Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology Books

3780 products


  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Invitation in Art Volume 51 International Behavioural and Social Sciences Classics from the Tavistock Press

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    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £210.00

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    £60.62

  • Imagination Illness and Injury

    Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales) Imagination Illness and Injury

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow does the body influence the way we see the world?Imagination, Illness and Injury examines the psychological factors behind perceptual limitations and distortions and links a broad range of somatic manifestations with their resolution.Melanie Starr Costello applies Jungian theory to a variety of cases, attributing psychosomatic phenomena to cognitive processes that are common to us all. She analyses the role of illness in several life narratives, and interprets the appearance of somatic phenomena during important phases of analytic treatment. Together these case narratives present a significant challenge to established views of psychosomatics. Subjects covered include: archetypal constrictions of identity somatic elements of perception the psyche-soma split. Imagination, Illness and Injury brings a fresh perspective to the understanding and treatment of the psychotherapy client as a psycho-somatic unity. JungTable of ContentsIntroduction. Part I: The Imaginal System: Archetypes and Complexes and Perceptual Determinants. Archetypal Constrictions of Identity: A Case of Resolution Through Injury. Albert Speer’s Twilight of Evil: A Case of Near-death Awakening. The Unconscious Complex and Olfactory Messaging: A Case of Repetition Compulsion. Part II: Somatic Elements of Perception: The Interpersonal Origins of Awareness. The Psyche-Soma Split: A Case of Maternal Negligence. Psychosomatics in Analysis: A Case of Repair Through Regression. Building the Bridge: A Case of Restoration Through Dyadic Imaging. Conclusions.

    1 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Embodiment

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisDid you know that intentional dreaming has been used to solve life's problems? Embodiment: Creative Imagination in Medicine, Art and Travel sets out Robert Bosnak's practice of embodied imagination and demonstrates how he actually works with dreams and memories in groups. The book discusses various approaches to dreams, body and imagination, and combines this with a Jungian, neurobiological, relational and cultural analysis. The author's fascination with dreams, the most absolute form of embodied imagination, has caused him to travel all over the world. From his research he concludes that while dreaming everyone everywhere experiences dreams as embodied events in time and space while the dreamer is convinced of being awake; it is after waking into our specific cultural stories about dreaming that the widely differing attitudes towards dreams arise. By taking dreaming reality, not our waking interpretation of it, as the model for imagination, this book creates a paradTrade Review"Late at night, when everyone is quiet, sit alone with Robert Bosnak's astonishing book, Embodiment, and allow him to accompany you on an exciting journey that is at once physical, spiritual, psychological, and astonishingly compatible with current data from neuroscience and cognitive science. As a working psychoanalyst, I have found this to be so transformational to my work that I can never again say 'It's only a dream'." - Philip M. Bromberg, Training and Supervising Analyst, William Alanson White Institute; Clinical Professor of Psychology, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, USA"I am convinced we should press forward with this lovely, simple, effective discipline which has proven itself with such remarkable results in our Company." - Michael Boyd, Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford-upon-Avon, UK"Drawing on Henry Corbin's Imaginal Realm, as well as on medieval alchemy, scientific complexity theory, East Asian philosophy, postcolonial critique, and above all on three decades intensive work with dreams, Embodiment reveals how humans can relate to the multiple beings alive in each of us. Original and fascinating." - Kimberley C. Patton, Professor of the Comparative and Historical Study of Religion, Harvard Divinity School, USATable of ContentsBosnak, Prelude. Into the Cave. A Radical Change of Perspective. The Embodying Image. A Display of Method. The Dreaming Brain and Simultaneous Multiplicity in Space. Metabolizing Trauma. The Endogenous Healing Response. Surrender and Dissociation. Kinds of Imagination. Primal Matter and Tincture, the Coloring Agent. Incubation, Art, and Dreaming by Proxy. The Embodied Condition. A Practical Guide to Technique.

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • The Psychotic Wavelength

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Psychotic Wavelength

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Psychotic Wavelength provides a psychoanalytical framework for clinicians to use in everyday general psychiatric practice and discusses how psychoanalytic ideas can be of great value when used in the treatment of seriously disturbed and disturbing psychiatric patients with psychoses, including both schizophrenia and the affective disorders. In this book Richard Lucas suggests that when clinicians are faced with psychotic patients, the primary concern should be to make sense of what is happening during their breakdown. He refers to this as tuning into the psychotic wavelength, a process that allows clinicians to distinguish between, and appropriately address, the psychotic and non-psychotic parts of the personality. He argues that if clinicians can find and identify the psychotic wavelength, they can more effectively help the patient to come to terms with the realities of living with a psychotic disorder.Divided into five parts and illustTable of ContentsMinne, Preface. Part I: Making the Case for a Psychoanalytic Perspective on Psychosis. Introduction. The Medical Model. Controversial Issues in Psychosis. Part II: Psychoanalytic Theories about Psychosis: A Selective Review. Freud's Contributions to Psychosis. The Kleinian Contribution to Psychosis. Bion and Psychosis. A Contemporary Freudian Perspective on Psychosis. The Psychoanalytic Treatment of Schizophrenia: Lessons from Chestnut Lodge. The Divided Self: Evaluating R. D. Laing's Contribution to Thinking about Psychosis. Part III: Tuning into The Psychotic Wavelength. Differentiating Psychotic Processes from Psychotic Disorders. The Psychotic Wavelength. Dreams and Delusions. Utilising the Countertransference in Psychosis. Part IV: The Psychotic Wavelength in Affective Disorders. Why the Cycle in a Clinical Psychosis? Puerperal Psychosis: Vulnerability and Aftermath. Managing Depression – Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, Antidepressants or Both? Part V: Implications for Management and Education. Developing an Exoskeleton. Destructive Attacks on Reality and the Self. The Role of Psychotherapy in Reducing the Risk of Suicide in Affective Disorders: A Case Study. Education in Psychosis. Psychoanalytic Attitudes to General Psychiatry and Psychosis.

    1 in stock

    £37.99

  • Exploring in Security

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Exploring in Security

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWinner of the 2010 Goethe Award for Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Scholarship!This book builds a key clinical bridge between attachment theory and psychoanalysis, deploying Holmes'' unique capacity to weld empirical evidence, psychoanalytic theory and consulting room experience into a coherent and convincing whole.  Starting from the theorypractice gap in psychoanalytic psychotherapy, the book demonstrates how attachment theory can help practitioners better understand what they intuitively do in the consulting room, how this benefits clients, and informs evidence-based practice. Divided into two sections, theory and practice, Exploring in Security discusses the concept of mentalising and considers three components of effective therapy the therapeutic relationship, meaning making and change promotion from both attachment and psychoanalytic perspectives. The second part of the book applies attachment theory to a number of clinical siTrade Review"The richness of this book lies in the way that Holmes uses and reflects on a diverse range of theory... Holmes does not take one theoretical perspective and build from this but rather interweaves and critically engages with analytic theorists in relations to his attachment based concepts. His aim, which he certainly fulfils, is to go not just beyond a conversation about theory but to develop a framework of psychoanalysis within the therapeutic community and build and develop both theory, and perhaps more importantly, practice in relation to therapeutic work." – Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 55, 2010"This book is genuinely rich and will appeal to students as much as to seasoned clinicians, both to learn from and quarrel with. A helpfully detailed index allows the book to be used as an ongoing resource... The book portrays an infectious delight in exploring theory, in thinking about thinking and awakening clients' curiosity to generate reparative meanings." - Gabrielle Brown, Therapy Today, June 2010"Exploring in Security concentrates on clinical uses of attachment theory within individual psychotherapy. Like its predecessors, it rarely disappoints... As he writes about these clinical lessons, what he offers is rich, complex and balanced in ways that soften conceptions of new or old." - Chris Mace, British Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 197, 2010"This is a stunning book, a tour de force. Both a brilliant scholar with an extraordinary reach, and a wise and deeply humane clinician, Holmes is unique in his ability to truly integrate the diverse voices of psychoanalysis and attachment research using the prism of the clinical process. This book is extraordinary for its complexity as well as its simplicity, because, finally, it is about the work of psychotherapy, which Holmes embraces in the most lively compassionate, and loving way. As soon as I finished it, I wanted to read it again." Arietta Slade, Professor of Clinical and Developmental Psychology, The City College and City University of New York, USA."This is an outstanding book. Jeremy Holmes, like an artisan weaving the weft and warp of a fine tapestry, eloquently interlaces attachment, psychoanalysis, and clinical practice, to create a convincing and accessible picture of the principles and practice of psychoanalytic psychotherapy. Long a leader in the field of psychotherapy, he draws on his broad knowledge of the literature, combining it with exemplary clinical understanding to show psychotherapy not only as an integration of both art and science but also as an effective method to help people in distress. For the practitioner this book is full of practice-orientated suggestions to be used in the consulting room; for the academically-inclined there is no shortage of discussion about the intrinsic psychological processes of therapy." Prof Anthony W Bateman Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist, Barnet, Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Trust and Visiting Professor, Psychoanalysis Unit, University College London."The richness of this book lies in the way that Holmes uses and reflects on a diverse range of theory... Holmes does not take one theoretical perspective and build from this but rather interweaves and critically engages with analytic theorists in relations to his attachment based concepts. His aim, which he certainly fulfils, is to go not just beyond a conversation about theory but to develop a framework of psychoanalysis within the therapeutic community and build and develop both theory, and perhaps more importantly, practice in relation to therapeutic work." – Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 55, 2010"Exploring in Security concentrates on clinical uses of attachment theory within individual psychotherapy. Like its predecessors, it rarely disappoints... As he writes about these clinical lessons, what he offers is rich, complex and balanced in ways that soften conceptions of new or old." - Chris Mace, British Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 197, 2010Table of ContentsPart I: Principles. Assuming. Mentalising. Attaching. Meaning. Changing. Empowering. Repairing. Poetising. Part II: Practice. Sex and Loving. 'Borderlining'. Suicide and Self-harming. Dreaming. Ending. Epilogue.

    1 in stock

    £37.99

  • Bion Today New Library of Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales) Bion Today New Library of Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBion Today explores how Bionâs work is used in contemporary settings; how his ideas have been applied at the level of the individual, the group and the organisation; and which phenomena have been made more comprehensible through the lenses of his concepts. The book introduces distinctive psychoanalytic contributions to show the ways in which distinguished analysts have explored and developed the ideas of Wilfred Bion. Drawing on the contributorsâ experience of using Bionâs ideas in clinical work, topics include: an introduction to Bion clarification of the inter-related concepts of countertransference and enactment concepts integrating group and individual phenomena clinical implications of Bionâs thought Bionâs approach to psychoanalysis. Bion Today will be a valuable resource for psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and all those who are interested in learning more about Bionâs thinking and his work.Trade Review"This is a very stimulating, at times almost provocative, book. It will make a fresh and valuable contribution to our thinking about the nature and significance of Bion’s work today." - Betty Joseph, Distinguished Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society, London, UK"The book’s authors represent diverse parts of the psychoanalytic world and the book itself covers a dizzying range of topics... It deserves to be widely read." - Tom C. Russ, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, Vol 25, No 3, September 2011"This is a very stimulating, at times almost provocative, book. It will make a fresh and valuable contribution to our thinking about the nature and significance of Bion’s work today." - Betty Joseph, Distinguished Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society, London, UK"The book’s authors represent diverse parts of the psychoanalytic world and the book itself covers a dizzying range of topics... It deserves to be widely read." - Tom C. Russ, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, Vol 25, No 3, September 2011Table of ContentsPart I: Introduction to Bion. Mawson, Introduction: Bion Today: Thinking in the Field. O’Shaughnessy, Whose Bion? Part II: Mainly Conceptual. Fisher, The Emotional Experience of K. Britton, The Pleasure Principle, the Reality Principle and the Uncertainty Principle. Bell, Bion: The Phenomenologist of Loss. Taylor, Anticipation and Interpretation. Cortiñas, Science and Fiction in the Psychoanalytical Field. Part III: Mainly Clinical. Ferro, Clinical Implications of Bion's Thought. O'Shaughnessy, Relating to the Superego. Levine, ‘The Consolation Which is Drawn from Truth:’ The Analysis of a Patient Unable to Suffer Experience. Grotstein, Clinical Vignette Encompassing Bion’s Technical Ideas. Mitrani, Taking the Transference: Some Technical Implications in Three Papers by Bion. Part IV: Aesthetic. Dartington, W. R. Bion and T. S. Eliot. Sayers, Bion's Transformations: Art and Psychoanalysis. Part V: Group Mentality. Armstrong, The Plurability of Experience. Garland, Group Therapy: Myth in the Service of Work. Lipgar, Learning from Bion’s Legacy to Groups. Gordon, Some Neglected Clinical Material from Bion’s Experiences in Groups. Part VI: Later Bion. Vermote, Bion’s Critical Approach to Psychoanalysis. Waddell, ‘From Resemblance to Identity’: The Internal Narrative of a Fifty Minute Hour. Harris-Williams, ‘Underlying Pattern’ in Bion's Memoir of the Future. Karnac, Appendix: W. R. Bion Bibliography.

    1 in stock

    £39.99

  • Developments in Object Relations

    Taylor & Francis Developments in Object Relations

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDevelopments in Object Relations provides a highly accessible account of how British Object Relations developed in the second half of the twentieth century, focusing on the generation who took up where Klein and Winnicott left off. Complementing and building on its predecessor, An Introduction to Object Relations, it gives an overview of the development of Object Relations with special reference to the Independent and Kleinian traditions.An introductory chapter defines the key features of Object Relations. The emergence of Object Relations is is then described theoretically from some of Freud's papers and clinically from the controversial work of Sandor Ferenczi. Similarities and divergences between Kleinian and Independent approaches are considered in detail through the close examination of the work of a key practitioner from each approach, and other significant contributions. Gomez brings clarity to a complex field, discussing what is powerfTrade Review"Like her previous Introduction to Object Relations, Lavinia Gomez's new book offers excellent guidance for anyone who seeks to get a handle on this important aspect of the British psychoanalytic tradition. In focussing on a select few contributors whose ideas are presented and discussed with great lucidity, Gomez manages to give a most useful account of the development of Object Relations theory and practice. The subtlety and complexity of her writing – as it is perhaps best exemplified by her re-assessment of 'the case' of Masud Khan – makes this book a pleasure to read."-Werner Prall, Ph.D, Senior Lecturer, Centre for Psychoanalysis, Middlesex University and The Guild of Psychotherapists, London."Lavinia Gomez describes developments in psychoanalytic thought and technique in Post War Britain. Linking the intellectual and personal biographies of central figures in the Kleinian and Independent groups, she shows how the commonalities and differences within schools of thought converge into a rich body of contemporary psychoanalytic practice. Her accomplished synthesis is interesting, accessible and erudite."-Gabrielle Brown, Adult Psychotherapist, Portman Clinic, Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, London."This book is a stimulating read with both informative and thought provoking content. In a clear, concise style, Gomez describes and comments on the historical emergence of object relations theory and the contrasting approaches that developed from it. Controversial differences are depicted between Klein/Winnicott /Bion/and Khan in an impressive overview and she creatively explores several further developments. Fascinating details about the analysts’ lives, set against the backcloth of the psychoanalytic world, connect the reader with the personalities behind the theories."-Anna Bravesmith, (BPC, BAPPS), practising Jungian analyst, trainer and supervisor, member of the Society of Analytical Psychology. "What first struck me about this book was the author’s love for psychoanalysis. Gomez engages deeply and methodically with her subject, offering an original slant as well a valuable overview of Object Relations in the later twentieth century. Linking theoretical and personal aspects of practitioners and their work, together with absorbing case material, means the book will be helpful to experienced clinicians as well as those newer to the field. It is a good resource for all therapists to have in their library, and a must for those involved in teaching. The book is clearly structured, well thought through and highly readable."-Margot Schiemann, MA, Psychotherapist, Supervisor and Teacher, Training Group Analyst with the Institute of Group Analysis.Table of ContentsPrefaceChapter 1: IntroductionChapter 2: BeginningsChapter 3: The Kleinian and Independent FrameworksChapter 4: Wilfred Bion and his Development of PsychoanalysisChapter 5: Further Kleinian DevelopmentsChapter 6: Masud Khan and the British Psycho-Analytical SocietyChapter 7: Further Independent DevelopmentsChapter 8: Approaches to PracticeAppendix

    1 in stock

    £40.84

  • The Possible Profession The Analytic Process of

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Possible Profession The Analytic Process of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Possible Profession: The Analytic Process of Change takes a fresh look at the many forms of unconscious communication that take place in the analytic situation. Bringing together two decades of the author's previous writing as well as a considerable amount of new material, this book addresses a major contemporary issue in the field of psychoanalysis. Unconscious communication in the analytic situation takes many forms. This book explores a number of these pathways as the author has encountered them in clinical work. Including numerous clinical examples, chapters cover a variety of topics with a central focus on: the relationship between the inner worlds of patient and analyst the interplay between these intrapsychic forces how this interaction affects the analytic process and, more specifically, the therapeutic action of psychoanalysis. Written in a clear and concise way thTable of ContentsFinding a Point of View: Introduction. Section I: Interaction and the Inner World. On Beginnings: The Concept of the Therapeutic Alliance and the Interplay of Transferences in the Opening Phase. The Inner Experiences of the Analyst: Their Contribution to the Analytic Process. On Misreading and Misleading Patients: Some Reflections on Communications, Miscommunications, and Countertransference Enactments. Imaginary Gardens, Real Toads: On Memory and Its Uses in the Analytic Process. On Unconscious Communications and Covert Enactments: Some Reflections on Their Role in the Analytic Situation. Patients as Instruments of Change: Their Role in the Analytic Process. On Courage: A Fragment of an Analysis. Section II: Questions, Controversies, Explorations. On the Status of Nonverbal Communications: Some Reflections on Their Role in the Analytic Process and Analytic Education. Reflections on the Goals of Analysis and the Process of Change. On the Question of Self-Disclosure: Error or Advance in Treatment. Listening, Sharing, Dreaming: On the Uses of the Analyst’s Inner Experiences. Some Reflections on Slippery Slopes and an Approach on Those on the Edge. Section III: Reflections, Extensions, Historical Perspectives. Countertransferences Past and Present: A Review of the Concept. In Search of the Mind of the Analyst: A Progress Report. Hans Loewald: An Appreciation. On the Adolescent Neurosis. Travels with Charlie: On My Longstanding Affair with Theory. James Joyce and Molly Bloom. Insights, Epiphanies, and Working Through: On Healing, Self-Healing, and Creativity in the Writer and the Analyst. On Hope in Analysis and for Analysis. Index.

