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Journal Article

Citation

Rober P, Rosenblatt PC. Fam. Process 2017; 56(1): 250-261.

Affiliation

Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Family Process Institute, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/famp.12174

PMID

28247583

Abstract

A personal journey and a scientific challenge, this is an autoethnographic study about my own family's secrecy. I knew my grandfather had been a German prisoner of war during World War II. We all knew. But nobody talked about it. Then one day I decided I wanted to do systematic research on the issue of family secrecy around my grandfather's war experiences. Researching one's own family can be called autoethnography. It could be said that autoethnography is an approach to research that aims to describe and systemically analyze (graphy) personal experience (auto) to understand social and cultural phenomena (ethno). This scientific approach is quite new in the field of family therapy. This study has been an important personal quest, but it also led to important reflections on silences in families, on my own professional development, and on methodological issues concerning autoethnographical research. For one thing, it highlights some of the positive aspects of family secrecy and silences, and invites us-when confronted with family secrecy in clinical practice-to carefully consider the potential destructive and life-giving aspects of the silence.

© 2015 Family Process Institute.


Language: en

Keywords

Experiences of War; Familia de Origen; Family Therapy; Family of Origin; Secretos; Secrets; Silence; Terapia Familiar; 家庭出身; 家庭心理治疗; 秘密

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