Jeffrey Seinfeld, Sandy Silverman, Diana Siskind, Janet Shapiro, Vivian Shapiro, Susan Sherman, Laurie Sloane, Alice van der Pas, , SusanWarshaw | ISBN: | 9781461632351 |
Publisher: | Jason Aronson, Inc. | Publication: | August 31, 2006 |
Imprint: | Jason Aronson, Inc. | Language: | English |
Author: | Christopher Bonovitz, Jerrold Brandell, Jane Hanenberg, Paul Hymowitz, Carole Lapidus, Cathy Siebold, Jeffrey Seinfeld, Sandy Silverman, Diana Siskind, Janet Shapiro, Vivian Shapiro, Susan Sherman, Laurie Sloane, Alice van der Pas, , SusanWarshaw |
ISBN: | 9781461632351 |
Publisher: | Jason Aronson, Inc. |
Publication: | August 31, 2006 |
Imprint: | Jason Aronson, Inc. |
Language: | English |
Adoption is a transformational process bringing parenthood to those who long for but cannot bear children and giving stranded children home, family, and their place in the world. But every adoption is preceded and followed by its story and when these stories are told in the offices of psychotherapists we begin to understand the impact of adoption in all its complexity. We learn from parents how their quest to have and raise a child has played out in real life, and what shadows might have fallen between the dream and the reality. And we learn from the children the many ways that being adopted shaped their development, their sense of identity; what went wrong along the way and how we may help. Clinical work with parents and children as well as with adults who were adopted is the focus of Understanding Adoption. Because adoption has become widely practiced, accepted, and accessible, and because it has greatly changed the composition of families, it is a timely subject for study. The authors of this book undertake exploration of this important terrain of loss and connection, and of the fragility and resilience of human bonds.
Adoption is a transformational process bringing parenthood to those who long for but cannot bear children and giving stranded children home, family, and their place in the world. But every adoption is preceded and followed by its story and when these stories are told in the offices of psychotherapists we begin to understand the impact of adoption in all its complexity. We learn from parents how their quest to have and raise a child has played out in real life, and what shadows might have fallen between the dream and the reality. And we learn from the children the many ways that being adopted shaped their development, their sense of identity; what went wrong along the way and how we may help. Clinical work with parents and children as well as with adults who were adopted is the focus of Understanding Adoption. Because adoption has become widely practiced, accepted, and accessible, and because it has greatly changed the composition of families, it is a timely subject for study. The authors of this book undertake exploration of this important terrain of loss and connection, and of the fragility and resilience of human bonds.