    1 in stock

    £44.64

  • From the Couch to the Circle

    Taylor & Francis Ltd From the Couch to the Circle

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRecipient of the 2017 Anne Alonso Award for Excellence in Psychodynamic Group Therapy, conferred by the Group Foundation for Advancing Mental Health, part of the American Group Psychotherapy Association.From the Couch to the Circle: Group-Analytic Psychotherapy in Practice is a handbook of group therapy and a guide to the group-analytic model - the prevailing form of group therapy in Europe. The book draws on both John Schlapobersky's engagement as a practitioner and the words and experience of people in groups as they face psychotherapy's key challenges - understanding and change. This book provides a manual of practice for therapists' use that includes detailed descriptions of groups at work; accounts of therapists' own experience and the issues they face in themselves and in their groups. The book is devoted to the Group-Analytic model but the other principally psychodynamic models of group therapy - the Tavistock, Interpersonal, PsychTrade Review"Schlapobersky and his book – the literary analogue of a group at its best- are worthy successors to his predecessor giants: Foulkes and Anthony, Yalom, Skynner, Pines. Read him: for instruction, for joy, to live and laugh more fully, more contentedly, more dangerously and become a better, braver, more compassionate, more confident yet questioning therapist whilst doing so." - Jeremy Holmes"The massive strength of the book is the case material that drives it with engaging, moving examples and instructive commentaries.John shows acute clinical sensitivity and virtues as a teacher deploying concepts to make sense of clinical material and using clinical material recursively to flesh out theoretical concepts … a terrific way to work." - Stephen Frosh"Rarely nowadays do we read a single author text written with the authority that derives from such rich experience as a practitioner and teacher who enjoys and is able to utilize the work of his students who he quotes from so generously. The writing of former patients gives the final stamp of authority to his work." - Malcolm Pines "This is an encyclopaedic handbook that will be a source of reference for all group psychotherapist, and a significant teaching text for trainees. It is a rich and generous work, the culmination of John Schlapobersky's many years' experience of working in this field as a clinician, teacher and supervisor. Reading this book is like participating in a lively and exciting group. It organises group-analytic thinking in a multilayered structure where contributions and arguments are opened up, examined and stored like nodal points in a splendid theoretical web. And also like being in a good group, the experience enriches and deepens as each layer is explored and integrated... This book equips us with a current and mature clinical discipline that enables us to find form in both the spoken word and silence and peentrate the secrets of inner injury that have created hurt and isolation... For Schlapobersky, group analysis is not a theoretical form of psychotherapy but a way of being in and of the world. From The Couch to the Circle is a beautifully written testimony to the complexity of group analysis and the simplicity of strangers meeting." - Camilla Matthews, group analyst and supervisor, Therapy TodaySELECTED REVIEWS: British Journal of Psychiatry"One of the most comprehensive and accessible textbooks about group therapy for many years … (valuable) also for its wisdom about human nature, the complexities of inter-personal relationships and the dynamics of groups … (It) will be of use to psychiatrists and other mental health professionals at all stages of their career, and who are involved in any type of group work"-Jessica YakelyBritish Journal of Psychotherapy"… A compelling exposition of theory linked to practice … John looks at Foulkes’s writing as work in progress … offering us a different perspective on his theoretical legacy … The vignettes … speak of a master clinician at work and illustrate the potential of Group Analysis … The scope of this book is encyclopedic … a welcome addition to our existing text books..."-Stephen ArcariContexts I"This book is John’s gift to ‘pay love forward’ to the field of Group Analysis. Drawing on the image of the conductor’s missing baton … if you were to hold something that conveys the heart of Group Analysis, I suggest that you consider holding this book."-Nicky von FraunhoferContexts II"It is uncommon to come across a book that can truly be said to be a life-work … As a source book, a text-book, John’s is a faultless delivery … a tour de force, but it is more than this, insofar as it does indeed express … wise, lived aspects."-Martin WeegmanDialogue"… A substantial achievement (that) celebrates the increasing maturity of group analysis as a clinical and theoretical discipline."-David VincentGroup"These clinically informative vignettes allow us a metaphorical seat in the groups he presents as he demonstrates and integrates theory into practice, followed by his "commentary" … With a deeply respectful, mystical bent, he uncovers … "portal moments … that open the door between the unspoken and the unspeakable—in silent respect of the extraordinary."-Chera FinnisGroup Analysis I"… Documents the transition from the dyadic approach in psychoanaly(sis) to the multi-personal therapy of unconscious relations, ‘psychotherapy in the group, by the group, including its conductor’... This is the story of this book … easy to read… (and) full of helpful features … an oevre that gives the group-analytic State of the Art."-Robi FriedmanGroup Analysis II"A comprehensive reference book for students and experienced clinicians … helping demystify the model for both current and potential group members … John’s 35 years of experience working as a group analyst shines through in his attention to detail in each chapter…"-Sheila RitchieInternational Journal of Group Psychotherapy"This book will be a resource for the life and practice of any group therapist … for anyone interested in groups … a service to teaching, supervision, and practice for years to come."-Dale Godby and Jason BermanInternational Journal of Therapeutic Communities"it is seminal and deserves to become a classic contribution to the field of therapeutic group work … it must be for group analytic psychotherapy, the missing definitive text…"-Simon Mc ArdlePsychoanalytic Psychotherapy"This remarkable single author book is a much awaited and valuable contribution to the group analytic field … a robust review of theory coupled with a ‘how to’ manual approach, beautifully delivered through … richly textured clinical vignettes … a humbling and inspiring read … giving a wonderful step-by-step approach … mandatory reading for those training in group analysis … invaluable for those experienced in group work."-Daniel RiordanPsychotherapy Bulletin"This beautifully-written practice manual … provides us with a deeper understanding of the hows and whys of group therapy … a critical addition to the foundational texts … An extended demonstration of this radical principle of psychotherapy practice and (the author’s) interest in the reparative process of group therapy: "Our quest is to penetrate the heart of stone that holds the secrets of inner injury.... [In] the forum of the group people can be more alive to the real, the lost, and the unacquainted in one another and can harvest gifts of adversity from the most unlikely sources" … 68 stories or clinical vignettes … are the beating heart of th(is) … eloquent, deeply poetic book that will appeal to any group practitioner who wishes to become a more sophisticated thinker about how to create groups that become agents of healing."-Nancy Kelly The Psychotherapist"A bold, convincing step in the direction … of the all-important theory-practice link that makes for strength and confidence in our clinical work … describing a wide range of applications and offering coherence to some of the most ambiguous group analytic concepts."-Morris NitsunTherapy Today"An encyclopaedic handbook that will be a source of reference for all group psychotherapists … a significant teaching text for trainees … a rich and generous work, the culmination of … many years’ experience working in this field as a clinician, teacher and supervisor."-Camilla Matthews"Schlapobersky and his book – the literary analogue of a group at its best- are worthy successors to his predecessor giants: Foulkes and Anthony, Yalom, Skynner, Pines. Read him: for instruction, for joy, to live and laugh more fully, more contentedly, more dangerously and become a better, braver, more compassionate, more confident yet questioning therapist whilst doing so." - Jeremy Holmes"The massive strength of the book is the case material that drives it with engaging, moving examples and instructive commentaries.John shows acute clinical sensitivity and virtues as a teacher deploying concepts to make sense of clinical material and using clinical material recursively to flesh out theoretical concepts … a terrific way to work." - Stephen Frosh"Rarely nowadays do we read a single author text written with the authority that derives from such rich experience as a practitioner and teacher who enjoys and is able to utilize the work of his students who he quotes from so generously. The writing of former patients gives the final stamp of authority to his work." - Malcolm Pines "This is an encyclopaedic handbook that will be a source of reference for all group psychotherapist, and a significant teaching text for trainees. It is a rich and generous work, the culmination of John Schlapobersky's many years' experience of working in this field as a clinician, teacher and supervisor. Reading this book is like participating in a lively and exciting group. It organises group-analytic thinking in a multilayered structure where contributions and arguments are opened up, examined and stored like nodal points in a splendid theoretical web. And also like being in a good group, the experience enriches and deepens as each layer is explored and integrated... This book equips us with a current and mature clinical discipline that enables us to find form in both the spoken word and silence and peentrate the secrets of inner injury that have created hurt and isolation... For Schlapobersky, group analysis is not a theoretical form of psychotherapy but a way of being in and of the world. From The Couch to the Circle is a beautifully written testimony to the complexity of group analysis and the simplicity of strangers meeting." - Camilla Matthews, group analyst and supervisor, Therapy Today“Schlapobersky’s own resources are much in evidence as he picks his way through this mass of theory, attracted more by the bottom-up than the top-down, and very sparing in his use of heavier psychological constructs, such as the occasional references he makes to character disorder and personality disorder. So, the book proceeds intelligently, and humanely.” -Jack Chalkley, Author, Clinical Psychologist“He [John Schlapobersky] illustrates his arguments throughout with clinical material, bringing group analytic therapy alive at its best: human, compassionate, transformative. His clinical vignettes could stand alone for their narrative power and originality and it is a double treat that they also serve to augment the theory- practice link.” -Morris Nitsun, PhD, Consultant NHS Psychologist in Group Psychotherapy; Training Group Analyst, Institute of Group Analysis London and Fitzrovia Group Analytic Practice. Author, The Anti-GroupSELECTED REVIEWS: British Journal of Psychiatry"One of the most comprehensive and accessible textbooks about group therapy for many years … (valuable) also for its wisdom about human nature, the complexities of inter-personal relationships and the dynamics of groups … (It) will be of use to psychiatrists and other mental health professionals at all stages of their career, and who are involved in any type of group work"-Jessica YakelyBritish Journal of Psychotherapy"… A compelling exposition of theory linked to practice … John looks at Foulkes’s writing as work in progress … offering us a different perspective on his theoretical legacy … The vignettes … speak of a master clinician at work and illustrate the potential of Group Analysis … The scope of this book is encyclopedic … a welcome addition to our existing text books..."-Stephen ArcariContexts I"This book is John’s gift to ‘pay love forward’ to the field of Group Analysis. Drawing on the image of the conductor’s missing baton … if you were to hold something that conveys the heart of Group Analysis, I suggest that you consider holding this book."-Nicky von FraunhoferContexts II"It is uncommon to come across a book that can truly be said to be a life-work … As a source book, a text-book, John’s is a faultless delivery … a tour de force, but it is more than this, insofar as it does indeed express … wise, lived aspects."-Martin WeegmanDialogue"… A substantial achievement (that) celebrates the increasing maturity of group analysis as a clinical and theoretical discipline."-David VincentGroup"These clinically informative vignettes allow us a metaphorical seat in the groups he presents as he demonstrates and integrates theory into practice, followed by his "commentary" … With a deeply respectful, mystical bent, he uncovers … "portal moments … that open the door between the unspoken and the unspeakable—in silent respect of the extraordinary."-Chera FinnisGroup Analysis I"… Documents the transition from the dyadic approach in psychoanaly(sis) to the multi-personal therapy of unconscious relations, ‘psychotherapy in the group, by the group, including its conductor’... This is the story of this book … easy to read… (and) full of helpful features … an oevre that gives the group-analytic State of the Art."-Robi FriedmanGroup Analysis II"A comprehensive reference book for students and experienced clinicians … helping demystify the model for both current and potential group members … John’s 35 years of experience working as a group analyst shines through in his attention to detail in each chapter…"-Sheila RitchieInternational Journal of Group Psychotherapy"This book will be a resource for the life and practice of any group therapist … for anyone interested in groups … a service to teaching, supervision, and practice for years to come."-Dale Godby and Jason BermanInternational Journal of Therapeutic Communities"it is seminal and deserves to become a classic contribution to the field of therapeutic group work … it must be for group analytic psychotherapy, the missing definitive text…"-Simon Mc ArdlePsychoanalytic Psychotherapy"This remarkable single author book is a much awaited and valuable contribution to the group analytic field … a robust review of theory coupled with a ‘how to’ manual approach, beautifully delivered through … richly textured clinical vignettes … a humbling and inspiring read … giving a wonderful step-by-step approach … mandatory reading for those training in group analysis … invaluable for those experienced in group work."-Daniel RiordanPsychotherapy Bulletin"This beautifully-written practice manual … provides us with a deeper understanding of the hows and whys of group therapy … a critical addition to the foundational texts … An extended demonstration of this radical principle of psychotherapy practice and (the author’s) interest in the reparative process of group therapy: "Our quest is to penetrate the heart of stone that holds the secrets of inner injury.... [In] the forum of the group people can be more alive to the real, the lost, and the unacquainted in one another and can harvest gifts of adversity from the most unlikely sources" … 68 stories or clinical vignettes … are the beating heart of th(is) … eloquent, deeply poetic book that will appeal to any group practitioner who wishes to become a more sophisticated thinker about how to create groups that become agents of healing."-Nancy KellyThe Psychotherapist"A bold, convincing step in the direction … of the all-important theory-practice link that makes for strength and confidence in our clinical work … describing a wide range of applications and offering coherence to some of the most ambiguous group analytic concepts."-Morris NitsunTherapy Today"An encyclopaedic handbook that will be a source of reference for all group psychotherapists … a significant teaching text for trainees … a rich and generous work, the culmination of … many years’ experience working in this field as a clinician, teacher and supervisor."-Camilla MatthewsTable of ContentsFrosh, Foreword. Pines,Tribute. Anthony, Historical Preview. Schlapobersky, Introduction. Part I: Foundations. Section Overview. The Aims And Vocabulary Of Psychotherapy. The Three ‘R’s’: The Three Dimensions Of Psychotherapy: Relational, Reflective, Reparative. Personal and Group Development. The Language Of The Group: Monologue, Dialogue And Discourse In Group Analysis. Speech And Silence In Psychotherapy: Silence That Brings Words And Words That Bring Silence. The Range of Applications: Duration, Frequency, Setting and Form: Ten Clinical Studies. Methods Applications And Models: The Group-Analytic Model And Its Contemporaries: The Tavistock, Interpersonal, Psychoanalytic, Modern Analytic and Systemic. Part II: The Group-Analytic Model - The Basics. Section Overview. The Three Dimensions Of Life In A Group: Structure, Process And Content. Structure: Composition, Selection, Dynamic Administration. Process: Socialisation, Exchange (Reciprocity), Resonance, Valency, Mirroring, Amplification, Condensation. Content: Narrative, Discourse, Six Key Questions And The Voice Of The Symbol. The Conductor: Convenor, Therapist And Group Member. Part III: The Dynamics Of Change – Beyond The Basics. Section Overview. The Four Domains Of Communication In Groups: Current, Transference, Projective And Primordial. Lost Or Found In The Transference? Transference, Countertransference, Projection and Identification in Groups. Longing, Belonging and The Intermediate Territory: Holding, Play and The Group’s Figurations. Metaphors And Metamorphosis: Symbols, Transition And Transformation. Location, Translation, Interpretation: At The Heart of The Group-Analytic Model. Conclusion and The Last Word.

    1 in stock

    £46.54

  • Reading Lacans Écrits From The Freudian Thing to

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Reading Lacans Écrits From The Freudian Thing to

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Ãcrits was Jacques Lacanâs single most important text, a landmark in psychoanalysis which epitomized his aim of returning to Freud via structural linguistics, philosophy and literature. Reading Lacanâs Ãcrits is the first extensive set of commentaries on the complete edition of Lacanâs Ãcrits to be published in English. An invaluable document in the history of psychoanalysis, and one of the most challenging intellectual works of the 20th Century, Lacanâs Ãcrits still today begs the interpretative engagement of clinicians, scholars, philosophers and cultural theorists. The three volumes of Reading Lacanâs Ãcrits offer just this: a series of systematic paragraph-by-paragraph commentaries â by some of the worldâs most renowned Lacanian analysts and scholars â on the complete edition of the Ãcrits, inclusive of lesser known articles such as âKant with Sadeâ, âThe Youth of Gideâ, âScience and Truthâ, âPresentation on Transferenceâ and âBeyond the Reality Principle'. The originality and importance of Lacanâs Ãcrits to psychoanalysis and intellectual history is matched only by the textâs notorious inaccessibility. Reading Lacanâs Ãcrits is an indispensable companion piece and reference-text for clinicians and scholars exploring Lacan's magnum opus. Not only does it contextualize, explain and interrogate Lacan's arguments, it provides multiple interpretative routes through this most labyrinthine of texts. Reading Lacanâs Ãcrits provides an incisive and accessible companion for psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists in training and in practice, as well as philosophers, cultural theorists and literary, social science and humanities researchers who wish to draw upon Lacanâs pivotal work.Trade Review"It all began with an improbable wager: ask 35 scholars to each write something intelligible about every single paragraph in one of the texts included in Jacques Lacan's magnum opus, Écrits, so as to generate a commentary on the entire 800-page volume. And yet, after years of preparation, the wager has paid off: we have here useful and at times brilliant examples of textual explication! Cryptic formulations are lucidly unpacked, and mysterious references are provided, giving the serious reader myriad keys to fascinating texts"-Bruce Fink, translator of Écrits: The First Complete Edition in English"Let’s face it: Lacan’s Écrits, one of the classical texts of modern thought are unreadable - they remain impenetrable if we just pick the thick volume up and start to read it. Neill, Vanheule and Hook provide what we were all waiting for: a detailed commentary which does not aim to replace reading ECRITS but to render it possible. The three volumes do wonder, their effect is no less than magic: when, after getting stuck at a particularly dense page of Écrits, we turn to the corresponding pages in the commentary and then return to the page of Écrits which pushed us to madness, the same lines appear in all the clarity of their line of thought. It is thus a safe prediction that Neill, Vanheule and Hook’s commentary will become a kind of permanent companion of the English translation of Écrits, indispensable for everyone who wants to find her or his way in its complex texture."-Slavoj Zizek"Lacan’s teaching is notoriously hard to access and comprehend. But this is done on purpose: to understanding the psyche, the subject and its interaction with socio-political reality cannot be a piecemeal operation. One needs to take into account the paradoxical and often counterintuitive effects of unconscious mechanisms, and of the extimate operation of the real within and beyond the symbolic and the imaginary. Coupling exegesis with multi-level interpretations, the numerous texts in this volume advance a commentary, both informative and suggestive, that will immensely help readers navigate the archipelago of the Lacanian Écrits, without reducing in the least their complexity and inspirational value, without sacrificing their ability to surprise, provoke and jolt us out of our complacency."-Yannis Stavrakakis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki"These essays will be an invaluable resource not only for those approaching the Écrits for the first time but also for seasoned readers. Broad in scope yet following the detail of the text, they help guide us through Lacan's difficult prose, elucidating, contextualising and clarifying, and reminding us time and time again of the precision, power and originality of his rethinking of psychoanalysis".-Darian LeaderTable of ContentsList of Jacques Lacan’s Seminars; Introduction to ‘Reading the Écrits’: La trahison de l'écriture Derek Hook, Calum Neill & Stijn Vanheule 1 The Freudian Thing, or the Meaning of the Return to Freud in Psychoanalysis Adrian Johnston 2 Psychoanalysis and Its Teaching Michael Miller 3 The Situation of Psychoanalysis and the Training of Psychoanalysts in 1956 Patricia Gherovici & Manya Steinkoler 4 The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious, or Reason Since Freud Calum Matheson 5 On a Question Prior to Any Possible Treatment of Psychosis Stijn Vanheule 6 The Direction of the Treatment and the Principles of Its Power Reitske Meganck & Ruth Inslegers 7 Remarks on Daniel Lagache's Presentation: "Psychoanalysis and Personality Structure" Ed Pluth

    1 in stock

    £108.00

  • Minding the Body

    Taylor & Francis Minding the Body

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisMinding the Body: The Body in Psychoanalysis and Beyond outlines the value of a psychoanalytic approach to understanding the body and its vicissitudes and for addressing these in the context of psychoanalytic psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. The chapters cover a broad but esoteric range of subjects that are not often discussed within psychoanalysis such as the function of breast augmentation surgery, the psychic origins of hair, the use made of the analyst's toilet, transsexuality and the connection between dermatological conditions and necrophilic fantasies. The book also reaches beyond the couch' to consider the nature of reality television makeover show.The book is based on the Alessandra Lemma's extensive clinical experience as a psychoanalyst and psychologist working in a range of public and private health care settings with patients for whom the body is the primary presenting problem or who have made unconscious use of the body to communicate their psychic pain.Trade Review‘Lemma has become one of the modern leaders in psychoanalysis. Her contribution to understanding this most fundamental of psychoanalytic concerns – our relationship to our bodies – has been immense and is growing. This book is an essential source of inspiration for clinicians to help them listen to and hear their patients’ deepest concerns more clearly. An extraordinary achievement.’– Peter Fonagy, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis and Head of the Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, UK‘In this insightful and innovative book Alessandra Lemma revisits and explores further some of the subjects she considered in Under the Skin…. The author is at her fluent best as she examines how we ascribe meaning to experience through our bodies, and attempts to illustrate how the analyst can help patients re-integrate mind and body… This is an innovative approach to a fascinating subject. I defy any book browser to peruse its tantalising chapter titles and not want to read the whole book. Minding the Body is a must read.’ – Antonino Ferro, President of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and Consultant Associate Editor of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. He is a training and supervising analyst in the Italian Psychoanalytic Society, the American Psychoanalytic Association and the International Psychoanalytical Association.‘Lemma has become one of the modern leaders in psychoanalysis. Her contribution to understanding this most fundamental of psychoanalytic concerns – our relationship to our bodies – has been immense and is growing. This book is an essential source of inspiration for clinicians to help them listen to and hear their patients’ deepest concerns more clearly. An extraordinary achievement.’– Peter Fonagy, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis and Head of the Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, UK‘In this insightful and innovative book Alessandra Lemma revisits and explores further some of the subjects she considered in Under the Skin…. The author is at her fluent best as she examines how we ascribe meaning to experience through our bodies, and attempts to illustrate how the analyst can help patients re-integrate mind and body… This is an innovative approach to a fascinating subject. I defy any book browser to peruse its tantalising chapter titles and not want to read the whole book. Minding the Body is a must read.’ – Antonino Ferro, President of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and Consultant Associate Editor of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. He is a training and supervising analyst in the Italian Psychoanalytic Society, the American Psychoanalytic Association and the International Psychoanalytical Association.Table of ContentsCampbell, Preface. Introduction When the Body Speaks. Envy and the Maternal Body: The Psychodynamics of Cosmetic Surgery. Whose Skin is it Anyway? Some Reflections on the Psychic Function of Necrophilic Fantasies. An Order of Pure Decision: Growing up in a Virtual World and the Adolescent's Experience of Being-in-a-Body. Present Without Past: The Disruption of Temporal Integration in a Case of Transsexuality. The Body One Has and the Body One is: The Transsexual’s Need to be Seen. Trauma and the Body: A psychoanalytic Reading of Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In. The Body of the Analyst and the Analytic Setting: Reflections on the Embodied Setting and the Symbiotic Transference. Rapunzel Revisited: Untangling the Unconscious Meaning of Hair. Off the Couch, Into the Toilet: Exploring the Psychic Uses of the Analyst’s Toilet. Entrepreneurs of the Self: Some Psychoanalytic Reflections on the Psychic and Social Functions of Reality TV Makeover Shows.

