Academic literature on the topic 'Emotional incest'

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Journal articles on the topic "Emotional incest"

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Pepper, Robert S. "Emotional Incest in Group Psychotherapy." International Journal of Group Psychotherapy 52, no. 2 (April 2002): 285–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/ijgp.52.2.285.45504.

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Ahmad, Nor Shafrin, and Rohany Nasir. "Emotional Reactions and Behavior of Incest Victims." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 5 (2010): 1023–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2010.07.229.

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Carson, David K., James R. Council, and Margaret A. Volk. "Temperament, Adjustment, and Alcoholism in Adult Female Incest Victims." Violence and Victims 3, no. 3 (January 1988): 205–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.3.3.205.

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Female adult incest victims differing in history of alcoholism were compared to an alcoholism-only and a no incest/no alcoholism group on dimensions of temperament, psychological adjustment, and self-esteem. Incest victims with histories of alcoholism were more alienated and withdrawn, less rhythmical in their daily behavior, and evidenced lower self-esteem, more negative mood, greater social nonconformity, and more emotional discomfort than women in the other three groups. Women in the no incest/no alcohol group showed the best self-esteem and psychological adjustment and were generally more positive in the expression of various temperamental characteristics. The findings also suggested an association between incestuous victimization and an alcoholic family of origin.
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Clarke, Katherine M. "Creation of Meaning in Incest Survivors." Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy 7, no. 3 (January 1993): 195–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0889-8391.7.3.195.

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This paper describes an integrated constructivist treatment for addressing creation of meaning issues in incest survivors. The treatment involves the reaccessing and reprocessing of emotional schemata. It is compared to a cognitive restructuring treatment which considers issues of meaning as faulty beliefs which must be corrected by logical analysis and replacement. A preliminary treatment study found a significant increase in meaning resolution in incest survivors who were offered the integrated treatment approach. No changes were found on self-esteem.
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Karaian, Lara. "Relative Lust: Accidental Incest’s Affective and Legal Resonances." Law, Culture and the Humanities 15, no. 3 (July 25, 2016): 806–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1743872116661271.

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This article explores the intimate relationship between the body, sexuality, technology, popular culture, and incest law. I examine the nature, meaning, and affective resonances of representations of consensual incest, “accidental incest,” and “technology facilitated accidental incest” in popular culture, pornography, and public service announcements. Drawing on a pastiche of affect theory; cultural and media studies theories of human-technological relations; queer, feminist and cultural posthumanist theories of embodiment, subjectivity and sexuality; and, Eve Sedgwick’s notion of a “reparative reading” I consider how these experiences and representations expand our emotional and erotic desires and alter our perceptions of our bodies’ parameters, their “proper” sexual objects and kinship relations, and their boundary violations. I argue that these affective residues pose a challenge to the “logic” underpinning the taboo’s intransigence, thus potentially contributing to the destigmatization and decriminalization of consensual adult incestuous relations.
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Welldon, Estela. "Group therapy for victims and perpetrators of incest." Advances in Psychiatric Treatment 4, no. 2 (March 1998): 82–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/apt.4.2.82.

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Abuse is an inter-generational problem. Abusers have been damaged in childhood by abusive action perpetrated on them, usually by their parents but sometimes by other significant adults. At times, in becoming adults, the early emotional damage can manifest into psychopathological features, including perversions or paraphilias and perpetration of abuse against children.
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Bessa, Maria Misrelma Moura, Jefferson Drezett, Fernando Adami, Sandra Dircinha Teixeira de Araújo, Italla Maria Pinheiro Bezerra, and Luiz Carlos de Abreu. "Characterization of Adolescent Pregnancy and Legal Abortion in Situations Involving Incest or Sexual Violence by an Unknown Aggressor." Medicina 55, no. 8 (August 13, 2019): 474. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina55080474.

