Some Present-Day Asylum Seekers in the U.S.: Machismo and “Women on the Run”
Author(s)
Barbara EisoldKeywords
asylum, machismo, women on the run, transmission of trauma across generationsThe family. Marriage. Woman
HQ1-2044
Women. Feminism
HQ1101-2030.7
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
Following a brief review of international asylum law (The Geneva Conventions), and the role of American mental health professionals in the asylum process, this paper attempts to understand the ways in which the often trauma-creating custom of machismo is transferred across generations in Central American families. Using as background the work of self psychologist Alan Roland (1989,1996, 2005), I have described families from these areas as so powerfully father-centric that children develop a sense of themselves based largely on their ability to sustain their father’s positive regard. In addition, without discussion, they present a positive image of him to the outside world, even when his behavior at home is brutal. To do otherwise would be humiliating. Having no place to reflect on these customs, often they are acted upon/acted out in the next generation. Note:We publish thi paper also tranlated in italian by Francesca Tessitore (Francesca Tessitore, Psychologist, PhD Student in Mind, Gender and Languages, her research fields are the processes of female immigration and motherhood at risk through a psychodynamic framework. francitessitore@gmail.com).Date
2016-08-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:8923d9acf3014aada17b20ede2c4ecf11827-9198
2531-6605
10.6092/1827-9198/3996
https://doaj.org/article/8923d9acf3014aada17b20ede2c4ecf1