    1 in stock

    £42.74

  • The Psychology of Pierre Janet Routledge Revivals

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Psychology of Pierre Janet Routledge Revivals

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPierre Janet (1859 1947) is considered to be one of the founders of psychology, and pioneered in the disciplines of psychology, philosophy and psychotherapy. Janet's most crucial research, particularly in the subjects of dissociation' and subconscious' - terms coined by him - is explored in this book, first published in 1952. As Janet did not publish much in English, these notes provide guidance on such areas of study as hysteria and hypnosis, obsessive thinking and the psychology of adaption. Elton Mayo's comprehensive collection is an important guide for any student with an interest in the history of psychology, psychopathology and social study, and Janet's revolutionary work in the field.Table of Contents1. Psychopathology and Social Study 2. Hysteria and Hypnosis 3. The Complexity of the Attentive Act 4. Obsessive Thinking 5. Obsession and the Equilibrium Hypothesis 6. The Psychology of Adaptation; Appendix; Index

    1 in stock

    £24.32

  • The Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis: Understanding and Working With Trauma is an invaluable and cutting edge resource providing the current theory, practice, and research on trauma and dissociation within psychoanalysis. Elizabeth Howell and Sheldon Itzkowitz bring together experts in the field of dissociation and psychoanalysis, providing a comprehensive and forward-looking overview of the current thinking on trauma and dissociation. The volume contains articles on the history of concepts of trauma and dissociation, the linkage of complex trauma and dissociative problems in living, different modalities of treatment and theoretical approaches based on a new understanding of this linkage, as well as reviews of important new research. Overarching all of these is a clear explanation of how pathological dissociation is caused by trauma, and how this affects psychological organization -- concepts which have often been largely mTrade Review"In this outstanding volume, Howell and Itzkowitz have collected a comprehensive set of scholarly contributions covering the depth and breadth of dissociative phenomena, as well as the clinical concerns in working with the sequelae of complex trauma. They include the full range of psychoanalytic orientations and provide extensive surveys of cultural, historical, diagnostic, and developmental considerations along with research findings. On top of this considerable achievement, the editors have situated all of these contributions within the context provided by their own introductory chapters. This book will be used as a basic teaching text for years to come."- Lewis Aron, Ph.D., Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.Psychoanalysts both, Itzkowitz and Howell are well-known for their work with the naturally occurring dissociative aspects of mind and for their wise, humanistic, and compassionate work with patients suffering with trauma-generated dissociation, patients many might be afraid to treat in private practice. Now they bring their accumulated wisdom, together with the thinking of many distinguished colleagues, to bear, placing dissociation and the dissociative mind firmly in the psychoanalytic tradition, reading it in various theoretical and cultural contexts, explaining how it became hidden from view, showing how to understand and treat its sufferers now. This book will teach, encourage, and support all therapists who look for the human being underneath the "pathology." A great gift to us all. - Donna Orange, Ph.D., Psy.D. author, The Suffering Stranger (Routledge, 2011)Drs. Howell and Itzkowitz have fashioned a resource for those who are interested in learning more about psychoanalytic treatment and how psychoanalysts work with and help victims of trauma, traumatic, dissociation and dissociative disorders. Psychoanalysis, cognitive science, cognitive neuroscience, and trauma research all have a say in this outstanding volume which explores trauma and dissociation within a broad psychoanalytic context. The editors should be commended for their written contributions, for gathering chapters from leading experts in the area, and for the scope and depth of the issues addressed.- Judith Alpert, Ph.D. is Professor, Department of Applied Psychology, New York University and Professor and Clinical Consultant at New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis"In this outstanding volume, Howell and Itzkowitz have collected a comprehensive set of scholarly contributions covering the depth and breadth of dissociative phenomena, as well as the clinical concerns in working with the sequelae of complex trauma. They include the full range of psychoanalytic orientations and provide extensive surveys of cultural, historical, diagnostic, and developmental considerations along with research findings. On top of this considerable achievement, the editors have situated all of these contributions within the context provided by their own introductory chapters. This book will be used as a basic teaching text for years to come."- Lewis Aron, Ph.D., Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.Psychoanalysts both, Itzkowitz and Howell are well-known for their work with the naturally occurring dissociative aspects of mind and for their wise, humanistic, and compassionate work with patients suffering with trauma-generated dissociation, patients many might be afraid to treat in private practice. Now they bring their accumulated wisdom, together with the thinking of many distinguished colleagues, to bear, placing dissociation and the dissociative mind firmly in the psychoanalytic tradition, reading it in various theoretical and cultural contexts, explaining how it became hidden from view, showing how to understand and treat its sufferers now. This book will teach, encourage, and support all therapists who look for the human being underneath the "pathology." A great gift to us all. - Donna Orange, Ph.D., Psy.D. author, The Suffering Stranger (Routledge, 2011)Drs. Howell and Itzkowitz have fashioned a resource for those who are interested in learning more about psychoanalytic treatment and how psychoanalysts work with and help victims of trauma, traumatic, dissociation and dissociative disorders. Psychoanalysis, cognitive science, cognitive neuroscience, and trauma research all have a say in this outstanding volume which explores trauma and dissociation within a broad psychoanalytic context. The editors should be commended for their written contributions, for gathering chapters from leading experts in the area, and for the scope and depth of the issues addressed.- Judith Alpert, Ph.D. is Professor, Department of Applied Psychology, New York University and Professor and Clinical Consultant at New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and PsychoanalysisThe Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis is a landmark in the growing synthesis between psychoanalysis and trauma theory. Elizabeth Howell... and Sheldon Itzkowitz, composed a wonderful volume, brimming with interesting yet contradictory information... This is a wonderful book, a "must-read" for anyone intereted in the bonus of psychoanalytic thinking in the field of trauma and dissociation, but also a must-read for every psychoanalyst working with survivors of trauma and dissociative patients... a very worthwhile and important book. - Nelleke Nicolai, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, trauma therapist, author, The Netherlands, European Society for Trauma & Dissociation NewsletterTable of ContentsIntroduction Elizabeth F. Howell, Ph.D. & Sheldon Itzkowitz, Ph.D.SECTION 1 History of Complex Trauma and Dissociative Problems in Living1. Is Trauma-Analysis Psycho-Analysis Elizabeth F. Howell, Ph.D. & Sheldon Itzkowitz, Ph.D.2. From Trauma-Analysis to Psycho-Analysis And Back Again Elizabeth F. Howell, Ph.D. & Sheldon Itzkowitz, Ph.D.3. The Everywhereness of Trauma and the Dissociative Structuring of the Mind Elizabeth F. Howell, Ph.D. & Sheldon Itzkowitz, Ph.D.4. Pierre Janet, Sigmund Freud, and Dissociation of the Personality: The First Codification of a Psychodynamic Depth Psychology Onno van der Hart, Ph.D. 5. The Ferenczi Paradox: His Importance in Understanding Dissociation and the Dissociation of His Importance in Psychoanalysis Margaret L. Hainer, LCSW SECTION 2 Psychoanalytic Orientations and the Treatment of Complex Trauma Dissociation and Dissociative Disorders6. Models of Dissociation in Freud’s Work: Outcomes of Dissociation of Trauma in Theory and Practice Elizabeth F. Howell, Ph.D.7. Jung and Dissociation: Complexes, Dreams, and the Mythopoetic Psyche Donald Kalsched, Ph.D. 8. ‘A Queer Kind of Truth’: Winnicott and the Uses of Dissociation Dodi Goldman, Ph.D.9. A Kleinian Perspective on Dissociation and Trauma: Miscarriages in Symbolization Joseph Newirth, Ph.D.10. It Never Entered My Mind Philip Bromberg, Ph.D. 11. Precarious Places: Intersubjectivity in Traumatized States Jennifer Leighton LCSW12. Latah: An Ethnic Syndrome With Dissociative Features – A Sadomasochistic Pattern? Elizabeth Hegeman, Ph.D. SECTION 3 Aspects of Psychoanalytic Treatment of Complex Trauma and Dissociation13. Thoughts on Working with the Dreams of DID and DDNOS Patients Richard P. Kluft, M.D., Ph.D. 14. Who Moved My ‘Swiss’ Cheese? Eating Disorders And The Use Of Dissociation As An Attempt To Fill In The ‘Whole’ Jean Petrucelli, Ph.D. 15. A Bell Rings In The Empty Sky: Dissociative Attunement In A Resonant World Karen Hopenwasser, M.D. 16. Divide and Multiply; A Multi-Dimensional View of Dissociative Processes Wilma Bucci, Ph.D.17. The Personal Diagnostic Crisis: The Acknowledgement of Self-States in DID Richard A. Chefetz, M.D. 18. Psychoactive Therapy Of DID: A Multiphasic Model Ira Brenner, M.D. 19. The Seeming Absence of Children With DID Valerie Sinason, Ph.D. SECTION 4 Current Research Trends in Complex Trauma Dissociation and Dissociative Disorders20. A Tale of Two Offenders: Why Dissociation Is Under-Diagnosed In Forensic Populations Abby Stein, Ph.D.21. An Update On Research About the Validity, Assessment, and Treatment of DID Bethany Brand, Ph.D. & Daniel Brown B.S. 22. Speaking One’s Dissociated Mind: So Should My Thoughts Be Severed From My Griefs and Woes Brian Koehler, Ph.D.

    1 in stock

    £41.79

  • Old and Dirty Gods

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Old and Dirty Gods

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFreud's collection of antiquitieshis old and dirty godsstood as silent witnesses to the early analysts' paradoxical fascination and hostility toward religion. Pamela Cooper-White argues that antisemitism, reaching back centuries before the Holocaust, and the acute perspective from the margins that it engendered among the first analysts, stands at the very origins of psychoanalytic theory and practice. The core insight of psychoanalytic thought that there is always more beneath the surface appearances of reality, and that this more is among other things affective, memory-laden and psychologicalcannot fail to have had something to do with the experiences of the first Jewish analysts in their position of marginality and oppression in Habsburg-Catholic Vienna of the 20th century. The book concludes with some parallels between the decades leading to the Holocaust and the current political situation in the U.S. and Europe, and their implications for psychoanalytic pTrade Review"Pamela Cooper-White finally closes a research gap and offers her readers an illuminating volume which fully elaborates the complexity of religious topics which appeared in the discussions and writings of the members of Sigmund Freud’s Wednesday Night Psychological Society. One does not only get a sense of these wide-ranging religious and interdisciplinary topics, but also an extremely interesting insight into the (also unconscious) dynamics and structures of the very first psychoanalytic organisation characterized by a mix of orthodoxy and creativity, of conformity and diversity. What is more, this thorough and always transparent book also sheds light on the overdetermined sociocultural context of Vienna at the turn of the century to the Nazi takeover, pointing out the eminent – and still effective in Austria – reality of Antisemitism."-Daniela Finzi, research director at the Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna."A stunning achievement. Combines detailed historical research, psychoanalytic insight, and original conclusions. A must read for anyone concerned about the history of psychoanalysis, turn of the century Vienna, or a more complex understanding of the relationship between religion and psychoanalysis. Shows how early psychoanalytic theorizing and practices were shaped by discussions of religion and the surrounding climate of Austrian anti-Semitism. The concluding chapter has important insights into the way psychoanalysis developed in the United States. Worthy of a prize."-James W. Jones, Psy.D., Ph.D., Th.D., Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Rutgers University."At a time in history when there has been a resurgence of right-wing, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, and nationalistic, and even racial-purity movements, both in Europe and the United States, Pamela Cooper-White’s Old and Dirty Gods is an important historical, moral, and psychological contribution. She enhances our understanding of the origins of psychoanalysis and its tangled interconnection with antisemitism, racism, and immigration. Cooper-White provides a valuable examination of the early analysts around Freud and their relation to religion, and provides a detailed and thorough study of the impact of antisemitism on these early pioneers and on their legacy throughout the ongoing history of psychoanalysis."-Lewis Aron, Ph.D. director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis."Pamela Cooper-White finally closes a research gap and offers her readers an illuminating volume which fully elaborates the complexity of religious topics which appeared in the discussions and writings of the members of Sigmund Freud’s Wednesday Night Psychological Society. One does not only get a sense of these wide-ranging religious and interdisciplinary topics, but also an extremely interesting insight into the (also unconscious) dynamics and structures of the very first psychoanalytic organisation characterized by a mix of orthodoxy and creativity, of conformity and diversity. What is more, this thorough and always transparent book also sheds light on the overdetermined sociocultural context of Vienna at the turn of the century to the Nazi takeover, pointing out the eminent – and still effective in Austria – reality of Antisemitism."-Daniela Finzi, research director at the Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna."A stunning achievement. Combines detailed historical research, psychoanalytic insight, and original conclusions. A must read for anyone concerned about the history of psychoanalysis, turn of the century Vienna, or a more complex understanding of the relationship between religion and psychoanalysis. Shows how early psychoanalytic theorizing and practices were shaped by discussions of religion and the surrounding climate of Austrian anti-Semitism. The concluding chapter has important insights into the way psychoanalysis developed in the United States. Worthy of a prize."-James W. Jones, Psy.D., Ph.D., Th.D., Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Rutgers University."At a time in history when there has been a resurgence of right-wing, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, and nationalistic, and even racial-purity movements, both in Europe and the United States, Pamela Cooper-White’s Old and Dirty Gods is an important historical, moral, and psychological contribution. She enhances our understanding of the origins of psychoanalysis and its tangled interconnection with antisemitism, racism, and immigration. Cooper-White provides a valuable examination of the early analysts around Freud and their relation to religion, and provides a detailed and thorough study of the impact of antisemitism on these early pioneers and on their legacy throughout the ongoing history of psychoanalysis."-Lewis Aron, Ph.D. director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.Table of ContentsIntroduction Part I Religion and Freud’s Vienna Circle Ch. 1 "So, You Have Seen the Gang Now": The Wednesday Night Psychological Society Ch. 2 "Old and Dirty Gods": Religion in Freud’s Vienna Circle Part II Major Contributors Ch. 3 The Analyst Pastor: Oskar Pfister (1873-1956) Ch. 4 "Enduring Life without Illusion": Theodor Reik (1888-1969) Ch. 5 Soul, Will, and the Search for Immortality: Otto Rank (1884-1939) Ch. 6 Death and Resurrection: Sabina Spielrein (1885-1942) Part III The Shadow of Antisemitism Ch. 7 "Father, Don’t You See I’m Burning?": Antisemitism as Total Context Ch. 8 "In the Presence of the Burning Children": Psychoanalysis, Religion and Society – Then and Now

    1 in stock

    £37.04

  • Microtrauma

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Microtrauma

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisMicro-trauma: A psychoanalytic understanding of cumulative psychic injury explores the micro-traumatic or small, subtle psychic hurts that build up to undermine a person's sense of self-worth, skewing his or her character and compromising his or her relatedness to others. These injuries amount to what has been previously called cumulative or relational trauma. Until now, psychoanalysis has explained such negative influences in broad strokes, using general concepts like psychosexual urges, narcissistic needs, and separation-individuation aims, among others. Taking a fresh approach, Margaret Crastnopol identifies certain specific patterns of injurious relating that cause damage in predictable ways; she shows how these destructive processes can be identified, stopped in their tracks, and replaced by a healthier way of functioning.Seven different types of micro-trauma, all largely hidden in plain sight, are described in detail, and many others are discussed more briTrade ReviewCrastnopol’s book divides up the world in a whole new way. "Micro-trauma" is a convincing conceptualization of some of the most problematic happenings between people. But despite its novelty—and it is brand-new--what Crastnopol describes will be immediately recognizable to any clinician. Add lucid and entertaining writing that is often actually gripping, and you have the makings of a book that will be read at all levels of the field, from students to seasoned analysts. - Donnel Stern, Ph.D., William Alanson White Institute and New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis.Margaret Crastnopol’s "Micro-trauma: A Psychoanalytic Understanding of Cumulative Psychic Injury" is an exceptional book in that it's a genuinely original contribution to understanding ourselves and others in our day in/day out, lifelong, prosaic, and most intimate interactions. Crastnopol draws on the full range of psychoanalytic thinking to articulate the many ways that we undermine the self-worth and well-being of one another and of ourselves. Reading this book will help therapists and others, all of us, to better understand and catch ourselves as we subtly and unconsciously invalidate, misrecognize, and are misattuned to ourselves and each other. Her creative and literary explications of such relational dynamics as "unkind cutting back," "psychic airbrushing," "chronic entrenchment," and "uneasy intimacy," among many other characterizations, are both immediately useful and unforgettable. - Lewis Aron, Ph.D. Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.In our contemporary "in-your-face" culture, nuance and subtlety have all but disappeared. Yet these barely-registering phenomena live on in the sounds and silences of the psychoanalytic consulting room. Indeed they are the heart and soul of psychoanalytic discourse. In this superb new contribution, Margaret Crastnopol, an astute observer of those quotidian minutiae that fly under the radar, provides a comprehensive survey of micro-traumas that make up the fabric of our existence but may go unaddressed and unobserved in the hustle and bustle of our everyday lives. She deftly depicts the little murders, the withdrawals, the slights, and the stifled emotions that can wreak havoc on one's sense of well-being, and she shows how psychoanalysis is unique among the panoply of treatments in today’s marketplace in its potential for ameliorating the effect of those painful experiences. I highly recommend this book to both beginning clinicians and experienced analysts. -Glen O. Gabbard, MD, Author, Love and Hate in the Analytic Setting"Micro-trauma is a fascinating examination of the resonance of emotional experience and how affect operates within an insidious network of related feelings. With an abundance of vignettes to illustrate its principles and a strong, varied theoretical perspective, the book can be invaluable for researchers and clinical professionals alike...The book opens the door for further research and review from professional readership, something valuable for the scientifically and clinically-minded." - Michael Fiorini, Somatic Psychotherapy Today, Volume 5 Number 3, Summer 2015"Drawing together established theory and clinical practice, this book presents in-depth studies of common, identifiably hurtful behaviors and offers insight into techniques addressing the injuries... Chaplains in a wide variety of settings will find this focused inquiry into the human condition helpful... Introspection is part of the reader's experience, as well... Professional and conversational in her style, Crastnopol skillfully weaves her clinical experience and well-developed theory snuggly into a wider fabric of established psychotherapeutic schools, highlighting the unique contribution her work is making while demonstrating her mastery of the knowledge base." - Keith Goheen, MDiv BCC, chaplain, Beebe Healthcare, Lewes, DE, APC ForumCrastnopol’s book divides up the world in a whole new way. "Micro-trauma" is a convincing conceptualization of some of the most problematic happenings between people. But despite its novelty—and it is brand-new--what Crastnopol describes will be immediately recognizable to any clinician. Add lucid and entertaining writing that is often actually gripping, and you have the makings of a book that will be read at all levels of the field, from students to seasoned analysts. - Donnel Stern, Ph.D., William Alanson White Institute and New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis.Margaret Crastnopol’s "Micro-trauma: A Psychoanalytic Understanding of Cumulative Psychic Injury" is an exceptional book in that it's a genuinely original contribution to understanding ourselves and others in our day in/day out, lifelong, prosaic, and most intimate interactions. Crastnopol draws on the full range of psychoanalytic thinking to articulate the many ways that we undermine the self-worth and well-being of one another and of ourselves. Reading this book will help therapists and others, all of us, to better understand and catch ourselves as we subtly and unconsciously invalidate, misrecognize, and are misattuned to ourselves and each other. Her creative and literary explications of such relational dynamics as "unkind cutting back," "psychic airbrushing," "chronic entrenchment," and "uneasy intimacy," among many other characterizations, are both immediately useful and unforgettable. - Lewis Aron, Ph.D. Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.In our contemporary "in-your-face" culture, nuance and subtlety have all but disappeared. Yet these barely-registering phenomena live on in the sounds and silences of the psychoanalytic consulting room. Indeed they are the heart and soul of psychoanalytic discourse. In this superb new contribution, Margaret Crastnopol, an astute observer of those quotidian minutiae that fly under the radar, provides a comprehensive survey of micro-traumas that make up the fabric of our existence but may go unaddressed and unobserved in the hustle and bustle of our everyday lives. She deftly depicts the little murders, the withdrawals, the slights, and the stifled emotions that can wreak havoc on one's sense of well-being, and she shows how psychoanalysis is unique among the panoply of treatments in today’s marketplace in its potential for ameliorating the effect of those painful experiences. I highly recommend this book to both beginning clinicians and experienced analysts. -Glen O. Gabbard, MD, Author, Love and Hate in the Analytic SettingTable of ContentsAcknowledgments. Cumulative Micro-trauma that’s Hidden in Plain Sight: An Overview. Unkind Cutting Back and Its Navigation. Connoisseurship Gone Awry. Uneasy Intimacy—A Siren’s Call. Psychic Airbrushing and Excessive Niceness. Chronic Entrenchment and Its Collateral Damage. Unbridled Indignation. Little Murders and Other Everyday Micro-Assaults. Toward Repair.

