Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology Books
Taylor & Francis Ltd Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein
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
£37.04
Taylor & Francis Ltd Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma
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
£39.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd AttachmentInformed Grief Therapy
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
£27.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd When the Body Speaks
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
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Surviving Object
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)
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychoanalysis Under Occupation
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
£37.04
Taylor & Francis Sibling Relations and the Horizontal Axis in
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
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Jungian Psychoanalysis
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
£24.32
Taylor & Francis Ltd Treating Children with Dissociative Disorders
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
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd A Critical History of Psychotherapy Volume 1
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£37.04
Taylor & Francis Ltd A Critical History of Psychotherapy Volume 2
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
£37.04
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Relational Heart of Gestalt Therapy
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
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Yoga and Psychoanalysis
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
£24.32
Taylor & Francis The Psychological Impact of Boarding School
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’
£24.99
Taylor & Francis Experiencing Endings and Beginnings
Book SynopsisExperiencing Endings and Beginnings highlights the emotional turmoil which, to a greater or lesser extent, accompanies the changes we experience throughout life. It considers the nature of the anxieties aroused by a new situation, changes in our circumstances, beginnings and endings of relationships, gains and losses, and the ending of a previous state throughout the lifespan.Endings and beginnings are shown to be closely related, for every new situation entered into, more often than not, involves having to let go of some of the advantages of the previous one as well as losing what is familiar and facing fear of the unknown. Isca Wittenberg shows how all these aspects of change evoke primitive anxieties, stemming from our earliest experiences of coming into this world. The book considers life changes including birth and weaning, going to nursery and school, beginning work, marriage, parenthood, and retirement, with reference to clinical examples. This revised editionTrade Review"As she approaches the age of 100, it is truly remarkable that Isca Wittenberg has been able to continue her research into life’s ‘endings and beginnings’ with the same enthusiasm, vigour and intellect she showed in former years.She now brings her insight into extreme old age: the challenges and losses it presents and the accommodations which need to be arrived at. Far from being a depressing chapter on the frailties accompanying longevity, it gives a life-enhancing insight into how to be positive and still appreciate that which remains: nature, beauty, the joy of family.She has lost none of her ability to arouse the readers’ emotional involvement in the case studies she describes. On the contrary, her comments are more perceptive than ever. Her particular gift is her ability to make her writing accessible to all: that is, to give complex psychoanalytical insights in language which the layman can also understand." - Lilian Levy, MBEPraise for the first edition:"This is a wonderfully conceived book – on beginnings and endings – that in the author’s hands becomes a portal to review the connecting threads throughout our lives. All of us who worked with or knew Isca Wittenberg at the Tavistock were privileged to be in the presence of a very rare sensibility, characterized by a wis generosity of mind, the spirit of which is immanent throughout this deeply moving book. Now others will be in her company and shall enjoy the privilege of her companionship." – Christopher Bollas, author, The Shadow of the Object, China on the Mind and The Freudian Moment"Isca Wittenberg has become very well known for her original approach to thinking about beginnings and endings in life and as they appear and challenge us in clinical and teaching contexts. This book is the fruit of her long engagement with this topic, and it is a most engaging overview of the major transitions in the human life cycle. It is written with freshness and simplicity and offers the reader an encounter with a writer who draws on her personal and professional experience with freedom and zest. A book about everyday life by a far-from-everyday person, which I think will stimulate and charm many, because it imparts wisdom so lightly." - Margaret Rustin, Child and Adult Psychotherapist"Reading this book feels like being taken by the hand of a warm-hearted and experienced author going through your own life’s transitions: from life inside the mother to life outside, from separateness to finding new ways of connecting, from home and nursery to school and entering the world of work, from living alone to getting married, and from the experience of bereavement and retirement to the last step: growing old and facing death. The author convincingly includes psychoanalytic theory, vividly described clinical cases and reflections of her own life, while never excluding the spiritual dimension. In all these phases of life she keeps the infant aspects of the grown-ups alive. The book stimulates a deep emotional response on the reader. Isca Wittenberg writes with such liveliness that you think she is a young writer full of life and understanding." – Professor Gertraud Diem-Wille, training analyst for children, adolescents and adults of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Society and the International Psychoanalytical Association "A gem of a book. In her late eighties Isca Wittenberg writes as clearly as ever, distilling a lifetime's experience into a work of genuine wisdom. This book displays a deep psychoanalytic understanding of the lifecourse married with a searching and compassionate mind, and has the added bonus of fascinating autobiographical fragments from one of the luminaries of child psychotherapy." - Graham Music, Consultant Child Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust"As she approaches the age of 100, it is truly remarkable that Isca Wittenberg has been able to continue her research into life’s ‘endings and beginnings’ with the same enthusiasm, vigour and intellect she showed in former years.She now brings her insight into extreme old age: the challenges and losses it presents and the accommodations which need to be arrived at. Far from being a depressing chapter on the frailties accompanying longevity, it gives a life-enhancing insight into how to be positive and still appreciate that which remains: nature, beauty, the joy of family.She has lost none of her ability to arouse the readers’ emotional involvement in the case studies she describes. On the contrary, her comments are more perceptive than ever. Her particular gift is her ability to make her writing accessible to all: that is, to give complex psychoanalytical insights in language which the layman can also understand." - Lilian Levy, MBEPraise for the first edition:"This is a wonderfully conceived book – on beginnings and endings – that in the author’s hands becomes a portal to review the connecting threads throughout our lives. All of us who worked with or knew Isca Wittenberg at the Tavistock were privileged to be in the presence of a very rare sensibility, characterized by a wise generosity of mind, the spirit of which is immanent throughout this deeply moving book. Now others will be in her company and shall enjoy the privilege of her companionship." – Christopher Bollas, author, The Shadow of the Object, China on the Mind and The Freudian Moment"Isca Wittenberg has become very well known for her original approach to thinking about beginnings and endings in life and as they appear and challenge us in clinical and teaching contexts. This book is the fruit of her long engagement with this topic, and it is a most engaging overview of the major transitions in the human life cycle. It is written with freshness and simplicity and offers the reader an encounter with a writer who draws on her personal and professional experience with freedom and zest. A book about everyday life by a far-from-everyday person, which I think will stimulate and charm many, because it imparts wisdom so lightly." - Margaret Rustin, Child and Adult Psychotherapist"Reading this book feels like being taken by the hand of a warm-hearted and experienced author going through your own life’s transitions: from life inside the mother to life outside, from separateness to finding new ways of connecting, from home and nursery to school and entering the world of work, from living alone to getting married, and from the experience of bereavement and retirement to the last step: growing old and facing death. The author convincingly includes psychoanalytic theory, vividly described clinical cases and reflections of her own life, while never excluding the spiritual dimension. In all these phases of life she keeps the infant aspects of the grown-ups alive. The book stimulates a deep emotional response on the reader. Isca Wittenberg writes with such liveliness that you think she is a young writer full of life and understanding." – Professor Gertraud Diem-Wille, training analyst for children, adolescents and adults of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Society and the International Psychoanalytical Association "A gem of a book. In her late eighties Isca Wittenberg writes as clearly as ever, distilling a lifetime's experience into a work of genuine wisdom. This book displays a deep psychoanalytic understanding of the lifecourse married with a searching and compassionate mind, and has the added bonus of fascinating autobiographical fragments from one of the luminaries of child psychotherapy." - Graham Music, Consultant Child Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS TrustTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsAbout the AuthorPreface to the first editionAuthor’s NoteCHAPTER ONELearning from experience of endings and beginnings CHAPTER TWOFrom life inside mother to life outside CHAPTER THREESeparateness and new connections CHAPTER FOURWeaning CHAPTER FIVEBecoming a child in the family CHAPTER SIXGoing to nursery CHAPTER SEVENBeginnings and endings in schoolCHAPTER EIGHTTertiary education and entering the world of work CHAPTER NINEGetting married CHAPTER TENBecoming a parent CHAPTER ELEVENBereavement CHAPTER TWELVERetirement CHAPTER THIRTEENGrowing old and facing death CHAPTER FOURTEENGrowing ever older – facing the end of lifeReferences Bibliography Index
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Independent Women in British Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisIndependent Women in British Psychoanalysis celebrates the lives and work of female psychoanalysts whose significant contributions to the Independent Tradition have hitherto been overshadowed by their male counterparts. The contributors in this volume look at seven female psychoanalysts who broke new ground with their contributions to theory and practice: Ella Freemen Sharpe, Marjorie Brierley, Paula Heimann, Marion Milner, Enid Balint, Nina Coltart and Pearl King. The chapters tell the individual stories of these psychoanalysts alongside their theories, showing how their personal lives embody and illustrate the essential universal developmental task of becoming oneself and finding one's own voice. The themes across the chapters include infant and child development with (m)other, trauma, constructive use of aggression, creativity, a theory of clinical technique, and independence of mind in a social world. This book will be of interest and relevance to pTrade Review"This is a deeply inspiring book on the writings of the pioneer women psychoanalysts who were to become part of the Independent Tradition in the British Psychoanalytical Society. While emphasizing the centrality of the interpretation of the transference and countertransference in the analytic encounter, the original work of these women psychoanalysts highlighted the role of emotions, of playfulness and creativity, of receptivity and tolerance, as well as the experience of illusion and disillusionment in the unique encounter between analysts and their patients. The chapters are beautifully written and a joy to read." Rosine Perelberg, British Psychoanalytical Society. "This volume brings together papers that focus on a group of British women analysts who, following the Controversial Discussions, were aligned with the Independent group within the British Psychoanalytical Society. The importance of their clinical and theoretical contributions is widely acknowledged. They insisted on claiming the right to their own voices, and their works often embody a distinctive vocabularies and styles of writing. For many readers they may provide creative openings for further psychoanalytic thought." Nellie L. Thompson, IPA Committee on the History of Psychoanalysis. "The focus of this remarkable book is an extraordinary series of women psychoanalysts whose lives and work span the 20th century. Individually they are fascinating; together, they show historically how women analysts — some still not well known — have been at the heart of Independent psychoanalysis in Britain. Elizabeth Wolf and Barbie Antonis set this story in the context of their own experience, giving the book a personal feel as well. This is a splendid achievement, full of both information and feeling."Michael Parsons, British Psychoanalytical Society.Table of ContentsPart I Setting the SceneIntroduction: On Becoming 1. The Core Question: ‘What is mind?’ 2. Bloomsbury and the early evolution of British psychoanalysis Part II Independent Women 3. Ella Sharpe: Being Independent, following Freud 4. The Exceptional contributions of Marjory Brierley: affects, mediation and countertransference 5. Paula Heimann: Becoming Independent 6. Marion Milner: The Pliable Self 7. Doing things differently: Pearl King's independent contribution 8. Nina Coltart's Colourful ways of Listening9. Enid Balint’s imaginative perception: the creation of mutuality in the consulting room
£34.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Marion Milner Method
Book SynopsisThis book traces the development of British psychoanalyst Marion Milner's (190098) autobiographical acts throughout her lifetime, proposing that Milner is a thinker to whom we can turn to explore the therapeutic potentialities of autobiographical and creative self-expression.Milner's experimentation with aesthetic, self-expressive techniques are a means to therapeutic ends, forming what Emilia Halton-Hernandez calls her autobiographical cure. This book considers whether Milner's work champions this site for therapeutic work over that of the relationship between patient and analyst in the psychoanalytic setting. This book brings to light a theory and practice which is latent and sometimes hidden, but which is central to understanding what drives Milner's autobiographical work. It is by doing this work of elucidation and organisation that Halton-Hernandez finds Milner to be a thinker with a unique take on psychoanalysis, object relations theory, creativity, and autobiography, wTrade Review"Milner has historically been constructed as a subsidiary figure to D.W.Winnicott within the British Independent Group. She is however a very important figure within early- to mid-twentieth century psychoanalysis. This book provides a concerted, careful and theoretically-engaged analysis of Milner. It is an original work that stands to make a substantial contribution to the field of psychoanalytic studies, literary studies, and twentieth-century cultural history."Jo Winning, Professor, Birkbeck, University of London, UKTable of ContentsIntroduction Part 1: The Milner Method 1. A Life of One's Own and the birth of a diary keeping method to rival psychoanalysis 2. On Not Being Able to Paint and drawing and painting for psychoanalysis 3. Bothered by Alligators and compensating for the failures of a "couch analysis" Part 2: The Milner Tradition 4. Tracing Milner's influence in the twentieth century 5. Milner in the comic frame: Lynda Barry and Alison Bechdel's autobiographical cures 6. Conclusion: In search of legibility?