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Background and Objectives: In pregnancies resulting from incest, the adolescent maintains close family and emotional relations with the aggressor, different from what occurs when pregnancy results from sexual violence by strangers. Evidence indicates that this type of relationship with the aggressor may interfere in the dynamics of such violence and the adolescent’s access to health services. Materials and Methods: The objective of this research was to describe and correlate aspects associated with pregnancy when resulting from rape of adolescents in situations of incest; rape when perpetrated by an unknown aggressor and an abortion as allowed by law was sought. Method: A cross-sectional, epidemiological study of adolescents treated at the Pérola Byington Hospital, São Paulo, Brazil, bringing an allegation of pregnancy, resulting from sexual violence and a request for abortion as allowed by law. A total of 311 adolescents, being 134 in the “pregnancy from incest group”, and 174 in the group “pregnancies resulting from rape by a stranger” were considered under the study variables; relationships were investigated using the chi-squared test and Poisson regression with robust variance. Results: The study included 137 cases (44.1%) of pregnancy resulting from incest, and 174 cases (55.9%) of pregnancy from rape by a stranger. In cases of incest, a declaration of religion (92.0%) was significantly more frequent, and the adolescents were approached in spaces considered safe or private (92.7%); the aggressor taking advantage of the adolescent’s legal condition of vulnerability as a function of age (83.3%). Cases of incest presented a lower median adolescent age and greater gestational development, with gestations being ≥ 13 weeks prevailing. Conclusion: Cases of pregnancy by incest presented indicators suggesting both proximity and relationship with the aggressor, and pregnancy at a very early age, which postponed the adolescent’s procurement of health service, and interfered negatively with abortion assistance as allowed by law.
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Heath, Kathleen Carson, Hugh Donnan, and Gerald W. Halpin. "ATTRIBUTIONS FOR BLAME AND RESPONSIBILITY AMONG FEMALE INCEST VICTIMS." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 18, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 157–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.1990.18.1.157.

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Attributions concerning blame and responsibility for incest were assessed prior to therapy among 40 female victims. Also, relationships between causal attributions and emotional distress were investigated. Assessments of blame as attributed to “offender”, “victim”, “society”, and “situation” were obtained and correlated with measures of anxiety, depression, and hostility. Beliefs about responsibility for resolution of the incest problem were assessed and delineated also. An ANOVA on blame scores revealed a significant main effect (F = 78.62, df = 3, 117 p < .0001). Comparison procedures indicated the victims blamed the offender (p < .01) more than society, the situation, or the victim. However, there was no difference between societal and situational blame. Society and the situation were blamed (p < .01) more than the victim. No significant correlations between the blame attributions and distress levels were found. Victims' beliefs concerning responsibility for resolution of the incest problem were analyzed. An ANOVA performed on “offender”, “victim”, “society”, and “situational” responsibility items did not yield a significant main effect.
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Muhalimah, Siti, Budi Darma, and Fabiola Dharmawanti Kurnia. "Incestuous Behavior In Virginia Cleo Andrews’ Flowers In The Attic And Tabitha Suzuma’s Forbidden." Journal of English Language and Literature 12, no. 3 (December 31, 2019): 1187–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.17722/jell.v12i3.424.

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This study aims to give more understanding about incestuous behaviour especially in Virginia Cleo Andrews’ Flowers in the Attic and Tabitha Suzuma’s Forbidden. There are three focuses of the study; they are (1) how incest described in those novels, (2) what the causing factors of incest, and (3) what the impact of it. In answering the first question, incest on its features can be classified into three types; they are based on the offenders, the motivation, and the way of treating. For the second question, this study is analysed trough two parts. The first part is based on the condition before that incest happened and for the second part is based on the psychoanalysis theory by Karen Horney. In her theory, she explains about the childhood experience and neurotic needs that are related in finding the possible causing factors of incest as the focus of this study. Then, for the third question, the possible effects of sibling incest such as; trauma, isolated on social sanction, sexual aversion disorder, and other psychological problems. The result of this study has been found that sibling incest which is happened in those novels is driven by both sides of the offenders. What they do are on their mutual desire and willingness. And the dysfunctional family that they face also really influences their psychology. In Forbidden, it is found that there are two motivations that influence Lochan and Maya to do sibling incest, they are; affection and aggression while in Flowers in the Attic, there are three motivations that are found, they are; affection, eroticism and aggression. For the second question, this research reveals that there are three causing factors of sibling incest that are happened in both novels, they are; dysfunctional family, between age peers, and law of homogamy. Not only that, from the findings, it is also found that all of the offenders experienced the child abuse and neglect in their childhood. They also get the emotional maltreatment from their parents. Their childhood experiences then shape their personality and it deals with the psychological problems which are influenced by the neurotic needs that they seek. The third question is about the impact of sibling incest towards the offenders’ life. And it is found that all of the offenders blame themselves for everything that has happened in their lives, even one of those offenders Lochan decides to commit suicide
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Ali, Sheraz, and Johar Ali. "Suicidal Ideation in Victims of Sexual Abuse in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan." Pakistan Journal of Women's Studies: Alam-e-Niswan 26, no. 1 (May 30, 2020): 41–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.46521/pjws.026.01.0016.

