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Sleep No More: Nightmares in Emerging Nazi Germany

Sleep No More: Nightmares in Emerging Nazi Germany
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摘要 Charlotte Beradt collected hundreds of dreams she gathered in Germany between 1933 and 1939, hid them, and then sent them abroad. According to her The Third Reich of Dreams, people living under the totalitarian government of Nazi Germany had fears of listening devices picking up their own thoughts even when they were asleep, of having no walls, and of being condemned for talking in their sleep. The dreams reveal fears, insecurities, confusion, guilt, and lack of trust. Dream research has often been impaired because researchers were examining dreams during REM ~Rapid Eye Movement) sleep, while many nightmares occur during non-REM sleep. The Beradt's study showed the advantage of retrospective accounts. Dreams of other trauma victims include the discovery of dead bodies and being killed oneself and often replicas of actual events. Such nightmares preclude the restorative function of sleep. Psychotherapy, however, using dreams from traumas when conducted in a safe environment, can be helpful and relieve patients from suffering.
机构地区 Adelphi University
出处 《Sociology Study》 2017年第1期7-11,共5页
关键词 Traumatic dreams Nazis NIGHTMARES 纳粹德国 研究人员 恢复功能 心理治疗 安全感 睡眠 REM 受害者
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