Monday, April 13, 2015

Connecting sources


Amanda Gieseler

Connecting sources

 

Source A:  Alpert,  Judith L., New York University, Brown, Laura S., Seattle, Washington and Courtois, Christine A., Psychiatric Institute of Washington. "Symptomatic Clients and      Memories of Childhood Abuse: What the Trauma and Child Sexual Abuse Literature Tells Us." FIRST REPORT OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION WORKING GROUP ON INVESTIGATION OF MEMORIES OF CHILDHOOD ABUSE December. 1998. Web. 19 March. 2015.

Source A very much so integrates itself through all of the other sources I have gathered.  Speaking of different kinds of abuse, different therapies, ways of helping the children cope and heal as well as how they may turn out in the end.  The article does not specifically refute the other articles in any certain way, it really though places a big emphasis on memories that the child may experience later in life and as they continue to grow, it may gratefully help them or be extremely detrimental to them.  Source A brings in a lot of the pathos to try to get the reader to put themselves in the shoes of the child and fathom what the child may have experienced in order to give you a bigger picture to what may drive the child after these events to if the child just wishes to give up.  If I were to introduce my sources as if they were real people, I’d begin with telling them how they have a lot of the same train of thoughts and also that they may be able to bond over the fact that they want to help people try to heal and grow from experiences in which they helped others.

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