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Journal Article

Citation

Schatzow E, Herman JL. Psychiatr. Clin. North Am. 1989; 12(2): 337-349.

Affiliation

Women's Mental Health Collective, Somerville, Massachusetts.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2748441

Abstract

With families in which incest has occurred, secrecy is the organizing principle of all family relationships. Both the testimony of survivors and the clinical literature emphasize the central role of the incest secret. Children who have been sexually abused by adults outside the family also frequently keep this secret as a result of intimidation or shame. Secrecy compounds the trauma of the sexual abuse itself by isolating the victim from others, so that her perceptions can not be validated. Often, the victim comes to doubt her own experience of reality, which is at odds with the family's version of the truth. Many, if not most, victims of child sexual abuse reach adult life still preserving the rule of secrecy.


Language: en

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