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Marquis de Puységur Artificial Somnambulism
Book SynopsisThe Marquis de Puységur, Artificial Somnambulism, and the Discovery of the Unconscious Mind presents the first full English translation of a foundational text in the history of psychodynamic thinking, and provides a contextual explanation of its contemporary significance.Written by Puységur in 1784, Memoirs to Serve the History and Establishment of Animal Magnetism describes the author's exploration and discovery of artificial somnambulism, a state that reveals insights into the subconscious mind. Building on the healing techniques of Franz Anton Mesmer, Puységur kept detailed notes on his practice with patients, including their names, symptoms, and follow-up information, providing a unique insight into his process. The full text of this original publication is presented here, complemented by a historical introduction and editor's notes.The Marquis de Puységur, Artificial Somnambulism, and the Discovery of the Unconscious Mind will be of great in
£34.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd What Nazism Did to Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisWhat Nazism Did to Psychoanalysis explores the impact Nazism had on the evolution of psychoanalysis and tackles the enigma of the transformation of individual hate into mass psychosis and of the autocratic creation of a neo-reality. Addressing the effects of the Holocaust on the psychoanalytic world, this book does not focus on the suffering of the survivors but the analysis of the concrete mechanisms of destruction that affected language and thought, their impact on the practice of psychoanalysis and the defences that psychoanalysts tried to find against the linguistic, legal and symbolic chaos that struck the foundations of reality. Laurence Kahn discusses the struggle against the appropriation, by the Nazi language, of key terms such as demonic nature, drives, ideals and, above all, the Selbsterhaltungstrieb (the self-preservation drive), which became, with Hitler, the axis of the living space policy, the Lebensraum. Covering key topics suTable of ContentsSeries Editor's foreword by Gabriela Legorreta. 1. Introduction: old words, new meanings 2. The law beyond the law 3. The mMoses or brother Hitler 4. The Freudian heresy 5. The parasite and identity: the Gestalt 6. Psychoanalysis and Weltanschauung in 1930 7. Purifying psychoanalysis scientifically 8. Hartmann: logos against bios 9. Extreme trauma: which unconscious? 10. Mother, child and empathy 11. The liquidation of tragedy 12. The temptation of kitsch 13. What about hatred? 14. Conclusion: the foundations of words
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Affect Power and Institutions
Book SynopsisThis volume advances a comprehensive transdisciplinary approach to the affective lives of institutions theoretical, conceptual, empirical, and critical. With this approach, the volume foregrounds the role of affect in sustaining as well as transforming institutional arrangements that are deeply problematic.As part of its analysis, this book develops a novel understanding of institutional affect. It explores how institutions produce, frame, and condition affective dynamics and emotional repertoires, in ways that engender conformance or resistance to institutional requirements. This collection of works will be important for scholars and students of interdisciplinary affect and emotion studies from a wide range of disciplines, including social sciences, cultural studies, social and cultural anthropology, organizational and institution studies, media studies, social philosophy, aesthetics, and critical theory.Table of Contents1. General Introduction: The Many Lives of InstitutionsPART 1: Politics, Publics, Corporate Power2. Fabricated Feelings: Institutions, Organizations, and Emotion Repertoires3. Affective Citizenship: Differential Regimes of Belonging in Plural Societies4. Nationalism, affective recruitment and authoritarianism in post-coup Turkey5. Under Pressure: Journalism as an Affective InstitutionPART 2: Bodies, Materiality, Infrastructure6. Digital Infrastructuring as Institutional Affect(ing) in German Migration Management7. Botanical discipline: The senses and more-than-human affect8. Conflicting Imaginaries in the International AcademyPART 3: Forms, Genres, Aesthetics9. Genres as Imaginary Institutions10. Rewriting Education: Genre and Affects of Social Mobility in Contemporary German Literature11. Right Reading – Affective Institutionalisations and the Politics of Literature in the German New Right12. Glitching as Institutional CritiquePART 4: Diversity, Care, Critique13. Affective Diversity, or: Conceptualizing Institutional Change in Postmigrant Societies14. Working through Affects: Transforming and Challenging Psychosocial Care for Vietnamese Migrants15. Targeted Alienation: Reimagining the Labour of AbolitionAfterword
£34.19
Taylor & Francis Ltd Harry Stack Sullivan
Book SynopsisThis book covers the works and life of Harry Stack Sullivan (18921949), who has been described as the most original figure in American psychiatry.Challenging Freud's psychosexual theory, Sullivan founded the interpersonal theory of psychiatry, which emphasizes the role of interpersonal relations, society, and culture as the primary determinants of personality development and psychopathology. This concise and coherent account of Sullivan's work and life invites the modern audience to rediscover the provocative, ground-breaking ideas embodied in Sullivan's interpersonal theory and psychotherapy that continue to advance. This revised second edition is updated to reflect new research and ideas - such as an expanded section on Sullivan's groundbreaking ideas about homosexuality and new sections on his concept of anxiety in infancy and on psychological trauma and how interpersonal theory impacts attachment theory, human sexuality, psychopathology, personality assessment, psychotherTrade Review"This book is the authoritative source on one of the most influential and underappreciated thinkers in mental health in the 20th century, written by a world-class expert who trained in Sullivan's milieu and applied interpersonal principles for his entire illustrious career. As in the first edition, Evans provides a thorough treatment of Sullivan's thinking about development, psychopathology, assessment, psychotherapy, and broader social problems. In this new edition, he elaborates significantly on how Sullivan's approach to clinical and social issues can be understood through a contemporary lens and inform current practice. A must read for anyone who wants to understand this central player in the story of medicine and social science and situate their clinical work in the historically rich and eminently humane context offered by interpersonal theory."Christopher Hopwood, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Zurich"Evans' book on Harry Stack Sullivan is the best summary of Sullivan's work on the market today. It clearly describes all his basic concepts and their clinical implications. And this second edition contains clinical material illustrating an interpersonal approach to trauma work. Patients re-enact their traumas in therapy in order to tell the history of their interpersonal suffering. And if the therapist can listen with a relational ear, he can provide a climate of safety where the unsayable in the past can be said in the present. If for no other reason, the interpersonal understanding of anxiety and the strategies of self-other protection alone will reward the reader with new vistas of understanding."Jon Frederickson, MSW, Faculty, Washington School of Psychiatry; Author, Co-Creating Change and Co-Creating Safety"In this engaging new edition of his 1996 book, Barton Evans shows himself to be the pre-eminent authority on all things Sullivanian. Readers will be intrigued as Evans connects Sullivan’s life story to his interpersonal theory and then traces the influence of Sullivan’s concepts on modern psychotherapy, psychological assessment, social psychology, and psychiatry. Sullivan remains an underappreciated genius, and Evans helps us recognize his immense and far-reaching impact. Readers interested in Collaborative/Therapeutic Assessment (C/TA) will especially appreciate Evans’ discussion of current interpersonal models of psychological assessment."Stephen E. Finn, Ph.D., President, Therapeutic Assessment Institute; Clinical Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin"Dr. Evans succeeds in this masterful effort to "re-collect" the silent, forgotten, and sometimes maligned contributions of the genius Harry Stack Sullivan. Evans’ scholarly research and skillful explanation of Sullivan’s largely unacknowledged imprint on contemporary developments in psychoanalysis, theories of anxiety and psychopathology, and the vicissitudes of child development reminds us of how his ideas never really disappeared. In this gem of a book, Evans makes clear that at the heart of Sullivan’s theories was the enduring strength of interpersonal connections, which can "heal the developmental warps" that unfortunately occur in some. In Evans’ beautiful words, it is the "love between humans which ultimately liberates us." These words have never been more important than they are now." James H. Kleiger, Psy.D., ABPP, ABAP, Independent Practice Bethesda, MD; Past President, Baltimore-Washington Psychoanalytic InstituteTable of ContentsSECTION I Historical perspectives 1. Introduction 2. Harry Stack Sullivan, the Man SECTION II The interpersonal theory of psychiatry 3. Basic Concepts 4. Infancy: The Beginning of Interpersonal Living 5. Developmental Epochs of Childhood and the Juvenile Era: The Expansion of the Interpersonal World 6. Developmental Epochs of Adolescence: The Long Transition to Adulthood SECTION III Applications 7. The Interpersonal Theory of Mental Disorder 8. The Psychiatric Interview and Modern Interpersonal Personality Assessment 9. Interpersonal Psychotherapy 10. Social Psychiatry and the Problems of Society
£26.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Fifth Principle Trilogy Three Volume Set
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£66.55
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Unconscious Body Image
Book SynopsisThe Unconscious Body Image espouses a completely original view of the links between physical and psychic development, providing fresh insight into our understanding of psychosomatic symptoms and child development. Trade Review'This is a very welcome, long-overdue translation of the work of one of the foremost French psychoanalysts of the twentieth century, hitherto unavailable for the English reading public. Sham Bailly has done a masterful job of translating the often enigmatic French text. She renders understandable Dolto’s fascinating account of the deepest layers of subjectivity as it emerges in the developmental process. Bailly ‘s introduction enables the reader, familiar with British psychoanalysis, to be open to Dolto’s propositions about how "interpersonal dynamics structure the human mind and in turn how that governs the functioning of the body", without collapsing one into the other.'Angela Joyce, Adult and Child Psychoanalyst and Chair of the Winnicott Trust, London'As a child analyst interested in the work of Jacques Lacan and thus also of the French psychoanalysts who worked with him, I have appreciated the work of Dolto and have long regretted that more of it has not been available to Anglo-American readers. This fine translation is a major contribution toward rectifying that lack in the field of child psychoanalysis… The excellent quality of the translation that not only conveys the text clearly and accurately but also manages to capture the distinctive voice and style of Dolto’s writing is also to be commended.'David Lichtenstein, PhD, Faculty Member, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; Founding Editor of DIVISION/ReviewTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. The unconscious body image 2. The body images and their destiny: the castrations 3. Pathology of body images and analytic practice
