|   Sigmund Freud, the famous Viennese 
              architect of psychoanalysis, had a significant influence on modern 
              adoption theory and practice. So did his daughter Anna 
              Freud, who carried on her father’s legacy after his death 
              in 1939 and became well known in her own right as a developmental 
              researcher, a child analyst, and a theorist of “psychological 
              parenthood.” 
            Freudian ideas about unconscious desires, erotic instincts, and 
              critical childhood stages in the formation of adult personality 
              and behavior shaped the way that many parents and professionals 
              thought about adoption, especially its special challenges and potential 
              hazards. Early in the twentieth century, physicians, artists, and 
              feminists were in the vanguard of Americans interested in psychoanalysis. 
              Freud lectured at Clark University in 1909 and his translated writings 
              made him a more popular figure in the United States than in any 
              other country in the world. Freud always maintained that the American 
              version of psychoanalysis was hopelessly naive and ridiculously 
              optimistic—he called it a “gigantic mistake”—but 
              Americans paid little attention. They embraced psychoanalysis as 
              a practical means to cure a variety of ailments related to personal 
              adjustment, sexual happiness, and family life. Adoption was just 
              one example. 
            One starting point for Freud’s approach to development was 
              the belief that becoming an individual required escape, over the 
              course of childhood, from the absolute power and love of parents. 
              In order to accomplish this liberation, he argued, children invariably 
              called upon fantasies—acted out in play and daydreams—and 
              imagined that their “real” parents were much better, 
              kinder, and more exalted than the imperfect people who were actually 
              raising them. Freud called these comforting but entirely fabricated 
              fairy tales the “family romance.” 
              The fictional stories that children told themselves about their 
              origins mattered because they linked Freudian theory directly to 
              adoption. 
            Freud’s prototypical “family romance”—the 
              one he assumed virtually all children experienced and occasionally 
              remembered—was an adoption scenario. This scenario was developmentally 
              useful precisely because it remained imaginary. It allowed children 
              to safely express ambivalence and anger toward their parents, all 
              the while encouraging them to develop independent identities necessary 
              to becoming a healthy adults. 
            What worked for most children, however, caused definite problems 
              for children who actually were adopted. Adoptees who imagined another 
              set of parents were not engaged in benign falsehood. They were facing 
              up to reality. “There is a real element of mystery 
              in the illegitimate child’s background which makes such correction 
              by reality either impossible or unconvincing,” wrote social 
              worker Mary Brisley in 1939. The convergence of fantasy and real 
              life was the key issue for psychoanalytically inclined clinicians 
              in social work and psychiatry 
              whose interests included adoption. Viola Bernard, 
              Florence Clothier, Leontine Young, and Marshall 
              Schechter were just a few examples. Psychoanalytic ideas crowded 
              the adoption world from World War II on. Erik Erikson’s concepts 
              of “identity” and “identity crisis” were 
              among the most widely disseminated Freudian ideas, applicable to 
              adolescent development and youth movements in general as well as 
              adoption in particular.  
            Because the loss of natal parents was an all-too-real component 
              of adoption, the family romances of adopted children pointed toward 
              unanswered and sometimes unanswerable questions. Who were my birth 
              parents? Why did they give me away? Was there something wrong 
              with me? Such painful dilemmas were deeply implicated in the problematic 
              self-images and flawed relationships that some adoptees manifested, 
              and that came to the attention of clinicians. It is not surprising 
              that parents and professionals who took the Freudian family romance 
              seriously favored adoption policies and practices, such as matching, 
              that tried to erase natal kinship, hence concealing the emotionally 
              difficult truth that one set of parents had been lost and replaced 
              with another. 
            Even at the height of enthusiasm about confidentiality 
              and sealed records, the ritual of telling 
              children about their adoptions acknowledged that adoptees were different 
              than their non-adopted peers. Adoptees’ family romances were 
              more like nightmares than daydreams, and they had the potential 
              to produce deep sadness and distress. Knowing that they had indeed 
              been given away, and feeling that their very selfhood was divided 
              and incomplete, adoptees were at special risk for a range of psychopathologies. 
              Freud’s developmental theory implied that adoptees faced emotional 
              challenges inseparable from the adoption process itself, hence anticipating 
              and helping to bring into being more recent concerns with loss and 
              attachment.  
            Psychoanalytic approaches to birth 
              parents and adoptive parents also circulated widely in medicine, 
              social work, clinical psychology, 
              and the popular press. By midcentury, illegitimacy was widely perceived 
              as the result of unhappy and destructive parent-child relationships 
              that remained both unconscious and unresolved in adolescence and 
              adulthood. Seen through this Freudian lens, adoptions of children 
              born to unmarried women were no longer tragedies to be avoided, 
              but constructive acts that transferred children to adoptive parents 
              whose psychological (and other) qualifications were superior to 
              those of their neurotic birth mothers. On the other hand, the infertility 
              that logically motivated married couples to adopt was also suspected 
              of having unconscious sources that might signal neurosis or worse. 
            All parties to adoption, in other words, shared some form of psychological 
              dysfunction. After 1945, the goal of home studies and other therapeutic 
              practices was increasingly to guarantee that professionals trained 
              in psychoanalysis and other human sciences would play a crucial 
              managerial role in the adoption process. Even Jessie 
              Taft, a leading educator who disliked the orthodox Freudian 
              emphasis on trauma—it “implies fear of life itself” 
              she wrote in dismay—believed that skilled psychological interpretation 
              and help belonged at the heart of adoption. With the skills to explore 
              the emotional minefield that placement exposed, the psychological 
              engineers who oversaw family-formation confirmed that adoption was 
              abnormal while also promising to normalize it. Sigmund Freud’s 
              chief legacy, in adoption and elsewhere in American culture, was 
              to multiply deviations and simultaneously insist on their cure. 
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