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When trauma, oppression, and media shatter psychological integration: A dissoanalytic restructuring on the missions and formations of identity and alter personalities

Erdinc Ozturk.




Abstract

The dissoanalysis theory examines the current thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of individuals and societies who are controlled by trauma, oppression, and media, using a holistic approach. It also predicts the future thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of dissociative individuals and societies, aiming to develop strategies for preventing human-originated individual and societal traumatic experiences, as well as psychotherapy methods. From a dissoanalytic perspective, dissociation functions as an effort for renewal and individuation in response to successive positive and negative life events. For individuals and masses, it is essentially a struggle to regain the autonomy and freedom that have been lost, and even an act of becoming unique! In this original theoretical study, conducted based on the modern psychotraumatology principles and the dissoanalysis theory, new concepts such as the “dissoanalytic manifesto”, “alter personality bridge”, “dissociative void”, “dissociogenic attachment”, “dissociogenic growth panic”, “post-dissociative growth”, and “disso-autophagy” are introduced, offering a fresh perspective on dissociative identity disorder for the first time. Additionally, the functions and missions of thirty typical alter personalities have been restructured using the “dissoanalytic method”. Based on “cyclical dissociative causality” and originating from the dissoanalysis theory, the “dissoanalytic method” examines the psychosocial effects of trauma-originated dissociative processes on psychological integration. In the study, where psychological fragmentation is regarded as “traumatic fragmentation” and the splitting of identity, consciousness, memory, and perception is considered “dissociative fragmentation”, alter personalities are categorized based on their alter balance as “positive”, “neutral”, and “negative” in nature.

Key words: Dissoanalysis, dissoanalytic manifesto, alter formation, dissociative identity disorder, alter personality, cyclical dissociative causality





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