Contemporary Psychoanalysis
Volume 40, Issue 3, 2004, Pages 353-372
Lots wife, cary grant, and the american dream: Psychoanalysis with immigrants (Article)
Boulanger G.*
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a
Teaching and supervisory faculty, Columbia University, 242 West 101 Street, New York, NY, 10025, United States
Abstract
This paper explores two dimensions of experience common to all immigrants, whether they have chosen to emigrate or external circumstances have forced the choice on them: the loss of contextual continuity and the consequences of being an outsider in the new culture. Drawing on the contemporary literature on multiple discontinuous self-states, it is proposed that for many immigrants dissociated aspects of self-experience symbolize their original culture. Whether these dissociated states are idealized and felt to be unattainable in the new culture, or denigrated and warded off in a bid to make new connections, if they are not made conscious, examined, mourned over, and reintegrated, the immigrant will experience herself like Lot's wife, turned into a pillar of salt, her gaze fixed forever on the lost world. Or alternatively, in cutting herself off from a despised world from which she fled, she will also cut herself off from valuable aspects of self-experience inadvertently discarded in the act of immigration. Extensive case material is used to demonstrate the conclusion that being an immigrant is not about assimilation, but about a process of mutual accommodation between self-states that hold different pa ssports. © 2004, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-3242719564&doi=10.1080%2f00107530.2004.10745836&partnerID=40&md5=eb9963e534e57eccc757a0a20145220a
DOI: 10.1080/00107530.2004.10745836
ISSN: 00107530
Cited by: 31
Original Language: English