About the Editors ix
Notes on Contributors xi
Foreword from the Trauma Field xxi
Chris R. Brewin
Foreword from the Psychosis Field xxv
Brian Martindale
Introduction 1
Andrew Moskowitz, Martin J. Dorahy, and Ingo Schäfer
Part I Historical and Conceptual Perspectives 7
1 Defining Psychosis, Trauma, and Dissociation: Historical and
Contemporary Conceptions 9
Andrew Moskowitz, Markus Heinimaa, and Onno van der Hart
2 Historical Conceptions of Dissociative and Psychotic
Disorders: From Mesmer to the Twentieth Century 31
Warwick Middleton, Martin J. Dorahy, and Andrew Moskowitz
3 Hysterical Psychosis: A Historical Review and Empirical
Evaluation 43
Eliezer Witztum and Onno van der Hart
4 The Role of Dissociation in the Historical Concept of
Schizophrenia 55
Andrew Moskowitz and Gerhard Heim
5 Ego‐Fragmentation in Schizophrenia: A Severe Dissociation of
Self‐Experience 69
Christian Scharfetter
6 From Hysteria to Chronic Relational Trauma Disorder: The
History of Borderline Personality Disorder and Its Connection to
Trauma, Dissociation, and Psychosis 83
Elizabeth Howell
7 An Attachment Perspective on Schizophrenia: The Role of
Disorganized Attachment, Dissociation, and Mentalization 97
Andrew Gumley and Giovanni Liotti
8 Childhood Experiences and Delusions: Trauma, Memory, and the
Double Bind 117
Andrew Moskowitz and Rosario Montirosso
Part II Research Perspectives 141
9 Childhood Trauma in Psychotic and Dissociative Disorders
143
James G. Scott, Colin A. Ross, Martin J. Dorahy, John Read, and
Ingo Schäfer
10 Structural Brain Changes in Psychotic Disorders, Dissociative
Disorders, and After Childhood Adversity: Similarities and
Differences 159
Roar Fosse, Andrew Moskowitz, Ciaran Shannon, and Ciaran
Mulholland
11 Dissociative Symptoms in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
179
Ingo Schäfer, Volkmar Aderhold, Harald J. Freyberger, Carsten
Spitzer, and Katrin Schroeder
12 Psychotic Symptoms in Dissociative Disorders 195
Vedat Şar and Erdinç Öztürk
13 Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: Prevalence, Phenomenology,and
the Dissociation Hypothesis 207
Eleanor Longden, Andrew Moskowitz, Martin J. Dorahy, and Salvador
Perona‐Garcelán
14 The Value of Hypnotizability in Differentiating Dissociative
from Psychotic Disorders 223
Joost B. C. Mertens and Eric Vermetten
15 Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder and Schizotypal Personality Disorder 241
Holly K. Hamilton and Daphne Simeon
16 Post‐traumatic Stress Disorder with Psychotic Features
257
Cherie Armour, Mark Shevlin, Ask Elklit, and James Houston
17 Memory Disturbances in Schizophrenia and Post‐traumatic
Stress Disorder 271
Cherrie Galletly and Sandy McFarlane
18 Cognitive Perspectives on Dissociation and Psychosis:
Differences in the Processing of Threat? 283
Martin J. Dorahy and Melissa J. Green
Part III Clinical Perspectives 305
19 Dissociative Psychosis: Clinical and Theoretical Aspects
307
Onno van der Hart and Eliezer Witztum
20 Dissociative Schizophrenia: A Proposed Subtype of
Schizophrenia 321
Colin A. Ross
21 Advances in Clinical Assessment: The Differential Diagnosis
of Dissociative Identity Disorder and Schizophrenia 335
Marlene Steinberg
22 A Psychological Assessment Perspective on Clinical and
Conceptual Distinctions Between Dissociative Disorders and
Psychotic Disorders 351
Bethany L. Brand, Helle Spindler, and Renn Cannon
23 The Role of Double Binds, Reality Testing, and Chronic
Relational Trauma in the Genesis and Treatment of Borderline
Personality Disorder 367
Ruth A. Blizard
24 Accepting and Working with Voices: The Maastricht Approach
381
Dirk Corstens, Sandra Escher, Marius Romme, and Eleanor Longden
25 Trauma Therapy for Psychosis?: Research and Clinical
Experience Using EMDR with Psychotic Patients 397
Anabel Gonzalez, Dolores Mosquera, and Andrew M. Leeds
26 Treating Dissociative and Psychotic Disorders
Psychodynamically 411
Valerie E. Sinason and Ann‐Louise S. Silver
27 Dissociation, Psychosis and Spirituality: Whose Voices are We
Hearing? 427
Patte Randal, Jim Geekie, Ingo Lambrecht, and Melissa Taitimu
Index 441
The Editors
Andrew Moskowitz, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Dean of Undergraduate Programs, Touro College Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Martin J. Dorahy, PhD, Professor of Psychology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Ingo Schäfer, MD, MPH, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
The painting on the front cover, Composition VI, was created by Wassily Kandinsky in 1913. Inspired by the Biblical story of the Great Flood, Kandinsky drew on themes of destruction and rebirth in developing these images.
“This volume is highly recommended to clinicians and researchers as
an excellent resource of contemporary thinking in understanding
some of the many complex ways that individuals respond to traumatic
experiences”
- Pamela R. Fuller, Fronteir Psychological Associates
PTD includes outstanding contributions from international experts
and provides a comprehensive view of its topics, particularly with
respect to conceptual and research issues. The editors have
interspersed throughout the book parentheses leading the reader to
other related chapters, but a summarizing contribution would have
been welcome. That small qualm notwithstanding, PTD is essential
reading for anyone wanting to understand how trauma, dissociation,
and psychosis both converge and diverge. (Journal of Trauma
and Dissociation, July 2020)
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