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Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children [Hardcover]

James Herzog (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 1, 2001 0881632597 978-0881632590

James M. Herzog's Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children will quickly take its place both as a landmark contribution to developmental psychology and as an enduring classic in the clinical literature of psychoanalysis.  We live in an era when a great many children grow up without a father, or, worse still, with fathers who traumatically abuse them.  Yet, society continues to ignore the emotional price that children pay, and often continue to pay throughout their lives, for this tragic state of affairs.  

Father Hunger will change this situation.  First drawn to his topic by observing the recurring nightmares of clinic-referred children of newly separated parents - nightmares in which the children's fear of their own aggression was coupled with desperate wishes for their fathers' return - Herzog went on to spend more than two decades exploring the role of the father in a variety of naturalistic settings.  He discovered that the characteristically intense manner in which fathers engaged their children provided an experience of contained excitement that served as a necessary scaffolding to the children's emerging sense of self and as a potential buffer against future trauma.
  
A brilliant observer and remarkably gifted, caring clinician, Herzog remains true to the ambiguities and multiple leves of meaning that arise in therapeutic encounters with real people.  He consistently locates his therapeutic strategies and clinical discoveries within a sophisticated observational framework, thus making his formulations about father hunger and its remediation of immediate value to scientific researchers.  A model of humane psychoanalytic exploration in response to a deepening social problem, Father Hunger is a clinical document destined to raise public consciousness and help shape social policy.  And in the extraordinary stories of therapeutic struggle and restoration that emerge from its pages, it is a stunning testament to the resiliency of the human spirit.
 
 


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Editorial Reviews

From The New England Journal of Medicine

Riveting page turners are more the exception than the rule in psychoanalytic explorations, and James Herzog has written a fine one in his Father Hunger. Right from the preface, we know that this will be a passionate and revelatory book about the "other" crucial human intimate in the child's universe, as seen through the eye, ear, mind, and heart of an able clinician. He sets himself the following task: "to accompany, even in terror; to refuse to extract myself, even at a cost; and to try to help so that a person who requests my assistance, and with whom I have forged an alliance, need not do it alone." Such forceful language, it seems, is well suited to the rigorous exploration of the complex internal domain of children's longings and appetites for their fathers. Dr. Herzog knows well that he will have to make his case regarding the universal relevance of the father to healthy child development from a variety of perspectives. Like a disciplined surveyor suspicious of his measurements, he skillfully fixes his, and subsequently our, understanding of father hunger in time and space from several vantage points: the analytic couch and environs, the medical consulting room (with 103 men who fathered premature infants), the community consulting room (where 40 teenage boys spent 30 weeks participating in small-group discussions of sexuality and intimacy), and the wider perspective of clinical-research settings. Comfortable and literate in these diverse cultures, the author argues a series of theses throughout the book: all children need their fathers, a thesis that is supported by the majority of clinical evidence (despite the relative frequency with which that need remains unmet); fathers are indispensable in helping children manage their separation from their mothers and their autonomy, as well as their aggressive drives and fantasies; much can be learned about father-child transactions through the study of trauma and repair, play, and intrapsychic development; fatherhood is inexorably related to the conjugal relationship; the meaning of prospective fatherhood is assimilated into the individual man's life history to a greater degree than the meaning of prospective motherhood is for individual women; and finally -- Herzog's most creative and provocative contribution -- all men (and boys) need to participate in relationships with a male parent who is himself loved by a female parent. The author actively engages the reader's curiosity and knowledge base with the authenticity and compassion of his own clinical work. One is struck and moved from the outset by the high, nonjudgmental regard in which Herzog holds his coinvestigating adult and child patients and their families. By implication and example, he reiterates that the way one is as an analyst is at least as important as what one does as an analyst. I was reminded frequently of Jeree Pawl's admonition to "do unto others as you would have others do unto others." Were the analytic presence considered in terms of optimal dosage, Herzog's touch could serve as a useful standard. In his use of an analytic vocabulary, Herzog is respectful of his broader readership, relying only rarely on guild language. Even then, as in his discussion of the "caretaking line of development in boys and men," he widens the clinical application of the theoretical concept so that it may be easily understood and integrated into the next level of discussion. His ideas, in fact, seem to him to require more than one language in order to be understood, and he uses Romance languages and poetic references throughout the book to freshen the eye, mind, and palate. This touch is aesthetically pleasing without diminishing the warmth, humor, and accessibility of Dr. Herzog's narrative. He is equally circumspect in his use of clinical concepts and new language. Much analytic writing may be justly criticized for relying on an idiosyncratic use of language, but Herzog is wisely sparing in his dependence on esoterica. Corroboration of Herzog's theses is interwoven with other contemporary scholarship on fatherhood and child development. In Chapter 15 ("Expectant Fatherhood"), he organizes his observations of paternal behavior into various stages, from getting ready through conception, the turn toward father and fathering, and delivery. The mosaic of mood and behavioral changes, in which fantasies are nurtured and aggression is avoided, was recently validated in two Canadian investigations that tracked hormonal changes in men during the period when they are anticipating fatherhood. An increase in estrogen and prolactin levels and a reduction in the level of circulating testosterone may be the biologic mediators of the psychological experience Herzog describes. Further corroboration of his clinical observations regarding father hunger in boys whose parents are divorcing is also accumulating in the prospective Collaborative Divorce Project in Connecticut that is investigating developmental sequelae in 160 families with divorcing parents and children under six years of age. The project's methodology calls for multiple empirical investigations of the children and their families, including play interviews with experienced clinicians to inquire into the child's experience of and imaginings about divorce. Sleep difficulties and troubled dreams are frequently reported in the preschool children as their time with their father diminishes. One closes this book reluctantly, feeling inspired, challenged, and enriched by its unflinching exploration of the domain of the father's relationship with his child in the presence of the mother. We are inspired to listen more carefully to our patients, challenged to risk more of ourselves on their behalf in order to understand this unique appetite, and enriched by the time spent with this creative clinician who understands the internal experiences of children and the relationships that humanize them so incredibly well. Kyle D. Pruett, M.D.
Copyright © 2002 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.