£34.99
Taylor & Francis Antonino Ferro
Book SynopsisThis book provides a clear, thorough, and accessible introduction to the work of Antonino Ferro and draws on the clinical vignettes that punctuate his writings to show how Ferro has built on Bionâs revolutionary achievements to develop a distinctive, game-changing version of field theory in psychoanalysis.The book clarifies the phenomenological insight that the analyst and the patient together generate an ever-evolving, intersubjective field. Rather than the supposed psychology of the individual, it is this populous and multidimensional field, a co-created âin-betweenâ rich in characters and stories, that is to be explored and elaborated. The primary points of access to this new âmultiverseâ are dream, reverie, metaphor, and imagination. A radical Negative Capability is called for, not least to help dissolve co-constructed âbastionsâ obstructing the fieldâs expansion. The book sketches out the Italian and international context in which Ferro developed his thinking and address
£24.32
Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychopathology of the Situation in Gestalt
Book SynopsisThis collection explores the impacts and new ways of treatment of difficult clinical situations, in the uncertainty of a world in crisis, through a phenomenological and aesthetic field-oriented lens.Each author offers a Gestalt-centered perspective on clinical issues a situational window, which includes the therapist and avails itself of tools configured to modify the entire experiential field. Through clinical case studies and theoretical reflections, the book examines the experience of children, difficult childhood situations (such as separations, abuse, neurodevelopmental disorders, adolescent social closure), the experience of dependency, couples and family therapy, the condition of the elderly and the end of life, interventions for degenerative diseases, and the trauma of loss and mourning, all of which are considered according to two cardinal points: first, the description of the relational ground experiences of patients, and second, the aesthetic relational knowing, aTrade Review"Psychopathology of the Situation in Gestalt Therapy presents a tour de force of innovative thinking in the field of Gestalt therapy. Editor Margherita Spagnuolo Lobb and Pietro Cavaleri have assembled a gifted group of clinicians, theoreticians and researchers who tackle a daunting task: the reimagining of Gestalt therapy from a thoroughly relational and field-oriented perspective, wherein human suffering is treated in its situational, relational context. With intellectual rigor and innovation, deep humanism and clinical relevance this book reflects the many years of international teaching, training, writing and mentorship that Spagnuolo Lobb has given to the Gestalt therapy field. I highly recommend this collection to all who wish to expand their understanding of current thinking and methodology in psychotherapy."Peter Cole, LCSW, Co-Director, The Sierra Institute for Contemporary Gestalt Therapy"This excellent book pinpoints the central psychotherapeutic task today. In a demanding world that changes with bewildering force and speed, the meeting of therapist and client becomes a healing microcosm of situational possibility – an energised sanctuary and rehearsal space for relational, embodied, and experimental development. The writers describe their holistic encounters with suffering and confused others, the aesthetic qualities of their "dances" together, and how these can support, en-courage, and re-energise the clients’ life situations. The book is a powerful reminder to continue exploring way beyond the "intra-psychic" realm."Malcolm Parlett PhD, author of Future Sense: Five explorations of Whole Intelligence for a world that’s waking up."As the author/editors of this valuable new collection point out, our Gestalt therapy were visionary in laying out the primacy of field, embodiment, relationship and ground in human nature and process; yet often reverted to reified, dichotomous terms in applying their radical ideas to actual persons in clinical and life situations. This exciting, much-needed new collection, revises that primacy in our post pandemic time, offering us a complex vision based in aesthetics and reciprocity, encompassing self and other, relationship and embodiment, identity and diversity, neuroscience and experience and more. Essential and exciting reading."Gordon Wheeler, President, Esalen Institute, author of Gestalt Reconsidered, Beyond Individualism, Gestalt Therapy and other titles."Psychopathology of the Situation makes a substantial contribution to the field of therapeutic treatment in the uncertainty of a world in crisis. Drawn from the combined years of these authors' expertise, skillful and practical applications offer indispensable ways for therapists to attend to the suffering of their patients. This book, essential for both therapist and layperson, will help diverse groups of individuals navigate themselves in this fast-changing world."Ruella Frank, PhD, author of First Year and the Rest of Your Life: Movement, Development and Psychotherapeutic Change, Moving Self: The Bodily Roots of Experience in Psychotherapy "The world situation for us clinicians and those whom we treat has taken on urgency in the face the global pandemic. This book is a blend of practical wisdom and thoughtful insights as gestalt psychotherapists address this urgency at the psychological, anthropological, sociological, phenomenological, and neurobiological levels -- all within a phenomenological, aesthetic and field perspective, the hallmarks of a contemporary approach." Dan Bloom, JD, LCSW, Psychotherapist, Fellow, Past-President, New York Institute for Gestalt Therapy Table of ContentsForewordScott D. ChurchillEditors’ IntroductionPart 1: Psychopathology of the Situation1. Psychopathological Situations in a Post-Pandemic World. Gestalt Therapy in Emergent Clinical FieldsMargherita Spagnuolo Lobb and Pietro Andrea Cavaleri 2. Working on the Ground, on Aesthetics, and on the "Dance".Aesthetic Relational Knowledge and ReciprocityMargherita Spagnuolo LobbBeyond Slogans: Connecting Individuals in a Community A comment by Erving Polster3. Global Unrest and the Anthropological Perspective of Gestalt Therapy Pietro Andrea CavaleriThe World Crisis and Gestalt Therapy: Response to CavaleriA comment by Gary Yontef 4. Phenomenology and Gestalt Psychotherapy. New Challenges Under-the-RadarPietro Andrea Cavaleri5. The Gestalt Clinical Data Sheet: a Phenomenological, Aesthetic, and Field Instrument for Gestalt Psychotherapy and SupervisionMargherita Spagnuolo Lobb, Elisabetta Conte, and Maria MionePart II: Psychopathological Situations in the Clinical Fields of Human Relations6. Ring-a-Ring O’ Roses, A Pocket Full of Posies. Gestalt Psychotherapy and Childhood SufferingSilvia Tosi and Elisabetta Conte 7. Children of "Broken" Relationships: Repairing the Ground of the Parental ExperiencePaola Canna and Manuela Partinico8. Gestalt Psychotherapy and Complex Trauma in Preadolescence. How to Support the Integration of the Body, Emotions, and Words.Rosanna Militello9. To Be or Not to Be Autistic: From the Camouflage Effect to Élan Vital. A Gestalt PerspectiveAntonio Narzisi10. Adolescents in Eclipse. Journey Notes From the Labyrinth of Social Withdrawal Michele Lipani 11. Addiction as Persistent Trauma of the Ground Experience: Neuroscience and Gestalt Psychotherapy Giancarlo Pintus and Maria Luisa Grech 12. Conflict in Couple Relationships as Space for Recognition. An Opportunity that is Still Possible in the Post-Pandemic WorldPietro Andrea Cavaleri13. Working with the Family in Gestalt PsychotherapyGiuseppe Sampognaro14. Gestalt Psychotherapy and AgeingAlessandra Merizzi 15. Gestalt Psychotherapy in the Relationship with the Chronic Patient: Accepting and Supporting the Experience of Loss Through an Aesthetic Gaze Alessandra Vela and Donatella Buscemi 16. For Whom the Bells Do Not Toll. The Processing of Bereavement in Our TimeCarmen Vàzquez Bandìn AfterwordSanto Di NuovoBiographical NotesAppendix
£28.49
Taylor & Francis Ltd A Psychoanalytic Study of the Wounded Healer
Book SynopsisA Psychoanalytic Study of the Wounded Healer uses qualitative research to examine the popular myth that therapists are wounded healers'. Rhona M. Fear presents the life stories of seven well-known psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, including Sigmund Freud, John Bowlby and Patrick Casement. Fear uses grounded theory to analyse her research and categorise her results, focusing closely on experiences including trauma in early life, attachment problems, mental disturbance and resistance to authority figures. The book identifies patterns and common themes in the life stories of these leading figures and explains what this research can tell us about the enduring myth of the wounded healer. Accessibly written, A Psychoanalytic Study of the Wounded Healer will be of great interest to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, counsellors, and others in the helping professions.Table of ContentsIntroduction1: The Myth of the Wounded Healer2: The Research Methodology3: The Narrative Tone of Stories: Attachment Schemas and World View4: The Life of Patrick Casement5: The Life of Neville Symington6: The Life of Nina Coltart7: The Life of Sigmund Freud8: The Life of Viktor Frankl 9: The Life of Carl Jung10: The Life of John Bowlby11: Analysis of Themes in the Research12: Reflexivity13: DiscussionReferences
£28.49
Taylor & Francis On the Theory and Clinic of Lacanian Psychoanalysis
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£133.00
Taylor & Francis Ltd From Fiction to Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisHow can reading literary fiction shed light on the way we speak ourselves within psychoanalysis? Rather than offering psychoanalytic insights into literature, Rosemary Rizq, a practicing psychologist and psychoanalytic psychotherapist, explores what literary fiction can bring to psychoanalysis.In this fascinating collection of essays, she draws on stories written by authors ranging from Henry James to Kazuo Ishiguro and Colm Tóibín. By investigating the possibilities for fruitful encounter and dynamic exchange' between psychoanalysis and literature, Rizq sets out to offer a fresh perspective on theoretical ideas that are often presented within the psychoanalytic literature in abstract, overly technical ways. In a remarkably fresh approach, this book explores how fiction can inform, illuminate and even transform our understanding of psychoanalysis.Written for practicing clinicians, academics and students as well as for the wider public, this book offers an original and Trade Review'From Fiction to Psychoanalysis is a brilliant exploration of the interrelations between the experience of literature and the concepts and practices of psychoanalysis. Since the 1970s, both literary critics and psychoanalysts have increasingly recognized the inadequacy of "applied psychoanalysis" to capture and illuminate the fruitful possibilities of dialogue between these ways of knowing human subjectivity. Rosemary Rizq avoids the pull of master-narratives and hierarchic insistence on fixed truths and instead provides eloquent testimony to the value of reading in the potential spaces of both fields. A winner of the American Psychoanalytic Association's Peter Loewenberg Essay Prize in Psychoanalysis and Culture, Rizq shows how works by Kazuo Ishiguro, Colm Tóibín, Henry James, Tessa Hadley, Isak Dinesen and Alice Munro open new meanings of literature while also unfolding original uses of psychoanalytic writings by theorists such as Freud, Winnicott, Laplanche and Kristeva. Her book joins other recent works by Alicia Kristoff, Adam Phillips and others to demonstrate the great value of interdisciplinary writing. From