    1 in stock

    £42.74

  • The Embedded Self

    Taylor & Francis The Embedded Self

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFirst published in 1996, The Embedded Self was lauded as a brilliant and long overdue rapprochement between psychoanalysis and family therapy conceived by a practitioner trained and experienced in both modalities of treatment. Mary-Joan Gerson's integrated presentation of psychodynamic and family systems theory invited therapists of either orientation to learn the tools and techniques of the other, to mutual benefit. Firmly grounded in detailed case presentations, her focus on family therapy examined its history, organizing concepts, and developmental approaches, and addressed practical questions of diagnosis, clinical interaction, and referrals.A dozen years later, the psychoanalytic community is more open to integrating perspectives, and the growth of analysts working with couples and families necessitates an update of the material presented in The Embedded Self. Similarly, the family therapy community has deepened its interest in individual dynamicTrade Review"Mary-Joan Gerson speaks to psychoanalysts from the perspective of family therapy and to family therapists from the perspective of psychoanalysis. Now updated in breadth of coverage, extended clinical illustrations, and new possibilities of integration, this dual approach brings novely to familiar concepts and phrases. Like a book of Borges' poetry that I read in both Spanish and English, The Embedded Self brings intellectual challenge and esthetic pleasure. Any clinician, whether system or psychodynamic, will find this book an enriching and thought-provoking experience." - Salvador Minuchin, M.D., Research Professor of Psychiatry, NYU Medical Center"This was a marvelously comprehensive and integrative book when it first came out. In this new edition it is even better! It adeptly integrates new developments in fields such as attachment theory and neurobiology, thus extending its already impressive synthesis of systemic and psychodynamic thought. A powerful and important book." - Paul Wachtel, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor, City University of New York"Mary-Joan Gerson's masterful synthesis of psychoanalytic and systems perspectives on couples treatment has stood the test of time. The second edition retains the impressive breadth, emotional depth and intellectual heft of the original volume, while adding crucial new material on adult attachment and neurobiology. It shows how an understanding of the complex linkage between romantic partners can free up stalemated treatments, creating empathy and responsiveness where there was only harshness and withdrawal. Couples work is hard to do. It's important to have a book like this one at the ready." - Virginia Goldner, Ph.D., Faculty Emeritus, Ackerman Institute for the Family"This beautifully written book is a gift to therapists working with couples and families. At one time, the underlying premises of psychoanalysis and family therapy were considered incompatible, but times have changed. Mary-Joan Gerson, steeped in both traditions, expertly illustrates how each perspective can be enriched and vitalized by the other." - Marcia Sheinberg, LCSW, Director of Training and Clinical Services, Ackerman Institute for the Family"Although I would have thought it impossible, the second edition of Dr. Gerson’s book surpasses the remarkable first edition of The Embedded Self. The new edition is one of the finest books in our field, an accolade I do not offer lightly. Dr. Gerson preserves and improves upon the outstanding quality of the first edition. Her book is at once an excellent piece of scholarship, a probing theoretical analysis, and a clinical treasure trove of stimulating ideas and insights. It also offers a new, comprehensive, illuminating chapter on attachment theory in relation to couples and family dynamics as well as new, extensive case material. Dr. Gerson writes beautifully and her words reflect the clinical astuteness of a highly talented therapist who appreciates the intimate links between the intrapsychic and the interpersonal perspectives in relation to individuals, couples, and families. It will be savored with great profit by clinicians of all stripes." - David Wolitzky, Ph.D., series editor, Psychological Issues book series"This is a book that really gets it because Mary-Joan Gerson has the ability to simultaneously shuttle between two worlds: she is equally adept at articulating couples therapy from both a systems world and a psychoanalytic world...Gerson's book has achieved the position of the text for developing couples therapists who want a thorough grounding in clinical history and techniques in working with relationships. However, this is no book for beginners alone; it is also a book for clinicians who have been around the block a few times, clinicians who love to ground their clinical technique in solid theoretical underpinnings... There is so much to like about this book that it is hard to limit one's praise to a few items. Of foremost importance is that the quality of both clinical and theoretical conceptualizations is outstanding. The writing is descriptive and evocative...As soon as one begins to wonder how a given theoretical principle would unfold in the context of a couple, a clinical example appears. Finally, Gerson steadfastly maintains a personal point of view throughout the book - that the self develops and is challenged to grow in a context. We are social beings: needing another, finding the other, protecting ourselves from the other, and often growing because of the other." - Daniel Goldberg, The Psychoanalytic Quarterly"the book is timely...the author engages our attention by a balance of precise, theoretical overviews and a rich flow of clinical illustrations. We are encouraged to reflect, to widen our perspective, and to become more creative in our own therapeutic approaches. Gerson juxtaposes with great clarity the family or couple therapy positions to the psychoanalytic, adding a sense of drama to our reading journey...I highly recommend this book to all psychotherapists of whatever persuasion!" - Marianne Horney Exkardt, M.D., American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic PsychiatryTable of ContentsIntroduction: New Possibilities for Integration. Theoretical Overview. An Orientation to Family Systems Theory. Controversies and Conundrums. Context and Culture. Family Patterns. Attachment Theory: A New Frontier. Development from a Family Perspective. Diagnosis from a Family Perspective. How to Intervene: Technique and Timing. The Therapeutic Relationship. Playfulness, Authority and Authenticity. Referrals: Who? When? Where? Epilogue

    1 in stock

    £40.84

  • Good Enough Endings

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Good Enough Endings

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn the relational literature, the subject of termination - the ending of an analysis - has received scant attention, and traditional Freudian or ego-psychological criteria are not always enough to assess the readiness to terminate therapy in the coconstructed, intersubjective analytic relationship. Good Enough Endings seeks to remedy this gap, bringing together contributions from contemporary relational thinkers, while at the same time engaging with ideas from other psychoanalytic perspectives. Topics given consideration include: Can there be a relational criteria or paradigm for termination, and what would it include? How do treatment goals of the analyst and/or that of the patient affect the decision to terminate? How do recent developments in attachment theory and research influence the preparation to end analysis? What occurs for the patient after termination, and how do we assess the need for follow-up? Integrating elementTrade Review"In Good Enough Endings, Jill Salberg has given us a treasure. Psychoanalyses have to end. This has always been understood and more or less accepted by both patients and analysts. What rarely has been acknowledged openly is that the same logic cannot easily be applied to understanding why the ending of the personal relationship is so difficult for a patient to accept (work through) as simply a reasonable part of what is lost when the professional relationship 'terminates.' Transference explanations notwithstanding, this thorn in the side of psychoanalytic theory has never been systematically explored in a single volume from a perspective that fully respects psychoanalytic treatment in its personal as well as professional aspects. That is, until Salberg's extraordinary accomplishment.Long pleading for a relational renewal, the topic of termination is here endowed with fresh life by some of the most inspired thinkers writing today, but take note - this volume is more than a collection of individual essays. Within the broad spectrum of analytic schools represented in its 16 exquisitely selected chapters, what gives the book its defining character is the openly relational sensibility that runs through it, relatively independent of traditional psychoanalytic differences. Personally moving vignettes, many of them unforgettable, are framed by a new clinical understanding of 'termination' in light of contemporary research that unites mind, brain, and human relatedness - an understanding that speaks to a unique bond within which the process of saying goodbye to a relationship is not reducible to the successful completion of a treatment. I discovered in almost every chapter a way of looking at 'endings' that was so reenlightening I found myself a bit envious of the recently minted analysts who will have a chance to read Salberg's volume during their professional 'beginnings.'" - Philip M. Bromberg, Ph.D., author, Awakening the Dreamer (2006) and Standing in the Spaces (1998)"As Jill Salberg points out in her introduction to this timely book, our ideas about how treatment can and does end have not kept up with the many changes in our thinking about psychoanalysis and dynamic psychotherapy. The authors represented in this volume, most but not all of whom identify with contemporary relational psychoanalysis, grapple with the vexing problems involved in terminating a complex and often intimate relationship. Their various perspectives will certainly start an overdue, much needed conversation." - Jay Greenberg, Ph.D., Training and Supervising Analyst, William Alanson White InstituteTable of ContentsSalberg, Introduction. Part I: Termination: Theories and Positions.Salberg, Historical Overview. Bergmann, Termination: The Achilles Heel of Psychoanalytic Technique. Britton, There is No End of the Line: Terminating the Interminable. Bernstein, Beyond the Bedrock. Holmes, Termination in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy: An Attachment Perspective. Davies, Transformation of Desire and Despair: Reflections on the Termination Process from a Relational Perspective. Part II: On the Clinical Frontier.Salberg, How We End: Taking Leave. Grand, Termination as Necessary Madness. Cooper, The Changing Firmament: Familiar and Unfamiliar Forms of Engagement During Termination. Silverman, Will You Remember Me? Termination and Continuity. Layton, Maternal Resistance. Part III: Musings on the Multiple Meanings of Ending.Reis, Afterwardness and Termination. Skolnick, Termination in Psychoanalysis: It's About Time. Goldman, Parting Ways. Glennon, Relational Analyses: Are They More Difficult to Terminate? Bass, "It Ain't Over Till It's Over": Infinite Conversations, Imperfect Endings, and the Elusive Nature of Termination.

    1 in stock

    £109.25

  • Toward an Emancipatory Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Toward an Emancipatory Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Best known for his contributions to the development of contemporary intersubjectivity theory, Bernard Brandchaft has dedicated a career to the advancement of psychoanalytic theory and practice. Continually searching for a theoretical viewpoint that would satisfactorily explain the clinical phenomena he was encountering, his curiosity eventually led him to the work of Heinz Kohut and the then-emerging school of self psychology. However, seemingly always one step ahead of the crowd, Brandchaft constantly reformulated his ideas about and investigations into the intersubjective nature of human experiences.Many of the chapters in this volume have never before been published. Together, they articulate the evolution of Brandchaft''s thinking along the road toward an emancipatory psychoanalysis. Moreover, commentary from Shelley Doctors and Dorienne Sorter in addition to Bernard Brandchaft himself examines the clinical implications of the theoretical shifts that he advocated a

    1 in stock

    £40.84

  • Simon & Schuster The Jung Cult

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £17.09

  • Dream Analysis 1

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Dream Analysis 1

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisProvides clarification of Jung''s method of dream analysis. Based upon a previously unpublished series of dreams of one of Jung''s patients.Table of ContentsIntroduction. Acknowledgements. Members of the Seminar. Chronological Order of Dreams. List of Abbreviations. Winter Term: First Part. Winter Term: Second Part. Summer Term. Winter Term: First Part. Winter Term: Second Part. Summer Term. Index. The Collected Works of C. G. Jung.

    1 in stock

    £71.24

  • Michael Murphys Book of Dreams Unlock the Hidden

    Gill Michael Murphys Book of Dreams Unlock the Hidden

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisWe all have dreams, but what do they mean? Your dreams hold the secrets of your unconscious thoughts and understanding their hidden meaning can guide you in your daily life. The author analyses people''s dreams, most of them common ones, and shows how to interpret their meaning and decipher the messages they are sending. This book will encourage you to work with your dreams in order to reach a deeper understanding of what is happening in your life and to make sense of the seemingly random material deriving from the unconscious.There are dreams relating to pop stars, relationships, sex, dead people, horror, animals, being improperly dressed, teeth falling out, the apocalypse, holidays, the Leaving Cert, flying and more.''Makes for fascinating reading'' Sunday Independent

    2 in stock

    £17.09

  • ...or Worse

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd ...or Worse

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsOF ONE SEX AND THE OTHER I. The small difference II. The function x III. From anecdote to logic IV. From necessity to inexistence THE OTHER: FROM SPEECH TO SEXUALITY V. Topology of speech (a talk at Sainte-Anne) VI. I ask you to refuse me my offering VII. The vanished partner (a talk at Sainte-Anne) VIII. What is involved in the Other THE ONE: NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL REACH IX. In the field of the Unian X. Yad'lun XI. An issue of Ones (a talk at Sainte-Anne) XII. Knowledge about truth XIII. The founding of sexual difference XIV. Theory of the four formulae (a talk at Sainte-Anne) CODA XV. The desire to sleep XVI. Bodies captured by discourse APPENDICES Report on Seminar XIX, by Jacques Lacan Library of Seminar XIX, by Jacques-Alain Miller Translator's Notes Index

    1 in stock

    £15.19

  • The Maternalists

    University of Pennsylvania Press The Maternalists

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Maternalists is a study of the hitherto unexplored significance of utopian visions of the state as a maternal entity in mid-twentieth century Britain. Demonstrating the affinities between welfarism, maternalism, and psychoanalysis, Shaul Bar-Haim suggests a new reading of the British welfare state as a political project. After the First World War, British doctors, social thinkers, educators, and policy makers became increasingly interested in the contemporary turn being made in psychoanalytic theory toward the role of motherhood in child development. These public figures used new notions of the maternal to criticize modern European culture, and especially its patriarchal domestic structure. This strand of thought was pioneered by figures who were well placed to disseminate their ideas into the higher echelons of British culture, education, and medical care. Figures such as the anthropologists Bronislaw Malinowski and Geza Róheim, and the psychiatrist Ian Suttieto mention only a fTrade Review"[The] ‘maternal turn’ in interwar psychoanalytic discourse in Britain, which was at the same time a turn from Freud to Klein, and its impact on postwar welfare policy, is the subject of Shaul Bar-Haim’s book. He argues that progressive ‘maternalistic’ thinkers from the interwar period involved in education, anthropology and the ‘psy’ professions connected new psychoanalytic ideas of motherhood to an ideal of the state as a maternal entity. The ‘maternal ethics’ of the period were a response to the horrors of the First World War and the emergence of fascism on the continent. In this figuration, motherhood is less a lived experience than a site of collective imaginings, a meeting point between private and public spaces. As Bar-Haim argues, women and mothers were the main intermediaries between the family and the state in its newly interventionist mode, through their encounters with GPs, social workers, psychotherapists and teachers." * London Review of Books *"Bar‐Haim sets out to demonstrate how much of what we think of as democracy was forged in conjunction with a cultural shift to valuing mothers. The book brings together several strands of existing historiography, such as the development of a relations‐based psychoanalysis from Freud's drive‐based model, the emergence of the mother figure within this new psychoanalysis, and the synergy between the new psychoanalysis and the welfare state…[T]he book's contribution is impressive. Deploying a multiplicity of primary and secondary sources, some of them archival and unpublished, Bar‐Haim presents a compelling account of a historical transformation in the consequences of which we all live. While surveying sources from various disciplines, he avoids both jargon and oversimplification: the essay remains nuanced and accessible throughout. And in a scholarly world that rewards a specialization‐to‐naught strategy, Bar‐Haim's opting for a broad lens is courageous." * The History of the Behavioral Sciences *"The Maternalists, in which Shaul Bar-Haim explores mid-century psychoanalysts’ maternalistic thinking and the role of the welfare state, joins bookshelves at a moment in which Britain might be seen to be reassessing its enactment of maternalistic, caring values...[A]n intriguing, elegant, and deeply researched contribution to our understanding of the imaginaries of the welfare state and the influence of psychanalytic models in the mid-twentieth century." * Twentieth-Century British History *"The Maternalists provides at once a highly original interpretation of key figures in post-Freudian psychoanalysis and a novel take on the ideas that animated the expansion and reformation of the British welfare state. In focusing on the efforts to ‘maternalize’ the state—indeed to ‘maternalize’ society as a whole—Shaul Bar-Haim fundamentally rewrites the story we thought we knew. But the book achieves yet more, as it returns to the once tightly intertwined evolutions of psychoanalysis and anthropology, and recovers indispensable, heretofore underappreciated anticolonial strands within the psychoanalytic tradition." * Dagmar Herzog, author of Unlearning Eugenics *"This is a fascinating and important book. Shaul Bar-Haim plumbs a variety of continental and British psychoanalytic thinkers, from Freud and Ferenczi to Winnicott and Balint, to illuminate the ways in which they helped shape the postwar welfare state with its decidedly maternal cast. The Maternalists is a riveting contribution both to our understanding of the social influence of psychoanalytic thought and the meanings of the welfare state." * Lisa Appignanesi, author of Mad, Bad, and Sad *Table of ContentsIntroduction Chapter 1. The "Sphincter-Morality" and Beyond: The Concept of Childhood in Interwar Psychoanalysis Chapter 2. How Children Think: Susan Isaacs on "Primitive" Thinking Chapter 3. Malinowski, Róheim, and the Maternal Shift in British Psychoanalysis and Anthropology Chapter 4. Imagining the "Maternal" Past: Ian Suttie's Critique of Oedipal Culture Chapter 5. What About Father? Civic-Republican Maternalism and the Welfare State Chapter 6. "The Drug 'Doctor'": The Balint Movement and Psychosocial Medicine in Postwar Britain Conclusion Note Bibliography Index Acknowledgments

    1 in stock

    £40.50

  • Dynamis of Healing  Patristic Theology and the

    Fordham University Press Dynamis of Healing Patristic Theology and the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction | 1 1 Psyche and Creation: Initial Reflections on Orthodox Theology and Depth Psychology | 19 2 “That Which Is Not Assumed Is Not Healed” | 40 3 An Ontology of Healing? | 78 4 Eros: Healing Fire | 105 Conclusion | 149 Acknowledgments | 155 Notes | 157 Bibliography | 201 Index | 211

