The Un-Making of Them
Clinical Reflections on Boarding School Syndrome
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:24th Apr '25
£140.00
This title is due to be published on 24th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£29.99(9781032848945)
Ex-boarders can be amongst the most challenging clients for therapists with many clinicians struggling to address their unique needs. This book presents a groundbreaking collection of chapters sharing insights and reflections on clinical work with ex-boarders in different settings and circumstances with the aim establishing a body of knowledge for clinical work with these clients.
This book aims to demonstrate how the fall-out from boarding is much wider than was previously thought whilst reporting on new and innovative treatment methods that may serve to help clinicians address those consequences with boarders. Focusing on the experience and insights of clinicians, many of whom are ex-boarders themselves, the book features contributions from a wide range of theoretical backgrounds, including psychodynamic, ‘energy psychology’, post-Jungian, and more. It studies how the understanding of the “Boarding School Syndrome” has been enlarged by recent advances in Attachment therapy, trauma studies, neuroscience and pastoral/ safeguarding awareness within education, and brings the current research into new territories for this issue. Topics covered include the effect of boarding school on sibling relationships, miliary family boarders, ex-boarder therapists, and using EMDR for boarding school trauma. The reader will gain a wider understanding about how individuals and society are impacted by this way of raising children and what evidenced pathways to recovery are being evolved.
This book is written in an accessible jargon-free style and will appeal to psychotherapists, psychologists, psychoanalysts, and counsellors, as well as ex-boarders and parents interested in the impact of boarding schools from a professional or personal perspective.
‘Nick Duffell has curated a series of interlocking works that, together, form a devastating indictment of the enormous harm that boarding schools have inflicted, for far too long, on far too many.’
Earl Charles Spencer, historian and author of A Very private School
‘A first-class anthology that digs deep into the psychological harm done by boarding schools. For the first time, there is a serious attempt to identify and understand the abuse suffered by girls who fall prey to older boys at co-educational boarding schools where staff are incapable of protecting them.’
Robert Verkaik
‘A timely and useful summary of therapeutic approaches, with original contributions of particular interest and importance about women ex-boarders and co-educational boarding.’
Richard Beard, author of Sad Little Men
‘An important additional enquiry that broadens out from Nick Duffell’s pioneering work on identifying the psycho-social fall-out from boarding. It explores the widespread harm resulting from this pernicious way of raising children, and describes a range of treatment approaches for this difficult client group. All clinicians who want to be up to date must read this.’
Prof. Andrew Samuels, former chair of UKCP, author of A New Therapy for Politics
‘This book is a welcome contribution to the growing literature on the boarding school experience. Offering a range of essays by different authors, it highlights the relatively neglected topic of the female experience of boarding school as well as issues that arise for female psychotherapists who are themselves ex-boarders. Using vivid examples from clinical practice, we are reminded of the complex impact of ruptured attachment relationships on adult emotional life.’
Sue Gerhardt, author of Why Love Matters
‘Nick Duffell's work has illuminated my life ever since I first started to address the traumas that arose from my 'privileged' schooling. He has helped me immeasurably, and that has helped me to help others. His latest book brings together a fascinating range of thinkers and practitioners in the field of boarding school and associated syndromes – a force to ensure that children in institutions, state and private, are understood and protected better than we were. Let's listen to them.’
Alex Renton, writer and broadcaster, author of Stiff Upper Lip
‘To what extent has Britain’s class system been dependent on traumatising children? This is the wonderfully uncomfortable question that opens Duffell’s newest book on ‘boarding school survivors’. Although aimed at therapists helping those grown-up children to recover, the book’s core concerns are relevant to all of us. If modern life is governed by the ruthless economics of neoliberalism, then guess where the global elite are choosing to send their children for education? Duffell and colleagues ask us to pay attention to distress. We should listen.’
Dr Suzanne Zeedyk, Developmental Psychologist, University of Dundee
‘Duffell presents a brand-new collection of essays by experienced therapists working with adults who were, as children, sent to boarding school. The lasting impact of the traumatic losses are vividly conveyed by practitioners from diverse counselling and psychotherapy modalities, many of them boarding school survivors themselves. The deeply moving and rich collection of narratives will inform and inspire. A timely addition to the literature, this book will be a vital resource for therapists and ex-boarders alike.’
Professor Joy Schaverien, PhD, Jungian Psychoanalyst and author of Boarding School Syndrome: The Psychological Trauma of the ‘Privileged’ Child
‘A bold and pioneering contribution to human psychology.’
Professor Brett Kahr, Senior Fellow at the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology and author of twenty books, including Forensic Psychoanalysis: From Sub-Clinical Psychopaths to Serial Killers
‘With extensive knowledge of the challenges faced by those who experienced this unique form of trauma, psychotherapist, Nick Duffell has curated a comprehensive selection of clinically focused chapters. Each of these is written by an author with understanding of the complexities of healing from abuse and neglect masked as privilege. This book needs to be read by anyone supporting boarding school survivors on their journey to recovery.’
Dr Naomi Murphy, Consultant Clinical & Forensic Psychologist, Honorary Professor of Psychology (Nottingham Trent University)
ISBN: 9781032848969
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
176 pages