Fiction to Psychoanalysis is deeply informed, beautifully articulate and a pleasure to read, a book that will inspire further creative thinking.'Murray Schwartz, professor emeritus at Emerson College, Boston Massachusetts, USA'Rosemary Rizq's book is an amazingly lucid exposition of the common ground occupied by two eminently creative discourses: psychoanalysis and literature. It is rare to find an author who is as much at home with literature as with psychoanalysis. Rizq accomplishes the almost impossible task of holding the tension between the enigmatic messages conveyed by literary giants such as Ishiguro, James, Munro, Dinesen, Tóibín, and Hadley and identifying their traces and possible translations in the field of psychoanalytic theory and practice. Rizq provides us with a feast of riveting offerings - not least, the fascinating claim that 'the self-as-other is structured like a short story' - that achieves a veritable 'transubstantiation' of psychoanalysis by introducing and exploring its eucharistic relation to literature.' Anastasios Gaitanidis, director, Relational Psychotherapy Ltd. and co-editor of The Sublime in Everyday Life: Psychoanalytic and Aesthetic Perspectives, Routledge (2020)'Does one get a better understanding of people through studying psychology or literature? Fortunately, as psychological therapists we can avoid the answer to this question. For here, Rosemary Rizq shows us how we can be more thoughtful practitioners by reconsidering literature, both through the magnificent examples she provides and the process she illuminates, with the help of psychoanalysis and 'ways of reading and telling'. By drawing on literary fiction, this book provides a too rare antidote to the deathly crisis in the Psychological Therapies caused by them becoming increasingly dependent on so called 'evidence-based practice' as the basis of psychotherapeutic knowledge.'Del Loewenthal, emeritus professor of Psychotherapy and Counselling, University of Roehampton, UKTable of ContentsIntroduction: What do we know? 1. Copying, Cloning, and Creativity: Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go 2. The Wager of Faith in Fiction and Psychoanalysis: Colm Tóibín’s The Testament of Mary 3. Psychoanalysis and Ways of Reading: Henry James's The Figure in the Carpet 4. Epistemologues of the Particular: Tessa Hadley's An Abduction 5. On Food, Faith, and Psychoanalysis: Isak Dinesen's Babette's Feast 6. 'Familiar Artifiice': Alice Munro's The Moons of Jupiter
£24.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Relational Conversations on Meeting and Becoming
Book SynopsisDemonstrating a relational, dialogic way of thinking and writing, this book offers an innovative perspective on the human potential for intersubjective engagement and on the nature of true encounter. The authors engage in creative, associative dialogues and trialogues inspired by psychoanalysis and Buddhism, poetry and religion, theory and case studies, academic and free styles of writing each enriching the other. Reflecting on the essence of relating, they convey a flow between inner, private reveries and shared ones, and between individual expressions of thought and evolvements of newly born thirds. Through this interdisciplinary, experimental setting, the authors explore the possibility to reach truths and meanings that each individual would not have achieved on their own.Offering new concepts and formulations that may nourish psychotherapists' thought and be usefully implemented in their practice, this book presents a pressingly unique and essential viewpoint for Trade Review‘A beautiful book. A dialogical exploration of the human condition drawing on science, philosophy, psychology, poetry, art, spirituality – which is to say, open, un-dogmatic, and resourceful. One feels appreciation of life’s depths and surfaces, one’s own life and life of the Other. The writing is down to earth, personal and accessible, drawing on a rich background of human struggle, backslides and growth. We are born all life long and the Work of the Other furthers contact with the Work of Being.’Michael Eigen, author of The Challenge of Being Human, The Sensitive Self, The Psychoanalytic Mystic, and Contact with the Depths.‘This book is an intriguing journey in search of our basic experience of otherness in its various manifestations. There is a beautiful variance of voices that come together in a space of mutual enhancement. The concepts of dialogue and of trueness are dealt with in a unique fashion, in which the writers actively follow each other in the here and now. They thus inspire a hope that we as therapists and as human beings can rediscover our natural urge and curiosity for relations, for opening to the unknown, for co-creating.’Ofra Eshel, faculty, training and supervising analyst, Israel Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, and honorary member of the New Center for Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles; author of The Emergence of Analytic Oneness: Into the Heart of Psychoanalysis‘We can no more change our heartfelt commitments by talking to ourselves, than by defensively reiterating them in divisive dispute. But conversing with trusted others can. Glimpsing ourselves reflected in their caring eyes, enables the kind of potentially transformative self- distancing we can never achieve alone. Relational Conversations explores this epitome of relational psychology with uncanny insight, first by taking the psychotherapeutic dialogical interaction between analyst and patient as paradigmatic of true otherness, and by reflecting on it in a series of truly transformative non-Socratic dialogues.’ Menachem Fisch, professor emeritus of history and philosophy of science, director of the Center for Religious and Interreligious Studies at Tel Aviv University, and author of The View from Within: Normativity and the Limits of Self-Criticism; Creatively Undecided: Toward a History and Philosophy of Scientific Agency; Dialogues of Reason: Science, Politics, Religion, and other booksTable of ContentsForeword 1. First Dialogue: Creation and the True Other i. The Birth of a True Other ii. Meeting the Ultimate Other iii. In the Beginning There Was an Other 2. I Call Out to You: An Associative Trialogue 3. Second Dialogue: Becoming, Spaciousness, and Vitality i. Going on Being: On the Fear of Ceasing and the Need to Go On ii. Making Space for the Mess: The At-one-ment of Going On iii. The Echo Chamber Is Not Empty: On Limitation and Vastness, Spaciousness and Nourishment 4. Is Truth a Testimonial Process? The Need for a Testimonial Other for the Reestablishment of Truth and for Healing of Trauma: An Associative Trialogue i. Thinking Further: Trauma and Witnessing in the Context of the Verbal and Non-verbal Messages of Society, and the Relational Nature of the World 5. Third Dialogue: The Haiku Interpretation and the Chain of Caesuras i. In the Blink of an Eye: The Minimalist Interpretation ii. And You Said Mmhmm iii. In a Few Words 6. On "No Experience" With All My Heart and Soul: An Associative Trialogue Epilogue: The Clouds of Knowing
£24.99
Taylor & Francis Fratriarchy
Book SynopsisIn Fratriarchy, Juliet Mitchell expands her ground-breaking theories on the sibling trauma and the Law of the Mother. Writing as a psychoanalytic practitioner, she shows what happens from the ground up when we use feminist questions to probe the psycho-social world and its lateral relations.In this pivotal text, Mitchell argues that the motherâs prohibition of her toddler attacking a new or expected sibling is a rite of passage from infancy to childhood: this is a foundational force structuring our later lateral relationships and social practices. Throughout the volume, Mitchell chooses the term 'Fratriarchy' to show that, as well as the up-down axis of fathers and sons, there is also the side-to-side interaction of sisters and brothers and their social heirs. Making use both critically and affirmatively of Freud, Klein, Winnicott, Bion, Pontalis and others, Fratriarchy indicates how the collective social world matches the individual family world examined by estTrade Review'Juliet Mitchell’s astonishingly rich contributions to psychoanalysis and its social meanings, from Psychoanalysis and Feminism onward, culminate in Fratriarchy with a stunningly new conception of siblingship and what she tellingly calls 'the Law of the Mother.' This is a great and convincing work, taking us through psychoanalytic theory, and literature—finding its most eloquent enactments in Shakespeare. A major book by one of the leading thinkers of our time.'Peter Brooks, Sterling Emeritus Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University, USA'In her riveting new book, Fratriachy: The Sibling Trauma and the Law of the Mother, Juliet Mitchell makes a persuasive case for a psychoanalytic examination of sibling relations. Omitted from psychoanalytic discourse – until now – is what Mitchell characterises as "The Law of the Mother": the force that tempers a child’s homicidal impulses against their perceived usurper. In casting a light on horizontal relations and exploring their interactions with vertical control, Mitchell provides a fantastically entertaining and important feminist analysis of the functions of patriarchy and fraternity in a social world.'Inbali Iserles, award-winning author of children’s books and fellow of the Royal Literary Fund (2020-2022), University of Cambridge, UK'The contention of the existence of a horizontal axis along which siblings interact is the starting point of Fratriarchy. With her characteristic theoretical consistence and exquisite clinical sensitivity Juliet Mitchell proposes that the intersection of this horizontal axis with the hierarchical vertical patriarchal axis set the coordinates needed for an understanding of the universality of the prohibitions of incest and murder. The consequences of these prohibitions are different when operating on the horizontal and the vertical axes as they correspond to different Law-givers and different recipients. Mitchell’s Law of the Mother rules during the pre- social infancy prohibiting incest and murder between siblings along the horizontal axis. It is the necessary complement of the Law of the Father -to use the Lacanian translation of Freud’s formulation- that prohibits incest and murder in the vertical axis of filiation.'Max Hernandez Camarero, former Vice-President of the International Psychoanalytical Association and Founding Member of the Peruvian Psychoanalytic Society. He has been honoured with the Mary Sigourney Award'In the face of war, and gender, racial, and colonial oppression, it is crucial to define new frameworks of analysis that have the potential to end violence. Mitchell’s fascinating account of the Law of the Mother, sibling trauma, and the fratriarchy offers a route to deliverance articulated through new narratives about the self and the others, and a call to sisterhood.'Laura López Paniagua'In Juliet Mitchell’s Fratriarchy the author drives her argument with freewheeling and exhilarating force, into the prevailing foundations of psychoanalytic thinking---the Law of the father, the paternal function of the Oedipus, and its antecedent, the earliest relationship with the mother, "good enough" or not. What is left out , she asserts, is the separation and loss of infancy specifically through the replacement of the toddler by the baby he/she is no longer. This trauma is a product of "The Law of the Mother," and its consequences are death of the toddler, who dare not risk, by fulfilling the wish to murder the baby, his or her own death by maternal abandonment. Mitchell puts this dilemma powerfully, starting with the psychoanalytic writing of Winnicott and Klein, the British pillars of early infantile experience. Their early cases all start with the trauma of the birth of the sibling, but their theoretical focus backs away from this trauma, looking for antecedents in the first months of life. Juliet Mitchell says look again, at the trauma which