    1 in stock

    £71.25

  • Homo Psyche  On Queer Theory and Erotophobia

    Fordham University Press Homo Psyche On Queer Theory and Erotophobia

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction: Homo Psyche: On Queer Theory and Erotophobia | 1 1 What “Theory” Knew: Sedgwick, Queerness, Hermeneutics | 33 2 The Genealogy of Sex: Bersani, Laplanche, and Self-Shattering Sexuality | 62 3 Boundaries Are for Sissies: Violation in Jane Gallop and Henry James | 85 4 Adults Only: Lee Edelman’s No Future and the Limits of Queer Critique | 116 5 Psychology as Ideology-Lite: Butler, and the Trouble with Gender Theory | 141 6 Two Girls2: Sedgwick + Berlant, Relational and Queer | 171 Acknowledgments | 201 Notes | 203 Works Cited | 223 Index | 233

    1 in stock

    £24.69

  • Homo Psyche  On Queer Theory and Erotophobia

    Fordham University Press Homo Psyche On Queer Theory and Erotophobia

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction: Homo Psyche: On Queer Theory and Erotophobia | 1 1 What “Theory” Knew: Sedgwick, Queerness, Hermeneutics | 33 2 The Genealogy of Sex: Bersani, Laplanche, and Self-Shattering Sexuality | 62 3 Boundaries Are for Sissies: Violation in Jane Gallop and Henry James | 85 4 Adults Only: Lee Edelman’s No Future and the Limits of Queer Critique | 116 5 Psychology as Ideology-Lite: Butler, and the Trouble with Gender Theory | 141 6 Two Girls2: Sedgwick + Berlant, Relational and Queer | 171 Acknowledgments | 201 Notes | 203 Works Cited | 223 Index | 233

    1 in stock

    £80.75

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Adolescence

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £42.74

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Healing Tasks Psychotherapy with Adult Survivors of Childhood Abuse

    15 in stock

    This groundbreaking book presents a new model for working with survivors of abuse and other trauma.  The Healing Tasks Model, based on developmental stages of healing with specific tasks for each stage, offers the clinician new support for threading through the sometimes overwhelming complexities of the survivor''s experience.  At the same time, Kepner''s model helps to avoid some of the common pitfalls and risks of work in this most challenging of clinical areas, such as pushing clients to express and remember before they have developed the capacity to manage such intensity, or encouraging confrontation and interpersonal interactions that the survivor doesn''t yet have the developmental underpinnings to support.Using the Healing Tasks Model the clinician will find techniques for helping clients develop emotional and systemic supports, manage feelings, and set appropriate boundaries.  Readers will also find a guide to dealing with the difficult and troubling is

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Unformulated Experience

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Unformulated Experience

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this powerful and wonderfully accessible meditation on psychoanalysis, hermeneutics, and social constructivism, Donnel Stern explores the relationship between two fundamental kinds of experience: explicit verbal reflection and unformulated experience, or experience we have not yet reflected on and put into words. Stern is especially concerned with the process by which we come to formulate the unformulated. It is not an instrumental task, he holds, but one that requires openness and curiosity; the result of the process is not accuracy alone, but experience that is deeply felt and fully imagined. Stern''s sense of explicit verbal experience as continuously constructed and emergent leads to a central dialectic at the heart of his work: that between curiosity and imagination, on one hand, and dissociation and unthinking acceptance of the familiar on the other. The goal of psychoanalytic work, he holds, is the freedom to be curious, whereas defense signifies the denial of this frTrade Review"Unformulated Experience is not the usual pastiche of poststructuralist and hermeneutical theories stuck onto psychoanalysis like so many bandaids. Stern has evoked a magisterial, coherent theoretical frame of reference that places psychoanalysis (particularly post-Sullivanian interpersonalism) firmly within the postmodern critique of language; and he elaborates with great clarity and wonderfully frank vignettes the clinical implications of this position for contemporary psychoanalysis. The book will surely find its audience among those interested in psychoanalytic theory and practice. Even the most pragmatic clinician will find its clinical implications clarifying and useful. Unformulated Experience is a major contribution."- Edgar Levenson, M.D., William Alanson White Institute"Unformulated Experience is a book of complexity, courage, and verve. Donnel Stern combines Gadamer's hermeneutics and Sullivan'e interpersonal psychoanalysis in a move that separates him from the crowd of theorists who claim to integrate postmodern theory with psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. By doing so, he is able to guide us in confronting, understanding, and treating some of the most puzzling phenomena in the field today, such as trauma, dissociation, and multiplicity. Our ideas about memory, language, and the self will never be the same after this book - neither will our therapeutic practices nor our individual lives. At long last, our profession has produced a book worthy of being linked with the best of modern hermeneutic thought. Savor it."- Philip Cushman, Ph.D., author, Constructing the Self, Constructing America"Donnel Stern tackles issues that so often fall in the seams of psychoanalytic thought. What kind of intentionality is there in the act of verbalization; in using one set of words rather than another; in actively but unconsciously avoiding certain sets of words, and with them, certain meanings? To answer these and other challenging questions, Stern skillfully weaves together an extraordinary tapestry of ideas, drawing on philosophy, literature, psychoanalytic theory, and a rich array of clinical experiences. For its brilliant illumination of issues that are fundamental to all clinical theory, and for its cogent, systematic development of the author's own constructivist viewpoint, imaginatively applied to the psychoanalytic situation, I believe this book will emerge as a landmark contribution to the field."- Irwin Z. Hoffman, Ph.D., Chicago Center for PsychoanalysisTable of ContentsPart I: Experience Formulated and Unformulated. The Given and the Made: A Constructivist View. Unformulated Experience: An Introduction. Familiar Chaos: Unformulated Experience as Defense. Creative Disorder and Unbidden Perceptions: Unformulated Experience as Possibility. Part II: Reconsidering Self-Deception: Toward a Theory of Dissociation. Imagination and Creative Speech: Thoughts on Dissociation and Formulation. Not-Spelling-Out: Dissociation in the Strong Sense. Narrative Rigidity: Dissociation in The Weak Sense. The Problem of the Private Self: Unformulated Experience, the Interpersonal Field, and Multiplicit. Part III: Unformulated Experience in the Work of the Analyst. Interpretation and Subjectivity: A Phenomenology of Resistance. The Analyst's Unformulated Experience of the Patient. Gadamer's Hermeneutics: A Philosophy for the Embedded Analyst. Courting Surprise: Unbidden Perceptions in Clinical Practice.

    1 in stock

    £49.39

  • Making a Difference in Patients Lives Emotional

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Making a Difference in Patients Lives Emotional

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWinner of the 2009 Gradiva Award for Outstanding Psychoanalytic Publication!Within the title of her book, Making a Difference in Patients'' Lives, Sandra Buechler echoes the hope of all clinicians.  But, she counters, experience soon convinces most of us that insight, on its own, is often not powerful enough to have a significant impact on how a life is actually lived. Many clinicians and therapists have turned toward emotional experience, within and outside the treatment setting, as a resource. How can the immense power of lived emotional experience be harnessed in the service of helping patients live richer, more satisfying lives?Most patients come into treatment because they are too anxious, or depressed, or don't seem to feel alive enough. Something is wrong with what they feel, or don't feel. Given that the emotions operate as a system, with the intensity of each affecting the level of all the others, it makes sense thTrade Review"Sandra Buechler breaks the mold with Making A Difference in Patients' Lives. Aimed at teaching and inspiring those who do clinical work, Dr. Buechler has produced an instructive clinical book that is both practical and poetic. Strongly advocating for deep emotional experience as essential for change, she does not hesitate to discuss her own feelings and what it means to her to be a therapist. She succeeds at a task that is rarely attempted - defining therapy as both deeply personal and profoundly professional." - Karen J. Maroda, Ph.D., ABPP, Medical College of Wisconsin"Dr. Buechler has again succeeded in integrating key principles of emotion theory and her psychodynamic approach to therapy. In this book the discussion of emotion-cognition interactions is quite sophisticated, as when she acknowledges the frequent occurrence of emotions in meaningful patterns. Her treatment of the potentially adaptive role of emotions in behavior change should prove quite helpful to practicing therapists." - Carroll E. Izard, Ph.D., Trustees Distinguished Professor, University of Delaware"In this remarkably influential volume, Sandra Buechler, a polished writer and seasoned clinician, not only shares her evolving ideas about how to become a better psychoanalyst, but also, in so doing, provides a synthesis of emotion theory with what self psychologists have long understood about the powerful use of the empathic mode in promoting therapeutic change… a unique and important contribution to the psychoanalytic self psychology literature…. Buechler’s ideas are relevant to all psychotherapists utilizing a psychoanalytic framework for understanding the treatment process, not only to psychoanalysts training candidates in formal psychoanalytic institutes. Tightly organized and highly informative." - Linda A. Chernus, Psychoanalytic Social Work"Sandra Buechler, a wise psychoanalytic psychotherapist in New York City...brings her human experience as woman and mother, as a participant in the human condition, to bear on her work as therapist. It is a splendid book by an experienced clinician and teacher, an eloquent self-portrait of an active and committed therapist, brimming with clinical examples and helpful advice to both beginners and veterans in the field. It is a clarion call for emphasizing the role of emotions in life and in therapy rather than of intellectualized insight and theory... Buechler's book is a passionate segue and reaffirmation of the basic Freudian method....Buechler's pre-eminent focus on feelings and emotions and the life histories of her patients ...enabled her to build many bridges of emotional sharing between patient and therapist as they journey together, temporarily or interminably, in search of love, justice, and truth, making a difference where they can." - Zvi Lothane, M.D., The American Journal of Psychoanalysis"An overview, exploration and celebration of her life's work, Sandra Buechler's book is a passionate exegisis about what she believes to be the core and curative potential of the therapeutic relationship...Communicating a very intimate and vivid sense of her work as an analyst, Buechler describes emotion theory and how it shapes her interpersonal perspective, and proposes that a full understanding and deployment of therapeutic impact is best served from within this framework...Her voice is a lively, honest, and compelling one, and at times quite moving, as she weaves together an exposition of her theoretical principles and techniques with clinical scenarios, moments from poetry and literature, and meditations about mortality... Buechler brings a creative, fertile, and imaginative way of thinking to a discussion of psychoanalytic process, one that can usefully stir one's thinking, one's own associations, and one's emotional life no matter what theoretical orientation one brings, or tries not to bring, to the consulting room." - Daria Colombo, International Journal of Psychoanalysis "A book notable for the author's refreshing style, by turns conversational, poetic, and down-to-earth." - Dwarakanath G. Rao, Journal of the American Psychoanalytic AssociationTable of ContentsIntroduction: Meaningfully Impacting Patients' Lives. Basic Assumptions About Human Emotions. Empathic Recovery of Emotional Balance. Empathic Responses to Shame. Facing Painful Regret. Joy as a Universal Antidote. Grief. Empowering and Disorienting Anger. Special Section - Training: Nurturing the Capacity to Make a Difference. Thinking Analytically. Emotional Preparation for Practicing Psychoanalysis. Developing the Personal Strengths of a Psychoanalyst in Sum: Making a Difference.

    1 in stock

    £42.99

  • Jung  the Alchemical Imagination

    Hays (Nicolas) Ltd ,U.S. Jung the Alchemical Imagination

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £17.99

  • Attention and Interpretation Maresfield Library

    Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales) Attention and Interpretation Maresfield Library

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBion's central thesis in this volume is that for the study of people, whether individually or in groups, a cardinal requisite is accurate observation, accompanied by accurate appreciation and formulation of the observations so made. The study represents a further development of a theme introduced in the author's earlier works, particularly in Elements of Psychoanalysis (1963) and Transformations (1965). Bion's concern with the subject stems directly from his psycho-analytic experience and reflects his endeavor to overcome, in a scientific frame of reference, the immense difficulty of observing, assessing, and communicating non-sensuous experience. Here, he lays emphasis on he overriding importance of attending to the realities of mental phenomena as they manifest themselves in the individual or group under study. In influences that interpose themselves between the observer and the subject of his scrutiny giving rise to opacity, are examined, together with ways of controlling them.Trade ReviewBion's central thesis in this volume is that for the study of people, whether individually or in groups, a cardinal requisite is accurate observation, accompanied by accurate appreciation and formulation of the observations so made. The study represents a further development of a theme introduced in the author's earlier works, particularly in Elements of Psychoanalysis (1963) and Transformations (1965). Bion's concern with the subject stems directly from his psycho-analytic experience and reflects his endeavor to overcome, in a scientific frame of reference, the immense difficulty of observing, assessing, and communicating non-sensuous experience.Here, he lays emphasis on he overriding importance of attending to the realities of mental phenomena as they manifest themselves in the individual or group under study. In influences that interpose themselves between the observer and the subject of his scrutiny giving rise to opacity, are examined, together with ways of controlling them. Problems of language are considered: In order to express and communicate, the analyst is obliged to use words and formulations deriving from a background of sensuous experience and designed for a different task. Furthermore, the author says "It is too often forgotten that the gift of speech, so centrally employed, has been elaborated s much for the purpose of concealing thought by dissimulation and lying as for the purpose of elucidating or communicating thought".The practical value of this volume for those engaged in psycho-analytic work is self-evident; furthermore, its implications extend to many other areas of study. The discussion is wide-ranging: based on Kleinian theory, it encompasses theological dogma and mathematics, and the relationships between these fields. In particular, an attempt is made to show the analogy of certain psychological concepts with mathematical formulations such as set theory.Readers already familiar with Bion's work will welcome this further statement of his views. Those encountering his writing for the first time will at once perceive the originality of his approach and the precision of his theoretical exposition.Table of ContentsIntroduction -- Medicine as a Model -- Reality Sensuous and Psychic -- Opacity of Memory and Desire -- Theories: Particular Instance or General Configuration -- The Mystic and the Group -- Container and Contained -- Vertices: Evolution -- Ultimate Reality -- Visual Images and Invariants -- Lies and the Thinker -- Container and Contained Transformed -- Prelude to or Substitute for Achievement

    1 in stock

    £35.14

  • The Language of Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Language of Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisSigmund Freud evolved his theories throughout his lifetime. This entailed many revisions and changes which he himself never tried to standardise rigidly into a definitive conceptual system. The need for some sort of a reliable guide which would spell out both the pattern of the evolution of Freud's thinking, as well as establish its inherent logic, was felt for a long time by both scholars and students of psychoanalysis. Drs Laplanche and Pontalis of the Association Psychanalytique de France succeeded admirably in providing a dictionary of Freud's concepts which is more than a compilation of mere definitions. After many years of creative and industrious research, they were able to give an authentic account of the evolution of each concept with pertinent supporting texts from Freud's own writing (in the Standard Edition translation), and thus have endowed us with an instrument for work and research which is characterised by its thoroughness, exactitude and lack of prejudice towards dogmTrade ReviewSigmund Freud evolved his theories throughout his lifetime. This entailed many revisions and changes which he himself never tried to standardize rigidly into a definitive conceptual system. The need for some sort of a reliable guide which would spell out both the pattern of the evolution of Freud's thinking, as well as establish its inherent logic, was felt for a long time by both scholars and students of psychoanalysis. Drs. Laplanche and Pontalis of the Association Psychoanalytique de France succeeded admirably in providing a dictionary of Freud's concepts which is more than a compilation of mere definitions. After many years of creative and industrious research, they were able to give an authentic account of the evolution of each concept with pertinent supporting texts from Freud's own writing (in the Standard Edition translation), and thus have endowed us with an instrument for work and research which is characterized by its thoroughness, exactitude and lack of prejudice towards dogma.The Language of Psychoanalysis has already established itself as a classic and will long continue to be of invaluable use to both student and research-worker in psychoanalysis.Table of ContentsEditorial Preface -- Introduction -- Foreword -- A -- Abreaction -- Abstinence (Rule of) -- Acting Out -- Active Technique -- Activity/Passivity -- Actual Neurosis -- Adhesiveness of the Libido -- Affect -- Affection (or Tenderness) -- Agency -- Aggressive Instinct -- Aggressiveness (or Aggression or Aggressivity) -- Aim of the Instinct, Instinctual Aim -- Aim-Inhibited -- Allo-Erotism -- Alteration of the Ego -- Ambivalence -- Ambivalent; Pre-Ambivalent; Post-Ambivalent -- Anaclisis; Anaclitic (or Attachment) -- Anaclitic Depression -- Anaclitic Type of Object-Choice -- Anagogic Interpretation -- Anal-Sadistic Stage (or Phase) -- Anticathexis, Countercathexis -- Anxiety Hysteria -- Anxiety Neurosis -- Aphanisis -- Association -- Attention, (Evenly) Suspended or Poised -- Auto-Erotism -- Automatic Anxiety -- Autoplastic/Alloplastic -- B -- Binding -- Bisexuality -- Borderline Case -- C -- Cannibalistic -- Castration Complex -- Cathartic Method (or Therapy) -- Cathectic Energy -- Cathexis -- Censorship -- Character Neurosis -- Choice of Neurosis -- Cloacal (or Cloaca) Theory -- Combined Parent(s), Combined Parent-Figure -- Complemental Series -- Complex -- Component (or Partial) Instinct -- Compromise-Formation -- Compulsion, Compulsive -- Compulsion to Repeat (Repetition Compulsion) -- Condemnation (Judgement of) -- Condensation -- Consciousness -- Construction -- Control Analysis (or Supervised or Supervisory Analysis) -- Conversion -- Conversion Hysteria -- Counter-Transference -- D -- Damming up of Libido -- Day-Dream -- Day’s Residues -- Death Instincts -- Defence -- Defence Hysteria -- Defence Mechanisms -- Deferred Action; Deferred -- Depressive Position -- Derivative of the Unconscious -- Destructive Instinct -- Direct Analysis -- Disavowal (Denial) -- Discharge -- Displacement -- Distortion -- Dream Screen -- Dream-Work -- Dynamic -- E -- Economic -- Ego -- Ego-Ideal -- Ego-Instincts -- Egoism -- Ego-Libido/Object-Libido -- Ego-Syntonic -- Electra Complex -- Eros -- Erotogenic -- Erotogenic (or Erogenous) Zone -- Erotogenicity (or Erogenicity) -- Experience of Satisfaction -- F -- Facilitation -- Failure Neurosis (or Syndrome) -- Family Neurosis -- Family Romance -- Fate Neurosis -- Father Complex -- Fixation -- Flight into Illness -- Foreclosure (Repudiation) -- Free Association (Method or Rule of) -- Free Energy/Bound Energy -- Fright -- Frustration -- Functional Phenomenon -- Fundamental Rule -- Fusion/Defusion (of Instincts) -- G -- Gain from Illness, Primary and Secondary -- Generation of Anxiety -- Genital Love -- Genital Stage or Organisation -- ‘Good’ Object/‘Bad’ Object -- H -- Helplessness -- Hospitalism -- Hypercathexis -- Hypnoid Hysteria -- Hypnoid State -- Hysteria -- Hysterogenic Zone -- I -- Id -- Idea (or Presentation or Representation) -- Ideal Ego -- Idealisation -- Ideational Representative (α) -- Identification -- Identification with the Aggressor -- Imaginary (sb. & adj.) -- Imago -- Incorporation -- Infantile Amnesia -- Inferiority Complex -- Innervation -- Instinct (or Drive) -- Instinct to Master (or for Mastery) -- Instincts of Self-Preservation -- Instinctual Component -- Instinctual Impulse -- Instinctual Representative (α) -- Intellectualisation -- Interest, Ego-Interest -- Internalisation -- Interpretation -- Introjection -- Introversion -- Isolation -- L -- Latency Period -- Latent Content -- Libidinal Stage (or Phase) -- Libido -- Life Instincts -- M -- Manifest Content -- Masculinity/Femininity -- Masochism -- Material -- Memory-Trace (or Mnemic Trace) -- Metapsychology -- Mirror Phase (or Stage) -- Mixed Neurosis -- Mnemic Symbol -- Mothering -- N -- Narcissism -- Narcissistic Libido -- Narcissistic Neurosis -- Narcissistic Object-Choice -- Need for Punishment -- Negation -- Negative Therapeutic Reaction -- Neurasthenia -- Neuro-Psychosis (or Psychoneurosis) of Defence -- Neurosis -- Neurosis of Abandonment -- Neutrality -- Nirvana Principle -- O -- Object -- Object-Choice -- Object-Relation(ship) -- Obsessional Neurosis -- Oedipus Complex -- Oral Stage (or Phase) -- Oral-Sadistic Stage (or Phase) -- Organisation of the Libido -- Organ-Pleasure -- Over-Determination, Multiple Determination -- Over-Interpretation -- P -- Pair of Opposites -- Paranoia -- Paranoid Position -- Paraphrenia -- Parapraxis -- Part-Object -- Penis Envy -- Perceptual Identity/Thought Identity -- Perversion -- Phallic Stage (or Phase) -- Phallic Woman, Phallic Mother -- Phallus -- Phantasy (or Fantasy) -- Phobic Neurosis -- Plasticity of the Libido -- Pleasure-Ego/Reality-Ego -- Pleasure Principle -- Preconscious (sb. and adj.) -- Pregenital -- Preoedipal -- Pressure (of the Instinct) -- Primal Phantasies -- Primal Repression -- Primal Scene -- Primary Identification -- Primary Narcissism, Secondary Narcissism -- Primary Process/Secondary Process -- Principle of Constancy -- Principle of (Neuronal) Inertia -- Projection -- Projective Identification -- Protective Shield (Against Stimuli) -- Psychical (or Psychic or Mental) Apparatus -- Psychical Conflict -- Psychical Reality -- Psychical Representative (α) -- Psychical Working Out (or Over) -- Psycho-Analysis -- Psychoneurosis or Neuro-Psychosis -- Psychosis -- Psychotherapy -- Purposive Idea -- Q -- Quota of Affect -- R -- Rationalisation -- Reaction-Formation -- Realistic Anxiety -- Reality Principle -- Reality-Testing -- Regression -- Reparation -- Representability, Considerations of -- Repression -- Resistance -- Retention Hysteria -- Return of the Repressed -- Reversal into die Opposite -- S -- Sadism -- Sadism/Masochism, Sado-Masochism -- Scene of Seduction; Theory of Seduction -- Schizophrenia -- Screen Memory -- Secondary Revision (or Elaboration) -- Self-Analysis -- Sense of Guilt, Guilt Feeling -- Sense (or Feeling) of Inferiority -- Sexual Instinct -- Sexuality -- Signal of Anxiety, Anxiety as Signal -- Somatic Compliance -- Source of the Instinct -- Specific Action -- Splitting of the Ego -- Splitting of the Object -- Subconscious, Subconsciousness -- Sublimation -- Substitute-Formation (or Substitutive Formation) -- Sum of Excitation -- Super-Ego -- Suppression -- Symbolic (sb.) -- Symbolic Realisation -- Symbolism -- Symptom-Formation -- T -- Thanatos -- Thing-Presentation/Word-Presentation -- Topography; Topographical -- Training Analysis -- Transference -- Transference Neurosis -- Transitional Object -- Trauma (Psychical) -- Traumatic Hysteria -- Traumatic Neurosis -- Turning Round upon the Subject’s Own Self -- U -- Unconscious (sb. & adj.) -- Undoing (what has been done) -- Urethral Erotism (or Urinary Erotism) -- W -- Wild Psycho-Analysis -- Wish (Desire) -- Wish-Fulfilment -- Withdrawal of Cathexis (or Decathexis) -- Work of Mourning -- Working-off Mechanisms -- Working-Through