Review

"One closes this book reluctantly, feeling inspired, challenged, and enriched by its unflinching exploration of the domain of the father's relationship with his child in the presence of the mother.  We are inspired to listen more carefully to our patients, challenged to risk more of ourselves on their behalf in order to understand this unique appetite, and enriched by the time spent with this creative clinician who understands the internal experiences of children and the relationships that humanize them so incredibly well."

- Kyle D. Pruett, New England Journal of Medicine

"It has been over 20 years since James Herzog first introduced the concept of 'father hunger' to describe the heartfelt and, when frustrated, potentially excruciating longings of sons and daughters for their male parent.  Father Hunger tells the remarkable stories, in exquisite detail, of the adults and children who have passed through the doors of his consulting room.  A pioneer investigator, Herzog is exacting in his research, original in his thinking, and masterful in his clinical work.  Father Hunger takes the readers to the center of the developing self and to a man's role, both as external caretaker and as internal presence, in eliciting and then modulating the necessary but potentially destructive aggression of his offspring.  Bravo! A passionate book about primal passions, Father Hunger is a supremely psychoanalytic achievement."

- John Munder Ross, Ph.D., Author, What Men Want

"James Herzog and his patients, adults and children, offer us a deeply generous and intimate gift in this moving exploration of the far recesses of psychic derailment and repair.  Father Hunger explores the fathering principle and its role in development, especially in men but also in women, both in treatment and natural settings.  Using process notes and direct observation, Herzog shows how difficulties in the management of aggression derive from father hunger and then interweave with other traumatic developments in multiple ways.  His capacity to find the mind of the other is in the tradition of D.W. Winnicott, but goes far beyond him.  The chapter on 'Tommy and the Black Lion' constitutes a classic in its own right.  We owe a great debt to Herzog and to his courageous patients for sharing a journey that we all can learn from.  It would be hard to find a better book or a better teaching text for those interested in a close-up experience of how psychoanalytic therapy works."

- Susan W. Coates, Ph.D., Editor, September 11: Trauma and Human Bonds (Analytic Press, 2003)

"Herzog's work raises significant questions; meanwhile, however, one learns from and deeply admires his open and effective work with the patients in these pages, who are so profoundly affected by father hunger."

- Lynne S. Rubin, JAPA


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 328 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge (November 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0881632597
  • ISBN-13: 978-0881632590
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,237,882 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reactionary and Radical, March 16, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children (Hardcover)
Herzog's book shows him to encourage severe regressions with his patients, to poetic, moving and -- though it makes me uncomfortable to write this -- convincing effect. Herzog implies that homosexuality is a symptom of father hunger, at least for heterosexual men, and his evocative and elusive text makes a good case. Because Herzog is clearly a Winnicottian, he is untouched by the broader social perspective of, say, the interpersonalists. This is unfortunate but by no means takes away from his achievement. This book needs to be critiqued, but it also needs to be read. Those who have fled the Freudian perspective would do well to look here to see what an original, compassionate, and brave soul can do with the most painful, destructive, and frightening areas of self that other therapies neglect, avoid, or explain away.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars elegantly written and original, March 31, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children (Hardcover)
This exploration of father hunger begins with the painful stories of children and ends with the transformation of those stories into journeys of hope and personal discovery. Dr. Herzog lets the children lead the way in his sessions with them, and he organizes his book around their words and play. From a seven year old opera singer's immersion in her father's holocaust history to an eight year old boy's confrontation with the meanings of masculinity in his struggle with a make-believe lion, these patients emerge from suffering through creative play with a sensitive, adventurous analyst. Dr. Herzog deserves high praise for his insistent pursuit of the painful parts of his own past as important clues to his patients' experiences. And yet, we come away from this book in awe of the patients. Where in the psychoanalytic literature can we claim to find the same? This is an original and inspiring book.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Remarkable Exploration, March 31, 2005
This review is from: Father Hunger: Explorations with Adults and Children (Hardcover)
Herzog is both an explorer and a guide, accompanying people into the deepest, often most frightening, parts of themselves. His work with patients not only speaks to the power of deep therapeutic experience with an open, real and honest therapist, but to the hope that is possible for those who have suffered terrible trauma, provided that they have someone loyal and steadfast to join them.
Herzog does not shy away from the hard issues surrounding gender, homosexuality, aggression and violence. His writing is evocative, at times speaking directly, at times informing by including the reader in the experience of his relationships with his patients.
Finally, "Father Hunger" is not only a must read for therapists, and a must read for all who care deeply about fathers and fathering. This is a book that helps the reader know the value of having, and of being, a father.
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