'As you read through this book, it is sometimes hard to breathe. Words like tsunami, earthquake, shattering, trauma, contamination, contagion, despair, doubt, shame, and guilt permeate the essays, but it is the routine pervasiveness of the traumas described – death of the analyst, sexual exploitation of patients, the misapplication of ideas about patient confidentiality and privacy to institutions and colleagues, our history of secrecy and silencing in training institutions (only two writers name their institutional location) – and how unprepared our institutions are to deal with these that leave the reader sad and shocked. We are reminded of the individual personhood of each analyst and analysand, of the vulnerabiity of each of our patients and each trainee, of the bravery of a few, and of the complicated psychic and social processes involved in institutional and individual shattering and (in luckier cases) witnessing, repair and growth. Traumatic Ruptures is necessary reading for all analysts.' - Nancy J Chodorow, Ph.D. Training and supervising analyst, Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute.'Traumatic Ruptures is a remarkable book. Robin Deutsch and her colleagues faced the challenge of addressing, both from a theoretical perspective and clinical illustration, some of the most painful situations that are part of the analyst´s life cycle, as well as of analytic institutions; the issues addressed here very seldom appear in the analytic literature, possibly because all of us, as analysts or patients, experienced these painful moments, witnessed them or had to deal with colleagues, patients or institutions that suffered them. This book is extremely welcome, for its candid and courageous reports, for the richness of its examples and for showing once again that psychoanalysis keeps its vitality from facing the pain in its several expressions and for trying to live with and search ways of not denying human suffering and human resilience.' - Cláudio Laks Eizirik, training and supervising analyst, Porto Alegre Psychoanalytic Society, associate professor of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil former president of the IPA.'Psychoanalytic writing has long been plagued by a tendency to present things as they ought to be rather than as they are. In the service of promoting psychoanalysis, we have sometimes erred on the side of scotomizing the dark side of the profession. This new volume peels off the mask of self-deception and tells it like it is. Analysts die unexpectedly. Analysts delude themselves into thinking it's OK if they have sex with someone they are treating. Analysts who are bystanders don't know what to do with the fallout from disasters in their midst. I love this book. It should be required reading by all those who choose to spend their lives in Freud's "impossible profession"'- Glen O. Gabbard, MD. Author, Love and Hate in the Analytic Setting.