    1 in stock

    £54.14

  • Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA most lucid and comprehensive introduction to Kleinian theories from one of the leading contemporary Kleinian analysts, including new chapters on her early work and on technique. This is a reprint of a revised and enlarged edition, where the author has added important new chapters on Melanie Klein''s early work and on technique, as well as a complete chronological list of her publications.Trade ReviewThis is a reprint of a revised and enlarged edition of the most lucid and comprehensive study of Melanie Klein's writings. Dr Segal has added important new chapters on Melanie Klein's early work and on technique, as well as a complete chronological list of her publications.Table of ContentsIntroduction , Melanie Klein’s Early Work , Phantasy , The Paranoid-Schizoid Position , Envy , The Psychopathology of the Paranoid-Schizoid Position , The Depressive Position , Manic Defences , Reparation , The Early Stages of the Oedipus Complex , Postscript on Technique

    1 in stock

    £37.04

  • Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis monograph analyses Zadie Smith's White Teeth, On Beauty, NW, The Embassy of Cambodia, and Swing Time as trauma fictions that reveal the social, cultural, historical, and political facets of trauma. Starting with Smith's humorous critique of psychoanalysis and her definition of original trauma, this volume explores Smith's challenge of Western theories of trauma and coping, and how her narratives expose the insidiousness of (post)colonial suffering and unbelonging. This book then explores transgenerational trauma, the tensions between remembering and forgetting, multidirectional memory, and the possibilities of the ambiguities and contradictions of the postcolonial and diasporic characters Smith depicts. This analysis discloses Smith's effort to ethically redefine trauma theory from a postcolonial and decolonial standpoint, reiterates the need to acknowledge and work through colonial histories and postcolonial forms of oppression, and crTable of ContentsIntroduction: Postcolonial Traumas: Theories and NarrativesChapter 1. Origins, Original Trauma, and Transgenerational Trauma: The Obsessions and Revelations of HistoryChapter 2. The Erasure of Origins against Original Trauma: The Ambivalences of Forgetting and Remembering in White Teeth, On Beauty, and NWChapter 3. Multiple Origins and Multidirectional Memory: Dialogic Histories of Slavery in The Embassy of Cambodia and Swing TimeConclusion: The Forms, Complexities, and Contradictions of Postcolonial Trauma

    1 in stock

    £39.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd AttachmentInformed Grief Therapy

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisAttachment-Informed Grief Therapy bridges the fields of attachment studies, thanatology, and interpersonal neuroscience, uniting theory, research, and practice to enrich our understanding of how we can help the bereaved. The new edition includes updated research and discussion of emotion regulation, relational trauma, epistemic trust, and much more.In these pages, clinicians and students will gain a new understanding of the etiology of problematic grief and its treatment, and will become better equipped to formulate accurate and specific case conceptualization and treatment plans. The authors also illustrate the ways in which the therapeutic relationship is crucially important though largely unrecognized element in grief therapy and offer guidelines for an attachment-informed view of the therapeutic relationship that can serve as the foundation of all grief therapy.Written by two highly experienced grief counselors, this volume is filled with instructive casTrade Review"Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy is a fascinating book! Kosminsky and Jordan have written a scientifically sound, clinically innovative, well-argued, and extremely informative volume. The authors show how insights from attachment theory and neuroscience are the keys that unlock the puzzle of healthy and disordered grief responses, and how, through understanding unmet attachment needs, attachment-related emotions and defenses, and the broaden-and-build repercussions of attachment security, grief therapists can help bereaved clients to manage their grief reactions and to find ways to move forward. I enjoyed reading this gracefully written and profound book and I strongly believe that it will become essential reading for clinicians, researchers, and students interested in the study and treatment of disordered grief."Mario Mikulincer, professor of psychology, Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology, Reichman University, Israel"In this remarkable revision of their ground-breaking volume, Phyllis Kosminsky and Jack Jordan penetrate still more profoundly into the developmental, interpersonal, and intersubjective neurobiological underpinnings of attachment that give rise and form to all grief. More than a compendium of clinical wisdom and contemporary theory and research, Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy provides resonant insights and concrete principles for helping clients read the deep text of their own needs in the wake of loss. Equally, it instructs the reader in how to become the secure base that allows survivors to integrate the rupture and realign the bond with a significant other who is present even in absence. I, for one, am a better therapist and companion to those who mourn for the gift of their vision."Robert A. Neimeyer, PhD, co-editor of The Handbook of Grief Therapy and director of The Portland Institute for Loss and Transition"The second edition of this important volume is a valuable resource for clinicians and researchers alike. Updating, expanding, and deepening their understanding of the interface between attachment styles and the processing of bereavement, Kosminsky and Jordan's integration of new findings from neuroscience adds an important dimension to their overview. The ample clinical material included is accompanied by rich and thoughtful consideration of the cases at hand. Accompanying these exemplary clinicians as they weave together theory, research and practice on bereavement will enrich the therapeutic encounter for therapists at all stages of their professional development." Simon Shimshon Rubin, PhD, director of the International Laboratory for the Study of Loss, Bereavement, and Human Resilience at the University of Haifa, Israel, and co-author of Working with the Bereaved: Multiple Lenses on Loss and Mourning "Reading this book in one stitting, as I did, left me moved. It starts with a crystal-clear exposition of contemporary attachment theory and its neuroscience basis, defines and easy-to-understand attachment framework for helping bereaved people, and shows how sensitive therapy can help overcome physiological dysregulation and restore meaning. Convincing clinical illustrations are used throughout, contributing to an overall sense of two vastly experienced clinicians passing on deep theoretical and practical expertise to the next generations. Strongly recommended." Jeremy Holmes, MD, FRCPsych, University of Exeter, United Kingdom, and author of Exploring in Security: Towards an Attachment-Informed Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy"Grief, that harrowing experience after the death of a loved one, is again beautifully described in the second edition of Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy. What the authors have accomplished in this edition will continue to enrich how clinicians work with the grief-stricken and will provide them with an expanded knowledge of how attachment shapes the experience of grief in bereavement. And Kosminsky and Jordan do more. The rhythm of the writing combined with their clarity and deftness in explicating theory and neuroscience make Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy a book that is a pleasure to read."Dorothy Holinger, PhD, author of The Anatomy of Grief"In the second edition of this groundbreaking volume, Phyllis Kosminsky and John Jordan show us how to help our clients navigate the landscape of life, with all of its fault lines. Filled with deep empathy and wisdom, Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy is a book that will inform and inspire anyone who is in a position to offer support to people dealing with significant loss or with other difficult and painful losses." Jakob van Wielink, The School for Transition, The Netherlands, and co-author of Loss, Grief, and Attachment in Life Transitions: A Clinician's Guide to Secure Base Counseling"This volume provides a wonderful intergration of the concepts related to attachment, current theories of grief, and contemporary neuroscience. The book answered questions about attachment and therapy that I didn't even know that I had! It is an absolute must-read for any clinician who wishes to enhance their practice and provide sensitive and well-informed support to those who are grieving." Darcy Harris, PhD, professor, Thanatology Department, King's University College at Western University and co-editor of the Routledge Series in Death, Dying, and Bereavement "Finally! In an extraordinary blend of scholarship and clinical acumen, the rich store of information located in attachment theory/research has been retrieved and integrated with what the bereaved specifically require in the aftermath of significant loss. Synthesizing developmental psychology, traumatology, thanatology, neuroscience, and therapy research, Kosminsky and Jordan brilliantly elucidate the mourner's experience and needs, along the way operationalizing what clinicians must know to intervene successfully to promote healthy adaptation. Practical and cutting edge, this book makes a revolutionary contribution and will become required reading for those working with all kinds of loss." Therese Rando, PhD, BCETS, BCBT, founder and clinical director, The Institute for the Study and Treatment of Loss, Warwick Rhode Island, and author of Coping with the Sudden Death of Your Loved: A Self-Help Handbook for Traumatic Bereavement "Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy is a must-read for grief counselors. This is a book that every therapist should have in his or her library and one they will consult regularly." Kenneth J. Doka, PhD, senior consultant to the Hospice Foundation of America and author of Grief is a Journey: Finding Your Path Through Loss"This is an exceptional text! Written by two highly skilled clinicians, it presents the state of the art in attachment theory and bereavement in both a highly engaging and practical form. This book effectively bridges both research and practice and attachment and thanatology in a way that no other texts have previously done. Richly illustrated with clinical examples, this impressive book will enrich the understanding and skills of both beginning and experienced clinicians." Christopher Hall, MA, BEd, chief executive officer of the Australian Centre for Grief and Bereavement Table of ContentsIntroduction Part One: An Introduction to Attachment Theory and Research 1. Foundational Concepts in Attachment Theory 2. Building on the Foundation: The Second Wave of Attachment Theory and Research 3. Attachment Theory and Neuroscience: Understanding the Impact of Early Experience and the Nature of Change Part Two: Bereavement through the Lens of Attachment: Advances in Research, Theory and Practice 4. Insecure Attachment and Problematic Grief: Contemporary Models and Their Implications for Practice 5. The Impact of the Relationship with the Deceased 6. Trauma and the Mode of Death Part Three: Clinical Implications: Toward Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy 7. A Model of Attachment-Informed Grief Therapy 8. The Therapeutic Relationship: Core Capacities of the Attachment-Informed Grief Therapist 9. Strengthening Self-Capacities 10. Meaning Making in Adaptation to Loss 11. Conclusions

    15 in stock

    £27.99

  • When the Body Speaks

    Taylor & Francis Ltd When the Body Speaks

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book is based on the work done by a group of British and Italian psychoanalysts who have been meeting twice yearly since 2003 to study clinically the relationship between the mind and the body of their patients.The analytical dyad became the focus of a dialectical movement between body and mind and between subject and object. Containing contributions from a range of distinguished British and Italian analysts, this book covers such key topics as somatic symptoms, the embodied unconscious, bodily expressions of affect, sexuality, violence, self-harm, suicide attempts, hypochondria, hysteria, anorexia and bulimia, and splits and fragmentation associated with the body. The theoretical understanding is inspired by various psychoanalytic theoreticians, including Freud, M. Klein, Winnicott and Bion and their theories on sexuality, infantile sexuality, libido, aggressiveness, death instinct, Oedipus complex and motherchild relationship. Offering new advances in theoreticaTrade Review"This wonderful book explores to depth the unending unconscious effort of human beings trying to recover unity and harmony in their own sense of self. It investigates how to repair the split and lacks which detached minds from bodies, creating tragic feelings of subjective discontinuity and alienation.An innovative experiment of scientific cross-fertilization, by merging creatively for 14 years two different analytic perspectives thanks to the joint theoretical-clinical research of a "resilient" British-Italian working group, generates here a fascinating, unexpected and much more integrated vision on the soma-psyche issue.This book confirms the immense power of cross-fertilization in psychoanalysis, and I entusiastically recommend it to the readers." - Stefano Bolognini, Past-President of the International Psychoanalytical Association "When the Body Speaks is based on a series of dialogues held along 14 years between analysts from the British Psychoanalytical Society and the Italian Psychoanalytical Society. This highly interesting book shows how building bridges between different psychoanalytical Societies and perspectives can produce new interesting ideas on the complex issue of the body-mind relationship. Issues such as the role of the senses in psychic life, the body as ‘a way of being, ’ the maternal body and its availability to the infant, the role of metaphor in connection to the body and the place of the analyst’s body in analytic treatment are just some of the subjects touched upon in this book which together with detailed description of clinical material of the analysis of children, adolescents and adults, make When the Body Speaks intellectually stimulating as well as extremely helpful for anyone interested in psychoanalysis and in clinical practice in general." - Prof Catalina Bronstein, Fellow and Training Analyst, British Psychoanalytical Society and Visiting Professor, Psychoanalysis Unit, University College London"Edited by Don Campbell and Ronny Jaffé this fascinating and lively book deals with sensoriality and bodily issues into the analytic material, it aims to a deeper understanding of the human somatopsychic unity. "When the body speaks" is the result of years of dialogues between Italian and British psychoanalysts who met from 2001 to 2013. A specific aspect of the topic is tackled in each chapter. Distinguished authors present clinical cases that illustrate their way of being in touch with their own body-mind unit when working, thinking, and interpreting to the patient. Affected and concretely transformed by a psychosomatic disease the body can also be invasive in the clinical material and this can distort the countertransference. Faced with the patient’s body on the couch the analyst needs to listen to his own bodily counter-transferential reactions and try to work through his blind spots or scars. Remarkable survey!!" - Marilia Aisenstein, Training Analyst with the Hellenic Psychoanalytic Society and the Paris Psychoanalytic Society, past President of the Paris Psychoanalytic Society and of the Paris Psychosomatic Institute "This wonderful book explores to depth the unending unconscious effort of human beings trying to recover unity and harmony in their own sense of self. It investigates how to repair the split and lacks which detached minds from bodies, creating tragic feelings of subjective discontinuity and alienation. An innovative experiment of scientific cross-fertilization, by merging creatively for 14 years two different analytic perspectives thanks to the joint theoretical-clinical research of a 'resilient' British-Italian working group, generates here a fascinating, unexpected and much more integrated vision on the soma-psyche issue. This book confirms the immense power of cross-fertilization in psychoanalysis, and I entusiastically recommend it to the readers." - Stefano Bolognini, Past President of the International Psychoanalytical Association "When the Body Speaks is based on a series of dialogues held along 14 years between analysts from the British Psychoanalytical Society and the Italian Psychoanalytical Society. This highly interesting book shows how building bridges between different psychoanalytical Societies and perspectives can produce new interesting ideas on the complex issue of the body-mind relationship. Issues such as the role of the senses in psychic life, the body as ‘a way of being, ’ the maternal body and its availability to the infant, the role of metaphor in connection to the body and the place of the analyst’s body in analytic treatment are just some of the subjects touched upon in this book which together with detailed description of clinical material of the analysis of children, adolescents and adults, make When the Body Speaks intellectually stimulating as well as extremely helpful for anyone interested in psychoanalysis and in clinical practice in general." - Prof Catalina Bronstein, Fellow and Training Analyst, British Psychoanalytical Society and Visiting Professor, Psychoanalysis Unit, University College London"Edited by Don Campbell and Ronny Jaffé this fascinating and lively book deals with sensoriality and bodily issues into the analytic material, it aims to a deeper understanding of the human somatopsychic unity. When the Body Speaks is the result of years of dialogues between Italian and British psychoanalysts who met from 2001 to 2013. A specific aspect of the topic is tackled in each chapter. Distinguished authors present clinical cases that illustrate their way of being in touch with their own body-mind unit when working, thinking, and interpreting to the patient. Affected and concretely transformed by a psychosomatic disease the body can also be invasive in the clinical material and this can distort the countertransference. Faced with the patient’s body on the couch the analyst needs to listen to his own bodily counter-transferential reactions and try to work through his blind spots or scars. Remarkable survey!!" - Marilia Aisenstein, Training Analyst with the Hellenic Psychoanalytic Society and the Paris Psychoanalytic Society, Past President of the Paris Psychoanalytic Society and of the Paris Psychosomatic Institute Table of ContentsIntroduction Ronny Jaffè and Donald CampbellChapter 1Traces of the Early Relationship in the Corpus of Freud’s Work: A re-readingGiuseppina AntinucciChapter 2The "Psychoanalytical" Body and its Clinical ImplicationSarantis ThanopulosChapter 3 Transmission of Somatic and Sensory States in the Psychoanalytical RelationshipRonny JaffèChapter 4 PerfumeMaria Colazzo HendriksChapter 5 Access to the Embodied Unconscious through Reverie and MetaphorBenedetta Guerrini Degl’InnocentiChapter 6The Body in PsychoanalysisCristiano RocchiChapter 7 The Body in the Consulting Room: Italian-British conversationsBarbara PiovanoChapter 8 When the Body Speaks: Bodily expressions of unrepresented affectsLuigi CaparrottaChapter 9 A Skin of One’s Own: On boundaries, the skin, and feminine sexualityPatricia GrieveChapter 10 "Seized With A Savage Woe": Attacks on the vitality of the body of a suicidal young manJoan SchächterChapter 11 Physical Violence and its Depiction by a Male AdolescentDonald CampbellChapter 12 The Hidden Secret - Ego Distortion in Facial Deformity: Some reflections on the analysis of an adolescent boyBernard RobertsAfterthoughtsRonny Jaffè and Donald Campbell