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This study focuses on suicidal ideation in victims of sexual abuse. Drawing upon semi-structured interviews of thirty victims of sexual abuse in Khyber Pukhtunkhwah, Pakistan, this paper discusses the theme, i.e. domestic violence, including indiscriminate sexual abuse and the abhorring crime of incest, which remains hidden due to aggressively upheld patriarchal norms of women exploitation. The interviews conducted at six different locations, present women's narratives of their untold plight for the first time. The findings of this research show that among the respondents, only those women had strong suicidal ideations who were the victims of incest. Irritation, aggression and self-deprecating behaviour were strong symptoms of their suicidal temptations. Pain, physical and emotional, caused by overwhelming stress in the form of familial and social hatred, social disconnectedness, burdensomeness and the previous history of violence were the main factors that highly escalated their risk factor in committing suicide
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Emotional incest"

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Johnson, Tamsyn. "Emotional incest: an exploratory study of therapists' perceptions of the phenomenon and their experiences with it in couple therapy practice." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11961.

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This research study explored the phenomenon of emotional incest; otherwise conceptualised as the emotionally enmeshed parent-child relationship. The study focused on the perceptions and experiences of therapists who have encountered the phenomenon in their work with couples presenting for therapy; where one partner in the couple war or is currently involved in a parental relationship charactersised by emotional incest. The research investigated therapists' perceptions of the phenomenon of emotional incest and explored the nature of its manifestation amongst the therapists' own caseloads. The study also examined therapists' perceptions and experiences of the impact that emotional incest has on the relationships of the couples they are working with and explored the approaches therapists take in addressing this issue in practice.
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Karlsson, Martina, and Andrea Pettersson. "Flickors upplevelse av att utsättas för incest av fadern." Thesis, Högskolan i Skövde, Institutionen för hälsa och lärande, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:his:diva-13118.

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Bakgrund: I Sverige utsätts omkring 55 000 - 65 000 flickor mellan 0-17 år för incest. Anmälningar kring incest ökar årligen och det diskuteras om det relateras till ett mer medvetet och engagerat samhälle. Mörkertalet är fortfarande omfattande. För sjuksköterskor är det därför viktigt med kompetens och förståelse för barnens upplevelser. Genom stödjande samtal kan sexuellt utsatta barn upptäckas, vägledas och hjälpas vilket lindrar lidande Syfte: Syftet med studien var att belysa flickors upplevelse av att utsättas för incest av fadern. Metod: Studiens baserades på en kvalitativ metod med narrativ karaktär. Detta gjordes genom analys av sex självbiografier skrivna av kvinnor berättade ur barnens perspektiv. Resultat: Flickor upplever att de blir bekräftade av fadern men att inte vara förstående till hans handlingar. Incesten bidrar till att flickor känner sig ensamma och rädda i sin utsatthet. I resultatet framgår det även att flickor lär sig avskärma själen från kroppen i övergreppen. För att uppleva känslan av kontroll över sin egen kropp utvecklar flickorna ett destruktivt beteende. Skuld och skam är återkommande känslor hos flickor som utsätts för incest av fadern. Konklusion: Barn utsatta för incest behöver inte visa synliga symptom. För att upptäcka dessa flickor bör sjuksköterskor genom god omvårdnad se varje flicka i sin helhet och vara lyhörd inför deras livsvärld.
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Van, Niekerk Wilhelmina Johanna. "Emotional experiences of incestuous fathers : a social constructionist investigation." Diss., 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/928.