is equal for boys and girls, and which marks the entry into all the relationships outside the family, those relations which will eventually find expression in love and war. Confusions of love, sex and gender, the ubiquity of war, are the discontents we live with and Juliet Mitchell has much to say to illuminate the world in which we find ourselves. And she offers more than she explores in relation to adolescence. It is a riveting read.'Sara Flanders, British Psychoanalytic Society, UK'Juliet Mitchell is a field-defining thinker. In the long awaited Fratriarchy, Mitchell brings her world-renowned work as a feminist psychoanalytical and political scholar together with her personal observations on child development and sibling relations as a practitioner over the past twenty-five years. Central to Mitchell’s distinctive argument is the misdiagnosis of ‘sibling trauma’ and the far-reaching social and political consequences. Theoretically radical as well as autobiographical, this is an extraordinary book and a ‘must read’ for all those with a curiosity for understanding human society through familial dynamics.'Jude Browne'In this engaging new book which is very much a continuation of her earlier work, Mitchell elaborates the Law of the Mother: the danger of murder or incest on the part of the usurped toddler when the new sibling is born, is mediated by the mother. Throughout Mitchell’s writing there has been a deft weaving of sex, violence and death. Mitchell has never been fearful to challenge psychoanalytic shibboleths. This is exemplified many times in her new book. For example she considers how the usurped sibling’s brush with murderousness and death challenges the Freudian assertion that death is unrepresentable and can only be known through the idea of castration. In a characteristic intellectually and clinically informed discourse, she cites Pontalis’ challenge to this Freudian notion that death is unrepresentable through a thesis that Freud himself knew death only too well with his childhood losses, his half-brother aged eighteen months and through his own somatic preoccupation with his sick and ailing body: his own dying. This example highlights the call to read and engage with the continuing work of one of contemporary psychoanalysis’s most thoughtful and challenging of writers.’Rosemary Davies Table of ContentsIntroduction Part 1: The Toddler's World 1. From the 'Sibling Trauma' to the 'Law of the Mother' 2. Taking It like a Toddler 3. From Toddling to Walking; from Speaking to Talking 4. From the 'Sibling Trauma' to the Horizontal Axis of Social Relations Part 2: Three Theories 5. Donald Winnicott: Narcissistic-Psychotic Development. Do Siblings Count? 6. Using Wilfred Bion: The Social and Its Models 7. Questioning Fraternity: J.-B. Pontalis - 'Death-Work' and Brother of the Above Epilogue to Part 2: The Social Child's World: Latency and No-Latency Part 3: Fratriarchy: Tomorrow, Today and Yesterday 8. Oedipal Sexual Difference 9. Horizontal 'Gender' and Bisexuality 10. Fratriarchy - Tomorrow, Today and Yesterday
£21.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Ethics of Lacanian Psychoanalysis
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£24.99
Taylor & Francis The Poetry of the Word in Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisThe Poetry of the Word in Psychoanalysis presents selected key papers by leading Spanish psychoanalyst Pere Folch Mateu.Trade Review"Pere Folch was a passionate teacher of psychoanalysis and its applications to art, architecture, music, poetry, theatre and most of all psychotherapy. This volume attests to his vitality and devotion to his beliefs, both scientific and political and to the Catalan language. Most of all he was a compassionate listener who gave priority to the needs of his patients."John Steiner is a training analyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society, formerly a psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital and a psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic. He is the author of prominent works such as of Psychic Retreats, (1993), Seeing and Being Seen, (2011), and Illusion, Disillusion and Irony in Psychoanalysis, (2020)."This collection of papers illustrate Pere Folch’s crystalline intelligence, his limpet-like adherence to the phenomenology of the consulting room, and his sensitive and thoughtful considerations of the technical problems faced by the practicing analyst. The anglophone world is fortunate to have such an extensive collection of his thought now available to it. We are all indebted to the editors, translator and sponsors of this effort."Robert Caper, MD,Psychoanalyst in private practice, Former member of the editorial boards of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis and the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association.Table of Contents1. Clinical Problems of Intellectual Inhibition 2. Control of the Self and of the Object According to the: Obsessive Relational Model 3. Literary Process and Psychoanalytical Process 4. Symbolon and Diabolon in the Transference 5. Notes about Imitation, Hypocrisy and Transference Love 6. Particularities of the Musical Symbol 7. In Homage to Bion: The Theoretical and Clinical: Validity of His Thought 8. Notes on the Pathology of the Negative and a Technical Approach to it 9. Containment, Acting and Counter-acting 10. The Lyrical and the Logical in the Work of Interpretation
£27.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Here and Now of French Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisThe Here and Now of French Psychoanalysis provides an overview of the living psychoanalytic landscape in France through the voice of experienced psychoanalysts who continue to transform the legacy of Freud, Lacan and others in their publications and clinical practice.Rachel Boué-Widawsky interviews a wide range of practitioners, underscoring the specificities of French psychoanalysis and exploring how the French psychoanalytic community has responded theoretically and clinically to the global crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic and racial and gender issues. Mimicking the process of psychoanalytic dialogue, the interview format allows for a lively and engaging discussion of each practitioner's theoretical background and their clinical approach. Boué-Widawsky includes leading individuals in the field as well as representatives of key institutions including La Maison de Solenn and the Centre Jean-Favreau.The Here and Now of French Psychoanalysis presents an
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd A Beam of Intense Darkness
Book SynopsisWritten by pioneering analyst and creative thinker, James Grotstein, A Beam of Intense Darkness offers a thorough overview and illuminating insight into the often-complex work of W. R. Bion.This psychoanalytic classic sees Grotstein introduce over 30 key Bionian theories, comprehensively explaining them to the reader before offering his own insight and commentary. Grotstein first encountered Bion as his analysand and, later, as his friend. This book offers a level of insight only possible through such a close relationship, and offers a dialogue between Bion and Grotstein as they delve into the inner workings of the human psyche. Throughout, Grotstein offers his own original thoughts on topics such as projective transidentification, transcendent position and the truth drive.With a new introduction from Nicola Abel-Hirsch, this book is an essential read for anyone interested in Bion's work and legacy.Trade Review"A Beam of Intense Darkness, is a treasure trove of thoughts about Bion’s work, filtered through the fertile mind of James Grotstein. This rich, scholarly book has served me well in my pursuit of deeper understanding of Bion’s endlessly complex and evocative contributions to psychoanalysis. My copy of the book, inscribed by Dr. Grotstein, is well worn after many decades of reading and re-reading, for I have gone back to it as a reference over and over again, sometimes getting answers to questions I have had, sometimes stimulating new questions, that can also be explored with reference to this classical work on Bion. Dr. Grotstein’s imaginative, poetic, and scholarly perspectives on Bion’s theories have made this book instrumental in providing a deeper intuitive grasp of Bion’s revolutionary ideas, and rare wisdom."Annie Reiner, Los Angeles. Member and senior training analyst at The Psychoanalytic Center of California (PCC)"Jim Grotstein, an analysand, colleague and friend of Bion’s during the latter’s sojourn in Los Angeles, was one of our foremost North American explicators of and heirs to Bion’s thought. This classic book, enriched by Grotstein’s personal anecdotes and reminiscences of their exchanges and by his own uniquely creative and provocative extensions of and contributions to Bion’s models and theory, is an authoritative, foundational text that will assure and pay tribute to the enormity and relevance of Bion’s legacy as psychoanalysis continues to move forward into the 21st century."Howard B. Levine, Editor-in-Chief, The Routledge W.R. Bion Studies Series Table of Contents1. An introduction 2. What kind of analyst was Bion? 3. What kind of person was Bion? 4. Bion's vision 5. Bion's legacy 6. Bion's metatheory 7. Bion on technique 8. Clinical vignette encompassing Bion's technical ideas 9. Bion, the mathematician, the mystic, the psychoanalyst 10. The "Language of Achievement" 11. Bion's discovery of O 12. The concept of the "transcendent position" 13. The quest for the truth, Part A: the "truth drive" as the hidden order of Bion's metatheory for psychoanalysis 14. The quest for truth, Part B: curiosity about the truth as the "seventh servant" 15. Lies, "lies," and falsehoods 16. The container and the contained 17. "Projective transidentification": an extension of the concept of projective identification 18. Bion's work with groups 19. Bion's studies in psychosis 20. Transformations 21. Learning from experience 22. Points, lines, and circles 23. The Grid 24. Fetal mental life and its caesura with postnatal mental life 25. What does it mean to dream?" Bion's theory of dreaming 26. Dreaming, phantasying, and the "truth intellect" 27. "Become" 28. P-S to D 29. L, H, and passion 30. Faith 31. Bion's discovery of zero ("no-thing") 32. Epilogue