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Surviving Object

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this book, Abram proposes and elaborates the dual concept of an intrapsychic surviving and non surviving object and examines how psychic survival-of-the-object places the early m/Other at the centre of the nascent psyche before innate factors are relevant. Abram's clinical-theoretical elaborations advance several of Winnicott's key concepts. Moreover, the clinical illustrations show how her advances arise out of the transference-countertransference matrix of the analyzing situation. Chapter by chapter the reader witnesses the evolution of her proposals that not only enhance an appreciation of Winnicott's original clinical paradigm but also demonstrate how much more there is to glean from his texts especially in the contemporary consulting room. The Surviving Object comprises 8 chapters covering themes such as: the incommunicado self; violation of the self; the paradox of communication; terror at the roots of non survival; an implicit theory of desire; the fear of WOTrade Review"In her new book, Jan Abram continues the impressive endeavour to explore, discuss and develop the work of D. W. Winnicott. This time her personal voice is stronger. By offering the reader an Ariadne thread, through her clinical innovation of the intrapsychic surviving and non surviving objects, she takes the reader on a journey through the complexity of Winnicott’s work, and her own reflections of its clinical and theoretical implications. She includes an abundance of examples from her clinical work, and a continuous dialogue with other psychoanalytic writers. This makes Abram’s contribution not only helpful to the understanding of Winnicott, but also to several of the most important discussions in contemporary psychoanalysis." - Sølvi Kristiansen, Training and Supervising Analyst; Past President, The Norwegian Psychoanalytic Society"Jan Abram has made this marvellous achievement showing that DW Winnicott's two-person psychology is three-dimensional, following her inspiring meeting with André Green. To illustrate her psychoanalytic journey, she makes heuristic use of Japanese Ukiyo-e so that readers may enjoy viewing the transient and transitional object together while learning from the author, and in the end, shall realize the object has survived intrapsychically." - Osamu Kitayama, Training and Supervising Analyst & Past President Japan Psychoanalytic Society"In The Surviving Object, Jan Abram, the foremost Winnicott scholar writing today, discusses the way Winnicott reinvents the meanings of words as he goes, and uses the unique language he creates to convey understandings that analytic writing has never previously held. In this new work, she presents her own clinical work, which is strongly rooted in Winnicott’s thinking, but is uniquely her own. She speaks with her patients in a way that is sometimes calming, sometimes confrontational, sometimes stunningly insightful, but always profoundly personal and humane. This is an extraordinary book that must not be missed." - Thomas Ogden, author most recently of Reclaiming Unlived Life and Creative Readings: Essays on Seminal Analytic Works."The Surviving Object is a significant milestone in understanding the richness of Winnicott’s contributions to psychoanalysis. Jan Abram, a leading exponent of Winnicott’s work, traces the evolution of his central concepts, with the detailed grasp of them for which she is known. She also traces how her own understanding of them has developed over time and found expression in her clinical work. Winnicott’s ideas are carried forward in the process, and their links to French psychoanalysis in particular are valuably explored. This book is both an extremely useful survey of Winnicott’s thought and a creative elaboration of it." - Michael Parsons, author of Living Psychoanalysis: From Theory to Experience "In her new book, Jan Abram continues the impressive endeavour to explore, discuss and develop the work of D. W. Winnicott. This time her personal voice is stronger. By offering the reader an Ariadne thread, through her clinical innovation of the intrapsychic surviving and non surviving objects, she takes the reader on a journey through the complexity of Winnicott’s work, and her own reflections of its clinical and theoretical implications. She includes an abundance of examples from her clinical work, and a continuous dialogue with other psychoanalytic writers. This makes Abram’s contribution not only helpful to the understanding of Winnicott, but also to several of the most important discussions in contemporary psychoanalysis." - Sølvi Kristiansen, Training and Supervising Analyst; Past President, The Norwegian Psychoanalytic Society"Jan Abram has made this marvellous achievement showing that DW Winnicott's two-person psychology is three-dimensional, following her inspiring meeting with André Green. To illustrate her psychoanalytic journey, she makes heuristic use of Japanese Ukiyo-e so that readers may enjoy viewing the transient and transitional object together while learning from the author, and in the end, shall realize the object has survived intrapsychically." - Osamu Kitayama, Training and Supervising Analyst & Past President Japan Psychoanalytic Society"In The Surviving Object, Jan Abram, the foremost Winnicott scholar writing today, discusses the way Winnicott reinvents the meanings of words as he goes, and uses the unique language he creates to convey understandings that analytic writing has never previously held. In this new work, she presents her own clinical work, which is strongly rooted in Winnicott’s thinking, but is uniquely her own. She speaks with her patients in a way that is sometimes calming, sometimes confrontational, sometimes stunningly insightful, but always profoundly personal and humane. This is an extraordinary book that must not be missed." - Thomas Ogden, author most recently of Reclaiming Unlived Life and Creative Readings: Essays on Seminal Analytic Works."The Surviving Object is a significant milestone in understanding the richness of Winnicott’s contributions to psychoanalysis. Jan Abram, a leading exponent of Winnicott’s work, traces the evolution of his central concepts, with the detailed grasp of them for which she is known. She also traces how her own understanding of them has developed over time and found expression in her clinical work. Winnicott’s ideas are carried forward in the process, and their links to French psychoanalysis in particular are valuably explored. This book is both an extremely useful survey of Winnicott’s thought and a creative elaboration of it." - Michael Parsons, author of Living Psychoanalysis: From Theory to Experience"The book largely achieves its dual aims of both establishing the importance of Winnicott’s theory of psychic survival for clinicians working with adults and of extending it. Overall, I think Abram’s dual concepts of the intrapsychic surviving and non-surviving object provide useful tools for thinking about clinical work with adult patients."-Alison Rolfe, Journal of Analytical PsychologyTable of ContentsWhy Winnicott? 1. Squiggles, clowns and Catherine wheels: violation of the self and its vicissitudes (1996) 2. The surviving object (2003) 3. The non surviving object: reflections on the roots of terror (2005) 4. The fear of WOMAN/analysis: reflections on desire, infantile sexuality and psychic survival-of-the-object (2010) 5. On Winnicott’s clinical innovations in the analysis of adults (2012) 6. On Winnicott’s area of formlessness: the pure female element and the capacity to feel real (2013) 7. The paternal integrate and its role in the analyzing situation 2013) 8. The fear of madness in the context of nachträglichkeit and the negative therapeutic reaction (2018) Appendix: The dating of Fear of Breakdown and The Psychology of Madness and why it matters (2018)

    15 in stock

    £31.99

  • Psychoanalysis Under Occupation

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychoanalysis Under Occupation

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHeavily influenced by Frantz Fanon and critically engaging the theories of decoloniality and liberatory psychoanalysis, Lara Sheehi and Stephen Sheehi platform the lives, perspectives, and insights of psychoanalytically-inflected Palestinian psychologists, psychiatrists, and other mental health professionals.Trade ReviewWinner of the Best Academic Book Award at the Palestine Book Awards 2022."If you’re looking for another book on victims of apartheid-induced trauma or a psychoanalysis of occupation, this is not it. Instead, Lara Sheehi and Stephen Sheehi have written a brilliant, insurgent work of decolonial theory and practice that centers the labor of Palestinian clinicians and their patients seeking to restore and sustain a sense of self, community, cultural integrity, and ‘presence’ under the violence of settler colonialism. Building on and moving beyond Frantz Fanon, the authors understand the project of psychoanalysis in Palestine is not adjustment but resistance, liberation, and ultimately decolonization." Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination"Psychoanalysis Under Occupation makes a compelling argument that interrupts settler colonial epistemic violence. Theorized and discussed in a robust, sophisticated, and well-argued manner, Psychoanalysis Under Occupation prioritizes Palestinian clinician’s expressions, conceptualizing an Arab Palestinian theory of psychoanalyses and resistance. Lara and Stephen Sheehi’s thoughtful, and sensitive examination of al-nafs is a major contribution to psychoanalytic decolonial feminist knowledge produced as/through a liberatory struggle."Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Chair in Global Law, Queen Mary University of London and Professor of Criminology and Social Work, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem."How must one deal with the mental suffering of Palestinian patients? Based on an exhaustive analysis of the work of clinicians in Palestine, Lara Sheehi and Stephen Sheehi reject the paradigms of trauma and resilience, make the thought-provoking argument that these patients’ psychic life cannot be reduced to their experience of settler colonialism’s violence, and assert that their subjectivities remain open to desire, emancipation, and the will to live."Didier Fassin, Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study and to the Annual Chair of Public Health at the Collège de France"Sometimes a book shakes you to your very core and makes you see the field you’ve practiced in for forty years in an entirely new way. This is that book. In bringing readers into the material realities of Palestinian life under Israeli Occupation, introducing us to Palestinian clinicians, patients, Israeli and Palestinian supervisors, Sheehi and Sheehi show clearly that the way psychoanalysis is deployed is literally a matter of life and death. They reveal the multiple ways psychoanalysis is mis-used by those consciously or unconsciously bent on normalizing a violent status quo. At the same time, by letting us listen in on the multiple ways that Palestinian patients and clinicians resist allowing their minds and bodies to be occupied, they reveal what is possible when psychoanalysis aims at liberation."Lynne Layton, Ph.D., Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis"Whether it is the history, the theoretical complications or the clinical practice of psychoanalysis in Palestine, Sheehi and Sheehi back up each claim with meticulous footnote referencing which points us to their sources and which also in many cases provides more elaboration of the argument. This is an eminently scholarly book, which is not to say that it is neutral, making a pretence to objectivity, a story told as if from nowhere and so, by default, from the standpoint of those with power."Ian Parker, Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society"This is a very difficult and important book for psychoanalysts, psychologists, and anyone involved in practice concerned with alleviating distress and challenging injustice, including the ways that oppression creates distress as a recognisable and understandable response to injustice.Erica Burman, Psychotherapy and Politics International"This is a ground-breaking, intentionally hard-hitting, and rousing call to "jihad" that simultaneously shakes psychoanalysis (and by association, group analysis) out of its own insidious double-standards. The authors take us through an imagined and applied process of decolonization through navigating difficult terrain and largely unchartered ‘Arab Psychoanalytic’ territories. What emerges is a remarkable story of awakening, remembering and resilience that reveals histories of oppression, the harmful and disingenuous underbelly of Western models of therapy and the transformational potential of paradox, mediated through the circular interchangeable notions and motions of Nafs, Jihad and Sumud."Reem Shelhi, Group Analytic Society International"Western, orientalist, and colonial notions of the trauma victim have plagued Palestinain mental health discourses since the British Mandate. Lara and Stephen Sheehi’s Psychoanalysis Under Occupation is a valiant attempt at resisting this discourse. Through a methodological, theoretical, and analytical approach that centres Indigenous experiences and knowledge systems, the book transports the reader through its pages into a world outside these liberal, hegemonic discourses. The reader’s understanding of psychoanalysis, of research and academia, and of Palestine is subsequently transformed by the books unapologetic militant, revolutionary and liberatory understanding of mental health and wellbeing."Jeanine Hourani, the HytheTable of ContentsIntroduction: Setting the Frame 1. Practicing Disalienation 2. The Will to Live in Palestine 3. Psychoanalytic Innocence: The Ideological Misattunement of Dialogue 4. Psychotherapeutic Commons in Liberated Palestine Epilogue: Resistance Keeps Us Sane

    1 in stock

    £37.04

  • Sibling Relations and the Horizontal Axis in

    Taylor & Francis Sibling Relations and the Horizontal Axis in

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book explores the interpersonal world of sibling relationships, explaining how these relationships are central to the development of the psyche of the individual, of the group, of society and of the organisation. Sibling Relations and the Horizontal Axis in Theory and Practice considers four key areas: sibling relations, sibling trauma, the law of the mother and the horizontal axis. The contributors journey through examples from the psychological, philosophical, organisational, social and cultural realms, giving a new perspective on the psychic world and the importance of sibling relationships as an empowering and therapeutic component for building relationships. While we are used to looking at the individual, the group and at society through the vertical, hierarchical relationship that results from parentâchild relationships, this book discusses and reveals the impact of the horizontal axis.Sibling Relations and the Horizontal Axis in Theory and Practice will be Trade Review"This rich and fascinating book deals with various aspects of the Law of the Mother and the growth that results from the Sibling Trauma. The book analyzes the Horizontal Axis as it appears in group analysis, in the Bible, in organizations, in literature and in cinema. Reading this book shows how much society has changed in the days of Foulkes and Antony. It is a refreshing and topical book, boldly researching the weaknesses of hierarchical structures and the strengthening of the structure of social networks." Hanni Biran, Clinical Psychologist, Training Psychoanalyst and Group Analyst; Tel-Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Israeli Institute of Group Analysis "Ashuach and Berman together with their stellar contributors propose an entirely new vector for understanding group and individual process. Embellishing Juliet Mitchell’s Law of the Mother and the centrality of sibling consciousness this book will irrevocably change accepted understandings of patients and clinical process. With examples that range from clinical work to the bible each chapter creates a new and unexpected perspective that collectively foment a deep realignment of clinical thinking and of subjectivity itself. No reader will listen to their patients or view an organization in quite the same way again." Robert Grossmark, Ph.D, ABPP, Teaching Faculty and Clinical Consultant, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy"This important book powers the theme of sibling relationships as fundamental in social relationships. Using the emerging concept of the horizontal axis, it not only offers convincing examples from several perspectives – psychoanalysis, literature, film, organizations - but illuminates the basis of fairness in all human communication." Morris Nitsun, Consultant Psychologist and Group Analyst; Author, The Anti-Group (Routledge)Table of ContentsForwardEarl Hopper Preface.Juliet MitchellIntroduction.Smadar Ashuach and Avi Berman Sibling relations1.1 Group Encounters at the Boundaries of Developmental EpochsRichard M. Billow 1.2 Siblings and groups. Groups of siblings? Maria-Jose Blanco 1.3 Far away from home: A study of sibling relationships in Thomas Ogden’s novels Shoshi Breiner1.4 A new take on Joseph and his brothers: siblings as a potential rescue from parental destructivenessRobi Friedman 1.5 Transferences in Groups and Organizations. Definitions and clinical valueEinar Gudmundsson 1.6 Otherness in groups: The nursing couple and Oedipal relationsR.D. Hinshelwood1.7 "What happens when you cut a worm?" - Group members as PeersJoanna Skowronska1.8 Mature Adult SiblinghoodSuzi Shoshani and Pnina Rappoport 1.9 Kinship and Sibling Dynamics in Organizational ConsultancyGerhard WilkeSibling trauma2.1 Exclusion on the horizontal axisSmadar Ashuach2.2 The horizontal axis from differen perspectives: The Social Significance of SiblingsProphecy Coles2.3 Processes of Scapegoating and Sibling Rivalry in the Context of the Basic Assumption of Incohesion: Aggregation/MassificationEarl Hopper 2.4 Sibling witnessing in analytic group therapyElla Stolper2.5 Healing traumatic scars: New sibling relationships in therapeutic settingsIvan UrlićThe law of the mother3.1 The Law of the Mother and its expression in group relations conferences and organizationsSmadar Ashuach and Simi Talmi3.2 Discrimination: The dark side of the LawAvi Berman 3.3 Snitches-a rupture in "siblings" relationshipsMartin Mahler and Liat Warhaftig-Aran3.4 "Law of the Mother" – its impact on love and hate between siblings and in societyGila Ofer The Horizontal axis4.1 The Tree and the Rhizome and the Horizontal Axes – Reflections on Individual and Group Therapy following Deleuze and Guattari Avi Berman and Limor Avrahami4.2 Traversing the Axes: The intersection of parental and sibling relations in the film The Return, by Andrey ZvyagintsevRina Dudai4.3 Power relations in psychoanalysis as conditioned by capitalist structures: Felix Guttari’s critique and new horizonsEster Rapoport and Gita Kiper

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Jungian Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Jungian Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisJungian Psychoanalysis: A Contemporary Introduction provides a concise overview of analytical psychology as developed by Carl Jung. Mark Winborn offers a succinct introduction to the key elements of Jung's conceptual model and method, as well as an outline of the major transitions, critiques, and debates that have emerged in the evolution of analytical psychology. Similarities and differences between analytical psychology and other psychoanalytic orientations are also identified. This approach allows those who already have familiarity with the Jungian model to expand their understanding, while also providing an accessible map of the field to those with limited exposure to these concepts. Psychoanalysts, therapists, students, and instructors of all levels of experience will benefit from this unique introduction to the Jungian model of psychoanalysis.Trade Review"This book brilliantly outlines and integrates a breadth of understanding of Jung’s depth psychology in concert with contemporary psychoanalytic theory and practice. A much needed and timely opus, this volume is a feast of psychoanalytic knowledge punctuated with moving personal clinical experience and wisdom. A gem for Jungians and all those devoted to psyche." Ronnie Landau, Jungian psychoanalyst, President – CNASJA, past-President – Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts"This volume, in the series Routledge Introductions to Contemporary Psychoanalysis, gives a brilliant introduction to the classical concepts in Jungian psychoanalysis while at the same time integrating important debates in the field of analytical psychology as well as linking to concepts from other psychoanalytic perspectives. I find the book most inspiring, and I highly recommend it for all those looking for an excellent contemporary introduction to Jungian psychoanalysis." Misser Berg, Jungian analyst, Denmark, President of the International Association for Analytical Psychology"A welcome introduction to the richness and significance of Jungian thought. Especially welcome at this time, as Jung's vision of psychic reality delineates important components of world political impasse as well as depths of group and individual psychology. The author opens flexible dynamic currents between therapy schools enhancing what therapeutic communities can offer. Jung has been a generative background presence in the therapy field and Mark Winborn's foreground presentation enhances access, knowledge, and growth of experience." Michael Eigen, PhD, psychoanalyst and author of Contact with the Depths, The Challenge of Being Human, and Faith, The Birth of Experience "The development of dialogue between analytical psychology and contemporary psychoanalysis is essential for a deeper understanding of the multidimensional picture of the unconscious. Mark Winborn's book is an excellent contribution to the development of a poly-theoretical perspective for exploring the complexity of the psyche's manifestations and to the understanding of the specificity of the Jungian approach." Gražina Gudaitė, PhD, Professor at Vilnius University, Lithuania, Vice-President of the International Association for Analytical Psychology, and Editor of Exploring Core Competencies in Jungian Psychoanalysis: Research, Practice and TrainingTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. A Brief History of Analytical Psychology 2. Aims and Attitudes in Jungian Psychoanalysis 3. Structure and Stratification of the Psyche: Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious 4. Jungian Complex Theory 5. Jungian Perspectives on Dreams 6. Other Key Concepts in Jungian Psychoanalysis: Processes, States, and Energy 7. Jungian Perspectives on Defenses and Psychopathology 8. Technique in Jungian Psychoanalysis 9. An Overview of Jungian Psychoanalytic Training 10. Reflections from My Practice as a Jungian Psychoanalyst

    1 in stock

    £24.32

  • Treating Children with Dissociative Disorders

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Treating Children with Dissociative Disorders