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This study aimed to relate the emotions of two fathers regarding their incestuous behaviour. The epistemological framework is social constructionism. The `case-study approach' was chosen as the most suitable method to gain access to the information. Qualitative in-depth interviews with the fathers were conducted to collect data about their emotional experiences regarding their incestuous behaviour and Hermeneutics was used as method of data analysis. The emotional experiences of the participants regarding their incestuous behaviour were reconstructed in the form of prominent themes. Themes that seemed to re-occur in both participants' stories were identified and discussed as common themes. These themes included; ambivalence, powerlessness and guilt. This study provides a rich understanding of the emotional experiences of incestuous fathers. These experiences seem to be unstated or insufficiently emphasised in the traditional empirical, cause and effect, linear modernist literature.
Psychology
M.A. (Clinical Psychology)
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Saloojee, Melanie Fiona. "The experiences of primary caregivers whose children/grandchildren were exposed to paternal incest / Melanie Fiona Saloojee." Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/11967.

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Paternal incest is the intimate sexual contact between biological, step or foster fathers and their children. These father-figures include the live-in partners of the non-offending mother. The actual incidence of paternal incest in South Africa is not known; however, the South African Police Services report the incidence of incest in the Western Cape for 2011/2012 to be the second highest in South Africa. When children reveal the incest to any person, this is called disclosure. After disclosure and with the removal of the paternal figure from the family unit, the mother or grandmother is responsible for the sole care of the child-victim and becomes the primary caregiver. However, in the South African context it is traditionally accepted that the grandmother assumes the role of primary caregiver of the child where the child’s mother and/or father are unable to fulfil their parental role adequately. Therefore in this study, “primary caregivers” refers to mothers and maternal grandmothers. In the South African context, limited studies have been done that explore the experiences of primary caregivers whose children or grandchildren were exposed to paternal incest. There is also a lack of information on how to support these primary caregivers in the abovementioned context. The aim of this study was firstly to explore the experiences of primary caregivers whose children or grandchildren were exposed to paternal incest and secondly to use these experiences to suggest guidelines that may be utilised by practitioners (such as social workers and registered counsellors) to develop support programmes for these caregivers. The research was conducted at a non-profit organisation in the Western Cape Province of South Africa, that provides psychosocial services and where cases of paternal incest are referred for intervention. A qualitative, phenomenological research design was applied in this study to obtain rich data. Six primary caregivers were chosen through purposive sampling, on the basis that their children or grandchildren were exposed to paternal incest within the last five years. Of these, four were mothers and two were maternal grandmothers who were responsible for the children. Data was collected through in-depth interviews and was analysed thematically. Two main themes emerged from the study. The first theme involved reactions to the disclosure and its aftermath, which encompassed emotional, cognitive and physiological reactions that are similar to secondary traumatisation. The second theme was coping strategies that emerged to deal with the disclosure and its aftermath, which encompassed effective coping strategies (behavioural coping strategies to actively solve problems and the presence of social support), unhealthy or negative coping strategies (behavioural coping strategies of avoidance) and threats to coping (a lack of social support). The contribution of this study lies in the suggestion of guidelines for the support of primary caregivers whose children or grandchildren were exposed to paternal incest. These guidelines include the provision of emotional support, multidisciplinary practitioner support and educational support programmes.
MA (Psychology), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Lewenhaupt, Ida. "Passive radicalisation without mobilisation : A narrative analysis of collective identities and emotions as driving forces of online radicalisation." Thesis, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:fhs:diva-9673.

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Scholars often consider ideology a crucial factor for radicalisation, but some groups appear radical even though they have been described as lacking clear ideologies. This thesis will explore why members of the incel community appear radical despite the community’s lack of a rigid ideology. I explore this through a narrative analysis focusing on collective identities and emotions as narrated and potential driving forces of radicalisation. My study has identified two narratives, the incel as inferior and the incel as superior. The analysis shows that radicalisation is more prominent in the second narrative. In the first narrative, the victimhood and hopelessness serve as a foundation for the expressions of violence found in the second one based on perceived injustices. My findings suggest that the narration of collective identities and emotional dimensions is crucial for the radicalisation of members of the incel community since collective identities create a sense of belonging to the community and guide actions based on “emotional batteries”.
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Books on the topic "Emotional incest"

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MacIan, Paula Suzanne. It was the year of the scalping: Poems about emotional incest, sexually motivated abuse, mother-daughter incest, father-daughter incest. Pomfret Ctr., Conn: Still Waters Press, 1991.