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd A Brief Apocalyptic History of Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisA Brief Apocalyptic History of Psychoanalysis returns us to the birth of psychoanalysis and the trauma of castration that is its umbilicus.The story told in this book centers on the genital mutilation endured in her childhood by Emma Eckstein, Freud's most important patient in his abandonment of the seduction theory. For both cultural and personal reasons, Freud could not recognize the traumatic nature of this Beschneidung (circumcision), which nevertheless aroused in him deep anguish, conflating his own circumcision, the echoes of a violently anti-Semitic environment, and conflicts with his father. Taking Freud's countertransference to Eckstein's trauma into account leads to a radically different understanding of the origins of psychoanalysis from the one based on the solipsistic perspective of his self-analysis. Carlo Bonomi argues that the unacknowledged trauma of circumcision was inscribed in Freud's system of thinking as an amputated legacy from which theTrade Review"In this unique book, Bonomi combines a thoughtful textual analysis of the writings of Freud and his contemporaries, up-to-date historical and biographical knowledge, and a study of Ferenczi's journey from being Freud's enthusiastic follower towards crystalizing a daring new model, surpassing Freud's blind spots. This creative original work helps the reader to better comprehend major trends in present psychoanalytic practice, emphasizing trauma and splitting, the crucial value of empathy and lived experience, and the unavoidable immersion of therapists in the transference – countertransference matrix." - Prof. Emanuel Berman, Israel Psychoanalytic Society, Professor Emeritus at the University of Haifa."Carlo Bonomi, a scholar of the Ferenczi Renaissance, discloses a striking perspective on the foundation and transmission of psychoanalysis. The discovery that Freud didn’t categorize the circumcision of a girl as a genital mutilation and a relational trauma is indeed a shock. Yet, this unthought-of trauma didn’t get lost because, in the first analytic treatment Freud experienced it on his own body, later becoming the secret source of his theory of castration anxiety. This paradox is the key to this Brief Apocalyptic History of Psychoanalysis, in which many contradictions of the history of our discipline find their place within a consistent narration based on Ferenczi’s theory of trauma as a split between intellect and emotions." - Prof. Clara Mucci, Società di Psicoanalisi e Psicoterapia Sándor Ferenczi, and Professor for Dynamic Psychology at the Università degli Studi of Bergamo."In this new book Carlo Bonomi bridges the gap between Freud’s foundation of psychoanalysis and contemporary theories and methods, continuing his journey into the origins of psychoanalysis by linking Freud’s emotional and intellectual reaction to Emma Eckstein’s circumcision to his neglect of the feminine. Bonomi shows how Freud’s amputated legacy was unconsciously transmitted to his closest followers, and how Sándor Ferenczi in particular would help to heal this wounded body by restoring the limbs of repetition, countertransference, vulnerability, and the feminine." - Prof. Franco Borgogno, Società Psicoanalitica Italiana and 2010 recipient of the Mary Sigourney Award"Physicians’ interest in human sexual organs came with educational intent, a hidden story in the history of psychoanalysis. Freud, fallen into this sinister tradition, panicked – and concealed that his friend Fliess had operated on the patient known as "Irma" in The Interpretation of Dreams. She almost died. It’s a detective novel, but more a clarification of a traumatic event—a great contribution! With strong reference to Ferenczi, the author cures psychoanalysis from the unthought which had turned into the unthinkable. A "must read" for clinicians and historians." - Prof. Michael B. Buchholz, International Psychoanalytic University, Berlin"In line with his earlier work, Carlo Bonomi hypothesizes, with magnificent erudition, that Freud invented psychoanalysis as a result of an unacknowledged and repressed trauma: that of the circumcision undergone in childhood by one of his female patients. And it is from this amputated and catastrophic heritage that Ferenczi, in his great lucidity, was able to lay the basis for a refoundation of psychoanalytic doctrine. This book, of burning topicality, takes into account the question of the body, often neglected by psychoanalysts, and that of Freud's intimate life, which is essential for contemporary historiography."- Elisabeth Roudinesco, President of the Société internationale d’histoire de la psychiatrie et de la psychanalyse, Co-founder of the Institut histoire et Lumières de la pensée."In this unique book, Bonomi combines a thoughtful textual analysis of the writings of Freud and his contemporaries, up-to-date historical and biographical knowledge, and a study of Ferenczi's journey from being Freud's enthusiastic follower towards crystalizing a daring new model, surpassing Freud's blind spots. This creative original work helps the reader to better comprehend major trends in present psychoanalytic practice, emphasizing trauma and splitting, the crucial value of empathy and lived experience, and the unavoidable immersion of therapists in the transference – countertransference matrix." - Prof. Emanuel Berman, Israel Psychoanalytic Society, Professor Emeritus at the University of Haifa"Carlo Bonomi, a scholar of the Ferenczi Renaissance, discloses a striking perspective on the foundation and transmission of psychoanalysis. The discovery that Freud didn’t categorize the circumcision of a girl as a genital mutilation and a relational trauma is indeed a shock. Yet, this unthought-of trauma didn’t get lost because, in the first analytic treatment Freud experienced it on his own body, later becoming the secret source of his theory of castration anxiety. This paradox is the key to this Brief Apocalyptic History of Psychoanalysis, in which many contradictions of the history of our discipline find their place within a consistent narration based on Ferenczi’s theory of trauma as a split between intellect and emotions." - Prof. Clara Mucci, Società di Psicoanalisi e Psicoterapia Sándor Ferenczi, and Professor for Dynamic Psychology at the Università degli Studi of Bergamo."In this new book Carlo Bonomi bridges the gap between Freud’s foundation of psychoanalysis and contemporary theories and methods, continuing his journey into the origins of psychoanalysis by linking Freud’s emotional and intellectual reaction to Emma Eckstein’s circumcision to his neglect of the feminine. Bonomi shows how Freud’s amputated legacy was unconsciously transmitted to his closest followers, and how Sándor Ferenczi in particular would help to heal this wounded body by restoring the limbs of repetition, countertransference, vulnerability, and the feminine." - Prof. Franco Borgogno, Società Psicoanalitica Italiana and 2010 recipient of the Mary Sigourney Award"Physicians’ interest in human sexual organs came with educational intent, a hidden story in the history of psychoanalysis. Freud, fallen into this sinister tradition, panicked – and concealed that his friend Fliess had operated on the patient known as "Irma" in The Interpretation of Dreams. She almost died. It’s a detective novel, but more a clarification of a traumatic event—a great contribution! With strong reference to Ferenczi, the author cures psychoanalysis from the unthought which had turned into the unthinkable. A "must read" for clinicians and historians." - Prof. Michael B. Buchholz, International Psychoanalytic University, Berlin"In line with his earlier work, Carlo Bonomi hypothesizes, with magnificent erudition, that Freud invented psychoanalysis as a result of an unacknowledged and repressed trauma: that of the circumcision undergone in childhood by one of his female patients. And it is from this amputated and catastrophic heritage that Ferenczi, in his great lucidity, was able to lay the basis for a refoundation of psychoanalytic doctrine. This book, of burning topicality, takes into account the question of the body, often neglected by psychoanalysts, and that of Freud's intimate life, which is essential for contemporary historiography."- Elisabeth Roudinesco, President of the Société internationale d’histoire de la psychiatrie et de la psychanalyse, Co-founder of the Institut histoire et Lumières de la penséeTable of ContentsList of figuresPreface by Philippe RéfabertIntroductionPART IThe woman, a castrated man The voice of Ferenczi Hatred of the woman and veneration of man "Dark continent" PART II The code Amyl, trimethylamin = Brit milah The great Lord Penis The blood bride The tomb PART III Transmission A gap as heredity Catasthrophe PART IV Closing of the circle Giant snakes and dragons that still live Gaps and substitutes The nose as a fetish Postface by Philippe RéfabertReferences
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Blakes Job
Book SynopsisIn this unique book, Jason Wright analyses William Blake's Illustrations of the Book of Job and shows their relevance in clinical psychoanalysis and psychotherapy with groups and individuals, especially while working with patients who have experienced trauma and addiction.Drawing on decades of work in the field, this book sees Wright offer sensitive guidance to practitioners dealing with client experiences of change through the lens of addiction and offers useful insight to the lay reader. Throughout the chapters, Wright studies each illustration in depth and shows how they chart the breakdown of Job's life into a state of despair. Twinning a clinical vignette with each plate, Wright shows how these depictions can be directly applied to issues faced in contemporary analysis, therapy and addiction recovery. From Job's dissolution to his eventual salvation, Wright insightfully maps the process of change from a place of destitution to one of redemption and hope set in theTrade Review'Jason Wright has written an extraordinary book: one that is absolutely grounded and accessible to the lay reader, yet draws on complex philosophical and theoretical ideas. Wright is at pains to walk alongside the reader, describing what he sees, introducing key conceptual guides, for example Bohm’s implicate and engaging them in conversations on the deeper meaning of the human condition. This is beautifully crafted writing that describes William Blake’s exquisite illustrations of Job, his wife and friends’ journey to find true enlightenment in twenty one plates. The journey is long and arduous, and Wright powerfully interweaves it with reflections from his own experience of working with groups, their place in the community and ultimately the parallel grief, despair and trauma we face in today’s complex world. But the reward for walking through the discomfort, confronting our perishing and bearing it together, is that the moment of attainment is so beautiful and pure it almost takes the breath away. This is a work of robust tenderness, and hope.'Catherine du Toit, Founding Director of 51 architecture and President of the Architectural Association'A wonderful book that approaches Blake’s Illustrations of the Book of Job with fresh imagination. Blake’s masterpiece is presented as a transition from a paradigm of false vision and exploitation to that of participation, resonance and spiritual growth. Wright’s exploration includes not only the philosophical, spiritual and artistic currents of Blake’s day but philosophers of the 20th and 21st centuries such as David Bohm, Alfred Whitehead, and Iain McGilchrist – to mention only the most prominent. Blake’s Illustrations are not only a story of individual transformation but also, as presented by Wright, a collective one with great relevance to the contemporary world. Since the rational intellect has grown even greater in its power, global extension and destructiveness Blake’s prophesies and visions are more important than ever.This book is a remarkable combination of philosophy, stories of Wright’s life and professional history. Of especial interest are the numerous accounts of working with addiction both individually and in groups and of relating these moving and sometimes tragic stories to Blake’s Illustrations. For example, how people are trapped in false selves, how they become possessed by the Satan of addiction, and how spiritual experience may free them – as it did Job. The book is filled with magical and memorable phrases, for example: "Addiction is the search for something alive and relational in the dead but certain object of drugs or alcohol". As the book proceeds Wright focuses on how Blake’s work illustrates the path to the Self, to use a Jungian concept - but framed in a group context. Wright’s philosophy deepens and his prose becomes more expressive matching that of his esteemed philosophers ... "The organising principle in the universe is a creative, organic resonance, and self in this context is an emergent experience in that process".For all those interested in the relevance of Blake to the modern world this book, as well as being full of challenge, wisdom, and surprise, is also a great treat.'Alan Mulhern, author of The Sower and the Seed (2015) and Healing Intelligence (2012). Director of the Quest Lecture Series and podcaster (Vision in an Age of Crisis)'This is an erudite, stimulating and immersive book, expanding and enhancing Blake’s vision of the story of Job for modern times. It is a triumph of hope over despair, infused with humanity and common sense. It highlights the essential interconnectedness and relational dynamics in human interaction, Seeing them as paramount in any comprehensive understanding of individual and social development. It also illuminates how self-destructive structures and ideas can lead to limiting internal and external horizons, distorting how we see ourselves in relation to others and constricting our ability to adapt and change. Gleaned from his lengthy experience as a group and individual psychotherapist, the author emphasises with poetic grace and acuity, how necessary it is to face the ‘uncomfortability’ of engaging with the possibility of a participatory, unfolding, emergent, co-creative process. He challenges the desire for an overcontrolling, rigid, reductionist dogma that reinforces the primacy of self-interest over altruism. The author writes: "I see in the Job a group narrative, not only for the relationship between the individual and the group, but this set in the context of the resonant and relational whole where that whole is the group, the society, the species, the planet or indeed the divine." This is a bold, accessible and, challenging work, which deserves close attention.'Ian Simpson, group analyst and bonsai artist. Former Head of Psychotherapy Services at a major London teaching hospital for 20 yearsTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. Blake and Context 2. Perishing 3. Ulro: Spiritual Blindness 4. Turning Point 5. New Vision 6. New Context 7. Participation 8. End Note