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book provides a comprehensive overview of research into dissociation in children and adolescents and challenges conventional ideas about complex behaviours. Offering a new perspective to those who are unfamiliar with dissociation in children, and challenging prevalent assumptions for those who are experienced in the field, the editors encourage the professional to ask questions about the child's internal experiences beyond a diagnosis of the external symptoms. Chapters bring together a range of international experts working in the field, and interweave theories, practice, and challenging and complex case material, as well as identifying mistakes that therapists can avoid while working with children who dissociate.Filled with practical tools and examples, this book is a vital resource for professionals to enrich their practice with children who dissociate. Trade Review"Dissociative disorder in adults – ‘the presence of two or more distinct identity or personality states’ is well known. Despite the fact that the majority of traumatic experiences associated with Dissociative Disorder derive from Adverse Childhood Experiences, there is less familiarity with the condition in childhood and young people. This detailed text aims to redress this failure, by describing the latest clinical and trauma research, integrating attachment, neurobiology, child development, mental health and family systems offering unique perspectives on the phenomena of dissociation, and presentations in children and young people.Through clinical examples of detailed highly skilled therapeutic work with seriously traumatised children and young people, the concept of dissociation is brought to life – a key response to overwhelming toxic and damaging traumatic stress through the life-course. These result in the presence of self-states that either influence the child internally or directly by taking executive control over their bodies. An elemental dramatic relationship is enacted in the inner world of the child or young person, between figures who can guide, protect and cope, or are destructive to the self or other. The detailed therapeutic task is described, understanding the nature and origins of dissociative responses, and the extensive work of creating a coherent narrative of experiences. Separate self -states need to be integrated to establish a coherent, mature, individual, who can put their experiences in memory, to be open to relationships, to be creative and not to repeat and promulgate disastrous toxic ways of being." Arnon Bentovim, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist; Formerly Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital and the Tavistock Clinic, UK "This is a long awaited and much needed book. Brave, theoretically deep, imbued with rich clinical experience, daring to state what we fear to hear, and written by some of the finest and most experienced clinicians in this field, this is a must-read for anyone trying to get to grips with this complex and challenging area of work." Graham Music, PhD; Consultant Psychotherapist, Tavistock Centre, London; Author, Nurturing Natures, The Good Life and Nurturing Children"Offering detailed case histories and guidelines for treatment of children with complex symptoms (including discrete dissociative states of consciousness), this rare book takes us deep into the under-explored realm of multiple types of extreme trauma suffered by young victims, ranging from family violence, emotional or sexual abuse, to cyber-crime exploitation on the darknet. Experienced practitioners sensitively elucidate the ‘undoing’ of seemingly inexplicable disturbances in memory, identity, affect, soma and behaviour as aftereffects of protective dissociation, regarded here as a ‘psychological escape hatch - the only getaway at the time of the trauma’." Professor Joan Raphael-Leff, PhD; Retired Psychoanalyst/Transcultural Psychologist; Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society; Member, IPA; Leader, Academic Faculty for Psychoanalytic Research, Anna Freud Centre"Dissociative disorder in adults – ‘the presence of two or more distinct identity or personality states’ – is well known. Despite the fact that the majority of traumatic experiences associated with Dissociative Disorder derive from Adverse Childhood Experiences, there is less familiarity with the condition in childhood and young people. This detailed text aims to redress this failure, by describing the latest clinical and trauma research, integrating attachment, neurobiology, child development, mental health and family systems offering unique perspectives on the phenomena of dissociation, and presentations in children and young people.Through clinical examples of detailed highly skilled therapeutic work with seriously traumatised children and young people, the concept of dissociation is brought to life – a key response to overwhelming toxic and damaging traumatic stress through the life-course. These result in the presence of self-states that either influence the child internally or directly by taking executive control over their bodies. An elemental dramatic relationship is enacted in the inner world of the child or young person, between figures who can guide, protect and cope, or are destructive to the self or other. The detailed therapeutic task is described, understanding the nature and origins of dissociative responses, and the extensive work of creating a coherent narrative of experiences. Separate self-states need to be integrated to establish a coherent, mature, individual, who can put their experiences in memory, to be open to relationships, to be creative and not to repeat and promulgate disastrous toxic ways of being." Arnon Bentovim, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist; Formerly Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital and the Tavistock Clinic, UK "This is a long awaited and much needed book. Brave, theoretically deep, imbued with rich clinical experience, daring to state what we fear to hear, and written by some of the finest and most experienced clinicians in this field, this is a must-read for anyone trying to get to grips with this complex and challenging area of work." Graham Music, PhD; Consultant Psychotherapist, Tavistock Centre, London; Author, Nurturing Natures, The Good Life and Nurturing Children"Offering detailed case histories and guidelines for treatment of children with complex symptoms (including discrete dissociative states of consciousness), this rare book takes us deep into the under-explored realm of multiple types of extreme trauma suffered by young victims, ranging from family violence, emotional or sexual abuse, to cyber-crime exploitation on the darknet. Experienced practitioners sensitively elucidate the ‘undoing’ of seemingly inexplicable disturbances in memory, identity, affect, soma and behaviour as aftereffects of protective dissociation, regarded here as a ‘psychological escape hatch – the only getaway at the time of the trauma’." Professor Joan Raphael-Leff, PhD; Retired Psychoanalyst/Transcultural Psychologist; Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society; Member, IPA; Leader, Academic Faculty for Psychoanalytic Research, Anna Freud CentreTable of Contents1. Attachment and Dissociation Karl Heinz Brisch 2. Infant Attachment and Dissociative Psychopathology: An Approach Based on The Evolutionary Theory of Multiple Motivational Systems Giovanni Liotti 3. Importance of Attachment in the Presence of a Perceived Threat Mary Sue Moore 4. "You will not believe me if I tell you!" - Prenatal Trauma and Dissociation Renée Potgieter Marks 5. A Case Series of 70 Victims of Exploitation from Child Sexual Abuse imagery Joyanna Silberg 6. Star Theoretical Model: An Integrative Model for Assessing and Treating Childhood Dissociation Frances Waters 7. The Power of Care and Love: The Healing that comes from Teaching Non-offending Parents how to Regulate their Child after Physical and Sexual Abuse Christine Forner 8. Structuring treatment for dissociative children with the Sleeping Dogs method Arianne Struik 9. Genesis of a Dissociative Child: Kayleigh’s story – how ‘I’ became ‘us’ Jo Russell 10. The Inside-Outside Technique: exploring dissociation and fostering self-reflection Sandra Baita 11. Severe and unusual self-harm in DID: Motive, Means and Opportunity Adah Sachs 12. I Didn’t Know Where You Were: In the Play Space of Treatment with a Young Dissociative Boy Eva Teirstein Young 13. A Journey of Discovery Joy Hasler 14. The Price that Society and the Individual Victim Pays Zoe Hawton 15. Covid-19 – The Challenge, the Solution and the Unknown: Treating Dissociative Children Online Renée Potgieter Marks

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd A Critical History of Psychotherapy Volume 1

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd A Critical History of Psychotherapy Volume 2

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis unique book offers a comprehensive overview of the history of psychotherapy. Volume 2 traces the evolution of psychotherapy from the 1950s and the later 20th century through to modern times, considering what the future of psychotherapy will look like. The book shows how the history of psychotherapy has evolved over time through different branches and examines the offshoots as they develop. Each part of the book represents a significant period of time or a decade of the 20th century and provides a detailed overview of all significant movements within the history of psychology. The book also shows connections with history and contextualizes each therapeutic paradigm so it can be better understood it in a broader social context. The book is the first of its kind to show the parallel evolution of different theories in psychotherapy. It will be essential reading for researchers and students in the fields of clinical psychology, psychotherapy, psyc

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis compelling and comprehensive volume is an anthology of current thinking by many of gestalt therapyâs leading theoreticians, clinicians, and researchers. Including many well-known voices in the field and introducing several new ones to the current gestalt therapy literature, the book presents a broad-ranging compendium of essays, scientific articles, clinical applications, and integrative approaches that represent the richness and vibrancy of the field. Each contributor brings intellectual rigor, honest personal reflection, and humanism to their area of inquiry. This ethosâthe spirit of relational gestalt therapyâinfuses the whole book, bringing a sense of coherence to its seventeen chapters. Following an introduction written by Mark Winitsky, PhD, as an entry point into the field for students and psychotherapists from other schools of thought, the book is organized into three sections: Theory, Clinical Applications, and Integrative Approaches. Readers will encounter new ways of thinking about psychotherapy, new skills they can bring to their work, and new ways of integrating gestalt therapy with other approaches. The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy is essential reading for Gestalt therapists as well as other mental health professionals with an interest in Gestalt approaches.Trade Review'The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy is a step in the direction of humanizing psychotherapy, making it a compelling opportunity for people to discover the nuances of their existence and fly away into the realm of everyday stimulations. When we say, "the future is now" we say we are living in a universe of interactive agents who, in union, honor a lifetime. The authors of this book flesh out this wonder of earthly relationships of which the psychotherapy relationship is a prime inspiration.' - Erving Polster, PhD, International Gestalt Therapy Trainer and Founder of the Gestalt Training Center-San Diego'All schools of thought need to recognize how they’ve developed over time. The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy explores the shift to a more "field-relational" approach – less individualistic, riskier, and more humanly revealing. Peter Cole has assembled a range of talented therapists with different ways of working. Some are "old hands" in articulating this profound shift in values, others discover it with new excitement. Together they reveal the range, integrity, and vitality of Gestalt therapy today.' - Malcolm Parlett, PhD, Former editor of the British Gestalt Journal, international trainer and coach'This engaging and intriguing book combines stories of relational gestalt therapy with its psychoanalytic origins and influences, making both more available to practitioners of both traditions. Many of the best writers in contemporary gestalt therapy appear here, and the reader will be well rewarded with insight and enjoyment.' - Donna Orange, PhD, Faculty and training and supervising analyst, Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity, New York'Peter Cole’s edited book offers a major contribution to the understanding and practice of a relational approach in our present challenged world. This book "unpacks" the process of focusing of "being somebody… rooted somewhere" through an interactive and courageously mutual approach. What also touched me was the humility and inclusiveness of the authors as they describe theory and practice. It is as if they are practicing in the text the very mutuality of this approach; I felt talked with as I read each chapter. The multiple authors offer us perspectives both theoretically and in practice of the living embodied mutuality that is relational Gestalt. It is a description of what is both precious and not precious, uniquely human and yet fully embedded in the contextual situation. I highly recommend this entire volume with its diversity of topics and authors’ perspectives on the experience of an engaged process of connection and change' - Michael Clemmens, PhD, Author of Getting Beyond Sobriety: Clinical Approaches to Long-Term Recovery, Editor of Embodied Relational Gestalt: Theories and ApplicationsTable of ContentsForeword Preface Introduction: The Emergence of the Relational Perspective in Gestalt Therapy Section One: An Relational Gestalt Therapy Theory 1. Aesthetic Relational Knowledge and the Dance of Reciprocity in the Therapeutic Field: Post Pandemic Gestalt Therapy in Practice 2. Engaged Surrender 3. Field Theory in Psychopathology and Clinical Practice 4. Gestalt Therapy Theory in an Age of Turmoil 5. To Hold the Hands that Hold our Hands: Responsivity of Contacting 6. The Gifts and Risks in Relational Empathy: An Historical Perspective 7. Living in a World of Meaning Section Two: Applications of the Relational Gestalt Perspective 8. A Classical Beginning and a Relational Turn: A Gestalt Therapy Case Study 9. When the World Changes in an Instant: Exploring the "Cracks in the Continuity of Experience" 10. What My Client Taught Me About Dialogic Presence: A Case Study of Client and Therapist in Relational Gestalt Therapy 11. On Regret: A Relational Gestalt Therapy Perspective 12. The Encounter Process 13. Shame and Relational Gestalt Group Therapy: Restoring the Interpersonal Bridge Section Three: Integrative Relational Approaches 14. Embodies Relational Presence in Buddhist Psychology Informed Gestalt Therapy 15. The Here and Now of Sandtray Therapy: Sandtray Therapy Meets Gestalt Therapy 16. The Mountain and the River: Stillness and Flow and the Art of Therapy

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Yoga and Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Yoga and Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book discusses the relevance of tracing back the course of individual development noted in psychoanalysis (regression) and in Patañjali's Yoga (prati-prasava).Although Freud found the diagnostic benefits in tracing the history of the patients' early childhood experiences, he also recognized the influences of the history of civilization and evolution. He also viewed the regression to earlier history in a negative light. Ernst Kris, on the other hand, saw some benefits of regression. The nature and extent of the influence of Jewish mysticism on Freud is highly controversial, and scholars have pointed out the possible influence of Kabalarian mysticism, which held that enlightenment follows from going all the way back to the origin of human beings at the beginning of the cosmos. This view has an interesting parallel in Patañjali's Yoga. This volume highlights these significant parallels in the Indian and the Western systems of knowledge in the study of human psycTrade Review“It is a fascinating work replete with scholarship and humanity. It offers a powerful methodology to achieve the highest reaches of human nature. The book delineates an outstanding fact that to grow is to go back(!), back to the original state of being and beyond from where human life began. Evolution to the highest state of being, to a state of eternal joy, is through a process of involution. The book deals elaborately with Freudian methodology of Regression in Psychoanalytical Therapy which releases the dormant and ailing human potential. Further, it takes up even more elaborately the discussion on Patanjali's Yoga System that takes the human through a process of involution. Contrasting Involution with Regression the author goes to show yogic involution takes us beyond the psychoanalytic regression to attain the height of being that is full of Truth, Pure Consciousness and Joy. The Author has done a tremendous job in delienating and contrasting both Regression and Involution with great scholarship. The book is a great addition to the existing global knowledge on human growth and welfare.” - M S Thimmappa, Former Professor of Psychology, Bangalore University; Former Vice Chancellor, Registrar and Professor of Psychology, Bangalore University “In this invaluable book, Professor Paranjpe sets Freud’s and Patañjali’s Yoga systems side-by-side, focusing especially on psychological regression, a key concept in each system. Alongside well-known differences, he uncovers fascinating parallels, perhaps some traceable or inspired by Freud’s family heritage of Hassidic Judaism. Paranjpe’s readable, nuanced, and well-balanced treatment is a boon to attempts to integrate eastern and western psychological insights, as well as to comparative scholarship. The volume is highly recommended for seasoned scholars and teachers as well as for students seeking insight about the relation between these two influential views of human psychology.” - Doug Oman, University of California, BerkeleyAs a Kabbalistic scholar, I found profound insights into the link between Freud, Pantanjali, Yoga psychology, and ontological frameworks in Kabbalah.“Anand Paranjpe weaves together significant influences from Kabbalah, Eastern/Western psychology, the works of Patanjali and others, and delivers a sound thesis on Freud's contributions to modern psychology.Especially interesting, are discovering the roots of Freud's inspiration from the Hasadic community, and the similarities from Kabbalah's Zoharic teachings based on the Tree of Life (Etz Chiim).Highly recommend! “ - Bob Waxman Ph.D, President - Kabbalah Education Network, USA“I found this a compelling work.It presents and explores the process of 'regression' as manifested in India's traditions of deep psychology. It contrasts this process with its parallel in western psychology. Through this 'regression' lens the reader reviews the history of both eastern and western discoveries in psychology. I found particularly compelling the author's exposition of regression in yoga psychology as the path that the yogi takes in deconstructing one's personal self, and thus reality itself” - Brian Ruppenthal, Resident Sādhak Ramagiri Ashram, Tomales, California"Yoga Psychology and Psychoanalysis have their own specific contexts and purposes beyond their superficial similarities and applications in enhancing mental health and wellbeing. Professor Paranjpe has just picked one pair of concepts – prati prasava and regression to provide a comparative perspective of the two systems The author is already known to academicians internationally for his extensive knowledge and deep scholarship in both Western and Indian philosophical systems from his two earlier works. Once again, he has brought his rich intellectual resources and has demonstrated how we can understand and bridge the Indian and modern psychological thought. This is a work of great relevance and significance in this juncture because Yoga has become a part of popular discourse. Researchers in many fields like Clinical Psychology, Past Life Regression therapy, Indigenous Psychology, Indian psychology, Transpersonal Psychology, Spiritual psychology, and so forth can avoid many pitfalls by reading this work." - Kiran Kumar K. Salagame, Ph.D., Vice-President, International Transpersonal Association, USA; Fellow, Indian Association of Clinical Psychologists; Former Professor of Psychology, University of Mysore, India"Yoga and Psychoanalysis by Anand C. Paranjpe is a refreshing and contemporary contribution to the field of mind studies. A keen student of self and identity Paranjpe has gone into the complex and sophisticated traditions of psychoanalysis, Yoga and mystic traditions. It will be of great help to students and scholars interested in mind, consciousness, yoga and psychoanalysis." - Girishwar Misra, Ph.D., Ex Vice Chancellor, Mahatma Gandhi Antarrashtriya; Hindi Vishwavidyalaya, Wardha, and Former Professor and Head, Department of Psychology, University of Delhi, Delhi, India"This book by Dr Anand Paranjpe is a critical addition to the knowledge base in yoga. Anand ji brings a depth of knowledge and research to the explication of the convergences and divergences between pratiprasava and regression that lie at the heart of inner transformation. This understanding is essential for researchers and practitioners who are engaged with the field of Yoga Psychology." - Raghu Ananthanarayanan, Co-founder, Ritambhara Ashram"Psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health professionals generally tend to believe that mind sciences originated in the western hemisphere with the likes of William James and Sigmund Freud leading the development of core conceptual frameworks. Contemporary cross-cultural psychologists assume the universality of the foundational ideas in psychology and explore how cultures across the globe influence them and the human behavior. In stark contrast, Professor Paranjpe describes one of the central tenets in the Indic knowledge system (prati-prasava as described in Maharshi Patanjali’s Yogasutras) and compares it with the phenomenon of regression as described by Sigmund Freud. This juxtaposition and comparative analysis of prati-prasava and regression will impress upon the readers the need to understand and study different epistemological traditions contributing to the field of mind sciences." - Rahul Shidhaye, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences, Loni, India, and DBT-Wellcome Trust, India Alliance Intermediate Fellow in Clinical and Public Health Research"With his deep knowledge of both Yoga and modern psychologies, there is no better guide than Anand Paranjpe to the commonalities and differences in the two systems. This book is a welcome and scholarly addition to the project of creating a universal psychology that is not limited by its Western origins." - Sudhir Kakar, Psychoanalyst, AuthorTable of ContentsIntroduction, 1. The concept of regression in psychoanalysis, 2. Conceptual foundations of Yoga, 3. The concept of prati-prasava: a Yogic view of regression, 4. Patañjali’s view of prati-prasava, continued, 5. Kriyā Yoga, 6. Looking at Freud’s ideas within his cultural context and in an intercultural context, 7. Converging trends of thought within and across cultural traditions, 8. Convergence, complementarity, and conclusion

    1 in stock

    £24.32

  • The Psychological Impact of Boarding School

    Taylor & Francis The Psychological Impact of Boarding School

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Psychological Impact of Boarding School is a collection of research-based essays answering a range of questions about boarding school and its long-term impact.Through a combination of original in-depth first-person narratives as well as larger scale surveys, this book aims to fill gaps in current boarding school research and present new findings. Topics addressed include gender differences, eating behaviours, loneliness, mental health and relationships, the differences between younger and older boarders, and ex-boarder experiences of therapy. The research results highlight a key role in the age that children start boarding, the way that long-term psychological influences of friendships formed at school, and the larger role that parent and family relationships play in the psychological lives of boarders. Through these findings, the book ultimately challenges the current understanding of 'boarding school syndrome', proposing a move beyond the term and its concept.<Trade Review‘A scholarly and nuanced study on the long-term psychological impacts of British boarding schools: while some people thrive in boarding schools, for too many others the adverse psychological impacts last a lifetime.’Benedict Rattigan, author and ex-boarder at Eton'Boarding is often misunderstood and misrepresented, but this invaluable book provides a wide, and evidence-informed, analysis of the sector. Importantly, the authors allow the voices of the former pupils themselves to speak and in doing so reveal a nuanced and complex series of personal narratives. This is a book that should be read not only by those who work in boarding schools, but by anyone involved in education and child psychology.'David James, co-editor of The State of IndependenceTable of Contents1. British boarding schools on trial: Making the case for new evidence 2. British boarding schools, mental health and resilience: Survey research 3. The impact of boarding school on adult relationships: Men’s accounts 4. It’s not all down to boarding: Early family and peer relationships among boarders 5. The impact of boarding school on adult eating behaviour 6. How does boarding school influence feelings of loneliness? 7: The shadow side of boarding schools: Childhood sexual abuse and its aftermath 8. Having psychotherapy to help with boarding school experiences: The role of denial, shame and privilege 9. Escape, autonomy, friendship and resilience: Positive experiences of British boarding school 10. British boarding schools on trial: Making the case for ‘boarding family syndrome’

    1 in stock

    £24.99

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