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Uncle Vampire. New York: Atheneum, 1993.

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Grant, Cynthia D. Uncle vampire. London: Mammoth, 1995.

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No more secrets, no more shame: Understanding sexual abuse and emotional disorders. Washington, D.C: PIA Press, 1990.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. A place of stones. New York, N.Y: Signet, 1993.

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Love, Patricia. The emotional incest syndrome: What to do when a parent's love rules your life. New York: Bantam Books, 1990.

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Sibling abuse: Hidden physical, emotional, and sexual trauma. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications, 1997.

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Sibling abuse: Hidden physical, emotional, and sexual trauma. Lexington, Mass: Lexington Books, 1990.

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1947-, Robinson Jo, ed. The emotional incest syndrome: What to do when a parent's love rules your life. New York: Bantam Books, 1991.

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Wiehe, Vernon R. Sibling abuse: The hidden physical, emotional, and sexual trauma. Lexington, Mass: Lexington Books, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Emotional incest"

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Kung-Keat, Teoh, and Jasmine Ng. "Confused, Bored, Excited? An Emotion Based Approach to the Design of Online Learning Systems." In 7th International Conference on University Learning and Teaching (InCULT 2014) Proceedings, 221–33. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-664-5_19.

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"44. An emotional animal." In Incest Avoidance and the Incest Taboos, 120–24. Stanford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780804791694-044.

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"Sexual Abuse and Incest." In The Women’s Concise Guide to Emotional Well-Being, 122–26. Harvard University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1r4xd2h.24.

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Rachman, Arnold W., and Susan A. Klett. "The intellectual and emotional journey toward understanding the incest trauma." In Analysis of the Incest Trauma, 1–16. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429471766-1.

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Rachman, Arnold W., and Susan A. Klett. "Triumph of the human spirit: the emotional courage of a young woman who confronted her incest trauma." In Analysis of the Incest Trauma, 253–70. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429471766-11.

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Neverow, Vara. "Splintered Sexualities in Rebecca West’s The Return of the Soldier, Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, and Sylvia Townsend Warner’s “A Love Match”." In Virginia Woolf and Her Female Contemporaries. Liverpool University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781942954088.003.0028.

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Chris Baldry in Rebecca West’s debut novel The Return of the Soldier (1918), Septimus Warren Smith in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway (1925), and the siblings Justin Tizard and Celia Tizard in Sylvia Townsend Warner’s “A Love Match” (1961) all struggle with sexual attractions generated either by the trauma of direct exposure to the horrors of the Great War or by the side-effects of the war. Each of the characters discussed must cope with war-driven sexual confusion that violates the cultural restraints circumscribing sex and marriage while forbidding the transgressions of homosexuality and incest. The essay explores how the characters cope with their war-induced emotional distress and how their sufferings are offset through moments of intense love and euphoria that transcend all conventions. The essay also takes into account issues relating to censorship, particularly with regard to the timeframe of publication for Warner’s work.
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Donahue, Jennifer. "Consuming the Caribbean." In Taking Flight, 107–32. University Press of Mississippi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496828637.003.0006.

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The fifth chapter analyzes how Tiphanie Yanique’s Land of Love and Drowning and Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun critique the surveillance of women’s bodies. In highlighting the multigenerational impact of incest, sex work, and commercial land development, the authors foreground resistance to exploitative practices. Their works explore the interplay of structural inequalities, foreground the emotional and economic impact of exploitative practices, and question who benefits from the commoditization of land and women’s bodies. Here Comes the Sun and Land of Love and Drowning undercut the paradise myth through critical representations of tourism, sex tourism, and land development in Jamaica and the Virgin Islands. The novels call attention to the relationship between power, economics, and the surveillance of sexuality. The authors use the protagonists’ moves away from home, their respective quests for affirmation, to position home as a site of individual and collective trauma.
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Reuber, Markus, Gregg H. Rawlings, and Steven C. Schachter. "Psychiatric Consultation Liaison Clinical Nurse Specialist, 26 years’ experience, USA." In Non-Epileptic Seizures in Our Experience, edited by Markus Reuber, Gregg H. Rawlings, and Steven C. Schachter, 112–15. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190927752.003.0040.