£110.50
Taylor & Francis Wanderings and Crossroads
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£31.99
Taylor & Francis Sandtray Applications to Trauma Therapy
Book SynopsisSandtray Applications to Trauma Therapy presents the theory behind and the practicalities of using sandtray therapy in treatment with traumatized patients, both children and adults.The book begins with a review of the most frequently asked questions that professionals ask themselves when using the sandtray. It then details the Barudy and Dantagnan model of trauma therapy to understand and integrate sandtray therapy with patients who have suffered trauma. Chapters describe the importance of neuroaffective communication, directive and non-directive working methodologies, and how to use the technique in regulation, empowerment, and resilient integration of trauma. A featured chapter by the second author, Dr. Raffael Benito, presents the neurobiology behind sandtray therapy, outlining step by step what happens in the brain of a patient during a sandtray session. Transcripts of clinical cases, sandtray images, and true client stories are integrated throughout.This Trade Review‘Is a wonderful book that will illuminate practitioners, particularly those working with traumatised children and adolescents, in their task of helping these young people understand and overcome their traumatic experiences, build resilience and progress through a healthier, long-term developmental path in their lives. One of the outstanding strengths of the present book is that it is rooted in a secure base of more than one hundred years of child and adolescent mental health, from which it explores and digs deeply into the therapeutic applications of the sandtray technique, whilst integrating the domains of trauma, resilience, parental skills, personal development and neuroscience, within a framework of attachment-based thinking and practice.’ Arturo Ezquerro is a London-based consultant psychiatrist, psychoanalytic psychotherapist, and group analyst.‘The risk is that upon discovering the existence of therapeutic techniques as attractive and promising as the sandtray, they are applied with the illusion that these by themselves will be sufficient, neglecting the care that should be taken to apply, contextualize and integrate them in a process that is relational, affectively binding, empathic and mentalizing between therapist and patient. Thanks to their human quality, their extensive training and their rich clinical experience, the authors have the skills and sufficient authority to affirm that Traumatherapy is the ideal scenario that guarantees the effective and respectful application of the sandtray technique, applying it in the moment and adapting it to the uniqueness of each child or adolescent. The organization of the contents to work on in each block, following the neurosequential principle, is the best guarantee so that the therapeutic impact of using the sandtray keeps all its meaning and effectiveness.’ Jorge Barudy is a neuropsychiatrist, psychotherapist, family therapist, and trainer of the EFTA (European Association of Family Therapy). Maryorie Dantagnan is a pedagogue, psychologist, child psychotherapist and co-director of IFIV, Spain.Table of Contents1. The most frequently asked questions about the sandtray technique 2. Comprehensive psychotherapy model where the sandtray technique is applied: Barudy and Dantagnan´s Three Block Systemic Traumatherapy 3. Sandtray and trauma therapy 4. The sandtray technique: The work of identification, expression and emotional regulation 5. The sandtray technique to work on empowerment (Block II) 6. The sandtray technique to work on the resilient reintegration of traumatic contents and the psychological elaboration of the life story (Block III) 7. How the brain damaged by trauma works when performing sandplay therapy
£24.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Affective Formation of Publics
Book SynopsisThis book offers an interdisciplinary analysis of current formations of publics that is informed by in-depth knowledge of affect and emotion theory.Using empirical case studies from contexts as diverse as India, Pakistan, Tanzania, and the Americas as well as Europe, the book challenges dichotomous distinctions between private and public. Instead, publics are understood as a relational structure that encompasses both people and their physical and mediatized environment. While each kind of public is affectively constituted, the intensity of its affective attunement varies considerably.The volume is aimed at academic readers interested in understanding the dynamic and fluid forms of contemporary formation of publicsbe it digital or face-to-face encounters as well as in the intersection of both forms. This includes researchers from media and communication studies, social anthropology, theatre or literary studies. It is aimed at advanced students of these disciplines who aTable of Contents1. Prologue: Affective Publics and Their Meaning in Times of Global Crises; 2. Introduction: The Affective Character of Publics; PART I: Places; 3. Unhappy Objects: Colonial Violence, Maasai Materialities, and the Affective Publics of Ethnographic Museums; 4. Theater Publics in Motion: Affective Dynamics of Theater and the Street, Berlin 1989; 5. Digital Administrative Publics: Affective and Corporate Entanglements in Germany’s New Federal Portal PART II: Networks; 6. (Im)Mobility in the Americas and COVID-19: The Emergence of a Hemispheric Affective Counterpublic; 7. Women Activists Imaged Through Social Media Publics: The "Feisty Dadis of Shaheen Bagh" as Political Subjects; 8. Affectivism and Visibility in the Mediatization of Disappearing Non-Muslim Women in Pakistan; 9. Hijacking Solidarity: Affective Networking of Far-Right Publics on Twitter; 10. Affective Temporalities of Digital Hate Cultures; 11. Understanding the Affective Impact of Algorithmic Publics; PART III: Media; 12. Contested Image Practices of Public Shaming: A Case Study of an Internet Meme in the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict; 13. "GOOKS, Go Home!": Vietnamese in the United States; 14. Affective Publics and the Figure of the "Right-Wing Writer"; 15. Opening Up Ethnographic Data: When the Private Becomes Public
£121.50
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Bodily Unconscious in Psychoanalytic
Book SynopsisThe Bodily Unconscious in Psychoanalytic Technique explores how corporeality and body memory can be more strongly integrated into psychoanalytic work.This book brings together an international range of contributors to consider the bodily unconscious from different theoretical perspectives. Concepts from the work of Freud, Bion, Winnicott, Lacan, Laplanche, and Fonagy are developed with the aim of incorporating body memory into psychoanalytic technique. The contributors consider how severe and complex clinical states, dominated by bodily symptoms and disorganization, can be approached with methods that go beyond classical interpretation. The book includes ten case histories and discussion of key themes including transference and countertransference, feelings of corporeality and bodily sensations, and features clinical material throughout.The Bodily Unconscious in Psychoanalytic Technique will be essential reading for psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psych
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Case Formulation in Contemporary Psychotherapy
Book SynopsisCase Formulation in Contemporary Psychotherapy presents a new approach to case conceptualization and case formulation, making meaning from each clinical case and using every piece of data available. Robert Mendelsohn explains his core basic principles for case formulation, allowing the clinician to assess a case quickly and accurately. This book includes a discussion of the contributions of transference and countertransference, inducement and enactment, as well as the use of paradigmatic techniques, humor, and language. The processes presented, alongside vignettes illustrating their use, will allow clinicians to decode the meaning of all clinical interaction and to communicate that meaning in a helpful way to students and patients. Providing a new way to access a full range of conscious and preconscious clinical information, Case Formulation in Contemporary Psychotherapy will be essential reading for mental health professionals including psychotherapistTrade Review"A professor's professor, Dr. Mendelsohn brings one of his legendary courses to the world outside of his beloved school. With this book, he extends Theodore Reik's legacy and provides a contemporary psychoanalytic guide to case formulation and treatment planning that is at once practical and magical." J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D., Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, Adelphi University; Mount Sinai Beth Israel Psychotherapy Research Program, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University"A professor's professor, Dr. Mendelsohn brings one of his legendary courses to the world outside of his beloved school. With this book, he extends Theodore Reik's legacy and provides a contemporary psychoanalytic guide to case formulation and treatment planning that is at once practical and magical." J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D., Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, Adelphi University; Mount Sinai Beth Israel Psychotherapy Research Program, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University"Robert Mendelsohn is a teacher and clinician par excellence, having taught clinical psychology at Adelphi University for five decades. Read this book and learn from a clinician who is a master at formulating the client’s problems and showing us how to solve them!" Jacques Barber, Dean, Derner School of Psychology, Adelphi University, New YorkTable of ContentsForeword by Robert F. BornsteinPreface AcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1 The History of Case Formulation and Treatment Planning; From Freud (1918) to W. Reich, (1946) From Reich to T. Reik, (1948, 1959) from Reik to Bion, (1962, 1976) and Winnicott, (1960, 1971) to Billow & Mendelsohn, (1990)Chapter 2The Fourteen Clinical Processes Involved in My Approach to Case Formulation including: Countertransference, Inducement, Enactment, Projective Identification, Gratuitous Remarks, The Clinical Use of Many Processes Including Paradigmatic Techniques (And ’My Technical Use of My ‘Sense of Humor’)Chapter 3Early Clinical Examples of My Knowing Without Consciously Knowing What I Unconsciously KnewChapter 4What Is Parallel Process and How Does It Enrich Our Understanding of Psychodynamic Case Formulation and the Preconscious Transmission of Clinical Data?Chapter 5 Magical Processes in Psychotherapy and The Magic of Dream InterpretationChapter 6Magical Processes in Case Consultation, Case Formulation and Treatment PlanningChapter 7Conclusion: Creating A Space for Magic to Occur/Teaching the Magic to OthersAbout The Author