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This chapter focuses on the experience of a Psychiatric Clinical Nurse Specialist, who was invited by a Neurologist to help his team with the process of Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizure (PNES) diagnostic disclosure. Often, their patients are aware of trauma, such as physical or emotional abuse, incest, and rape; patients report they told a parent, usually their mother, but often they were told it did not happen and never to speak of it again. Other times, there is little or no memory of their childhood at all. The patients also report poor treatment in their local emergency room. Anytime family members have the perception that their loved one is “faking” the events, this will likely result in a lack of family support. Family members can be very helpful as the patient may minimize the sadness/anger felt about a loss. The chapter then offers advice to aid patients’ and family members’ acceptance of the psychogenic diagnosis.
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Eisler, Riane. "Touch, Intimacy, and Sexuality in Partnership and Domination Environments." In Nurturing Our Humanity, 197–223. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190935726.003.0009.

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How people are touched, especially as children and in sexual and other intimate relations, affects and is in turn affected by cultural factors. This chapter explores how patterns of touch, intimacy, and sexuality differ at opposite ends of the domination-partnership continuum and why understanding this is important for moving forward. Studies show that we read other’s intentions and emotions by how we are touched and that the confluence of caring with coercion and pain is one of the most effective mechanisms for socializing people to suppress empathy and submit to domination as adults—whether through the painful binding of girls’ feet once traditional in China, or so-called Christian parenting guides that today admonish parents not to “overindulge” children and instead follow “God’s way” by forcing eight-month-old babies to sit with their hands on their trays or laps through threats and violence. Sexuality, too, is distorted in domination systems through the erotization of domination and violence, for example, by inculcating the belief that males are entitled to sex; through the mass shootings of women in the United States and Canada by men who call themselves incel (involuntarily celibate); and by the enslavement of women by Muslim fundamentalist groups like ISIS. The chapter contrasts these unhealthy interactions with healthy ones supported by partnership-oriented cultures.
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Conference papers on the topic "Emotional incest"

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Jaiswal, Akriti, A. Krishnama Raju, and Suman Deb. "Facial Emotion Detection Using Deep Learning." In 2020 International Conference for Emerging Technology (INCET). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incet49848.2020.9154121.

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Chikkamath, Satish, Sachin Radder, Srinivasagouda C. Patil, and Nalini C. Iyer. "Face Emotion Based Intelligent Chaterbot." In 2021 2nd International Conference for Emerging Technology (INCET). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incet51464.2021.9456249.

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Sehgal, Stuti, Harsh Sharma, and Akshat Anand. "Smart and Context-Aware System employing Emotions Recognition." In 2021 2nd International Conference for Emerging Technology (INCET). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incet51464.2021.9456356.

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Chatzara, Konstantina, Charalampos Karagiannidis, and Demosthenes Stamatis. "An Intelligent Emotional Agent for Students with Attention Deficit Disorder." In 2010 2nd International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2010.98.

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Dodiya, Harsh, Karan Gala, Rounak Jaiswal, and Sheetal Chaudhari. "Attention, Emotion and Attendance Tracker with Question Generation System Using Deep Learning." In 2021 2nd International Conference for Emerging Technology (INCET). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incet51464.2021.9456254.

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Feidakis, Michalis, Thanasis Daradoumis, and Santi Caballe. "Endowing e-Learning Systems with Emotion Awareness." In 2011 Third International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2011.83.

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Daradoumis, Thanasis, Marta Arguedas, and Fatos Xhafa. "Building Intelligent Emotion Awareness for Improving Collaborative E-Learning." In 2013 International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2013.49.

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Caballe, Santi. "Towards a Multi-modal Emotion-Awareness e-Learning System." In 2015 International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCOS). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2015.88.

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Zhong, Zhao, Gang Shen, and Wenhu Chen. "Facial Emotion Recognition Using PHOG and a Hierarchical Expression Model." In 2013 International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2013.143.

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Arguedas, Marta, Fatos Xhafa, and Thanasis Daradoumis. "An Ontology about Emotion Awareness and Affective Feedback in Elearning." In 2015 International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCOS). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2015.78.

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