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Trauma Psychoanalysis and History
Book SynopsisLocated at the crossroads of psychoanalysis and history, this book investigates the ambiguous concept of trauma and the changes to its formulation and use between the years 1866 and 1939. Luis Sanfelippo introduces the original conceptions of trauma outlined by Sigmund Freud, Pierre Janet and their contemporaries, before investigating how the meaning of this concept was influenced and informed by large-scale historical events like the First World War. Trauma, Psychoanalysis and History investigates the multiple problems linked to this fetishised category and how it has developed over time. Sanfelippo also considers the historiographical and conceptual problems raised by the application of trauma to collective memory and contemporary history, reflecting on what this means for historiography. Trauma, Psychoanalysis and History will be of great interest to students in training for psychotherapy and mental health practice, trained psychoanTrade Review"We should be grateful to Luis Sanfelippo for his research on trauma, a concept that over the years since Freud used it to start psychoanalysis, experienced transformations, expansions and bastardizations. His meticulous research of Freud's papers should allow clinicians and theoreticians to stand on more solid ground when attempting to understand the human condition. The exploration of trauma in psychoanalysis is scholarly and complemented by the research on the link with other human sciences and culture that significantly enriches our understanding of the other concept." Alberto Pieczanski, MD, psychoanalyst; training and supervising analyst, Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis; member of the British Psychoanalytical Society, UK; co-editor (with Nydia Pieczanski, MD) of The Pioneers of Psychoanalysis in South America: An Essential Guide"Trauma is one of the words most often associated with the experience of the contemporary world: two world wars, crimes and mass violence have originated a growing awareness of psychic injuries, both individual and collective. The interest of Luis Sanfelippo's research lies in the fact that it restores, around Sigmund Freud, a key moment in the genealogy of this notion. Psychologists, psychiatrists and psychoanalysts have not ceased to deepen and reformulate it, but their thinking is inseparable from a history that concerns us all." Jacques Revel, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, France"Thanks to the recent exhumation of documents and reconstructions of context, which this book helps to bring to light, the canonical version of the reasons for Freud's abandonment of his trauma theory has lost consensus. Pursuing Freud's delays, returns, mutations and perplexities, Luis Sanfelippo highlights unknown subtleties of that inner debate. Observing that whirlwind would allow one to discover, as he says, how 'the past does not determine a necessary direction; but it conditions, it generates conditions of possibility and, also, it determines impossibilities." Jorge Baños Orellana, École lacanienne de psychanalyse, Argentina and France"The passion for psychoanalysis leads Luis to a rigorous study of the concept of trauma in Freud, given the different versions that emerge from various readings at different times. Luis Sanfelippo's research is already a reference in Latin America for the study of the concept of trauma. His historical, serious and profound journey makes it essential." Griselda Sanchez Zago, Instituto Freudiano para el Estudio de las Prácticas Psicoanalíticas (México); Asociación Psicoanalítica de Guadalajara; FEPAL; IPA; co-editor, Calibán"A lot has been written in recent years about trauma, either from a psychoanalytical perspective or from a historical point of view. Yet, so far, there were no significant studies dedicated to this capital concept in the history of psychoanalysis and even beyond... Not only does this ground-breaking piece by Luis Sanfelippo show the changing places of trauma in Freudian theory, in different contexts, but it also traces its medical origins back to the first railroad accidents and their objective and subjective consequences. For those willing to know how trauma became a key category to understand our time, this research, as precise as it is lively, will become a must-read." Alejandro Dagfal, psychologist and historian; University of Buenos Aires; National Research Council and National Library, ArgentinaTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. Mechanical Trauma, Psychical Trauma: Railway Accidents and Hysteria (1866-1889) 2. Trauma and Memory: The Janet-Freud Debate, 1889-1895/1913-1914 3. Sexual Cause and Traumatic Testimonies: The Versions of the Neurotica and its Abandonment (1896-1933) 4. The War Neuroses and a New Economic Conception of Trauma (1914-1920) 5. On Collective Traumas: The Persistence and Transmission of Past Experiences (1913 and 1939) Conclusions
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Erotic Transference
Book SynopsisErotic Transferences: A Contemporary Introduction offers a comprehensive introduction to this key, yet challenging aspect of the psychoanalytic process.Despite emerging frequently in the psychoanalytic process, Andrea Celenza highlights the sparseness of literature on erotic transferences and a tendency to desexualise psychoanalytic theorizing, which she posits is a result of the inherent threat erotic transferences can pose to the analyst. By providing a thorough overview of the topic, clarifying terminology, and providing vivid case examples, Celenza seeks to redress this omission. Throughout this volume, she discusses the interplay of power and gender, along with chapters on the temptation of disclosure and the disturbing prevalence of sexual boundary violations.Providing practitioners with the tools to deal with the intense feelings that inevitably arise with erotic transferences, this book is vital reading for all psychoanalysts at all levels of experience
£24.51
Taylor & Francis Ltd Transgenerational Haunting in Psychoanalysis
Book SynopsisIn this book, Maurice Apprey continues his unique work on transgenerational haunting to explore how events in our ancestors'' lives may be renegotiated and re-subjectivized in the present from within the therapeutic dyad.With an informed and impassioned voice that evokes the tragic psychic consequences of the unresolved, silenced tragedies and transgressions that haunt subsequent generations, Apprey illustrates how the analyst can unfold a patient''s transference wishes and emancipate them from the unconscious projects, or errands, they have inherited. This can happen through a threefold process of excavating the unconscious sedimentations of ancestral history, appropriating and reactivating the ancestral errands within the transference, and subsequently decoding the patient''s transference pressures. Expanding on Apprey''s work about the analyst''s field of inquiry and ways of listening in clinical practice, this book illuminates the potential for a resolution, rather than aTrade Review'In this book, Maurice Apprey, a psychoanalyst for children, adolescents, and adults, describes how individuals have identifications with damaged parts of internalized images of parents and illustrates how individuals as well as ethnic, national, religious, and ideological groups are unwittingly possessed by historical events involving their ancestors. I consider Maurice Apprey as one of the most integrative thinkers for creating more knowledge about the concepts of trauma, the psychology of historical events and transgenerational haunting. This important book illustrates and teaches us more about the necessity and importance of psychoanalytic study of psychical transfer in transgenerational haunting.'Vamık Volkan, professor emeritus of Psychiatry, University of Virginia; president emeritus of International Dialogue Initiative and past president of the Virginia Psychoanalytic Society, Turkish-American Neuropsychiatric Society, International Society of Political Psychology and American College of Psychoanalysts'In this book, Apprey, a pioneer in the study of psychic phenomena expressing transgenerational transmissions of aggressivity, brilliantly shows the implications of such transmissibility for psychoanalytic theory and therapy. Taking Freud's instinct theory and reworking it into an object relations theory that can account for the temporality of psychic messaging, Apprey offers various strategies for conceptualizing how humans enact and make sense of history. Yet, of Apprey's dramatis personae, Freud is not the central character. Nor are the philosophers Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Jean-Luc Marion, Claude Romano, et alia - all of whom Apprey mobilizes with total perspicacity. The main figure turns out to be Auden, whose celebrated 1937 poem, "On this Island" prompted Apprey to think through the seeming contradictions embedded in the poetic phrase: ships diverge on urgent voluntary errands. Under what conditions are errands voluntary? And, if errands are truly urgent, then what room is left for choice, the spontaneous? Auden's "errands" would orient Apprey, like the diverging ships in the poem, sending him on a multiplex psychoanalytic errand of his own.' Michael Uebel, a scholar who has taught literature, literary history and cultural theory at the University of Virginia, Georgetown University, and University of Kentucky, and clinical social work at the University of Texas, AustinTable of ContentsForeword by Vamık Volkan Editor's Introduction: In Consultation, My First Meeting with Maurice Apprey 1. Delayed Preface, Or, How to Read my Work 2. The Urgent and the Voluntary in Errands: W. H. Auden and my Very First Intuitive Grasp of Psychoanalysis 3. Repairing History: Reworking Transgenerational Trauma 4. "Scripting" Inhabitations of Unwelcome Guests, Hosts and Ghosts: Unpacking Elements That Constitute Transgenerational Haunting 5. Representing, Theorizing and Reconfiguring the Concept of Transgenerational Haunting in Order to Facilitate Healing 6. Difference and the Awakening of Wounds in Intercultural Psychoanalysis 7. Reinventing the Self in the Face of Received Transgenerational Hatred in the African American Community 8. A Pluperfact Errand: A Turbulent Return to the Beginnings in the Transgenerational Transmission of Destructive Aggression 9. Three Leitmotifs for Sequencing and Transforming the Process of Transgenerational Transmission of Destructive Aggression 10. Transgenerational Transmission in Psychoanalysis: Dislocating Errands 11. "Containing the Uncontainable": The Return of the Phantom and Its Reconfiguration in Ethnonational Conflict Resolution 12. "To Maurice, with Best Wishes from One Strategist and Peacemaker to Another. John": An Evocative Reminiscence of Tension Between a Quiet Psychoanalytic Inner Voice and the Fire Outside 13. Emancipation from Institutionalization: A Case Study on Transgenerational Hauntings by Edward T. Novak 14 THROWN: A Personal Narrative of Psychoanalysis and Toxic Errands by William F. Cornell Afterword: Temporality and Apprey's Hauntology for Psychoanalysis by Michael Uebel
£28.49
Taylor & Francis Ltd Bion in the Consulting Room
Book SynopsisBion in the Consulting Room addresses the long-unanswered question of Bion's clinical and supervisorial technique and examines the way Bion's conceptual model and clinical practices informed his theoretical work.As Bion wrote about technique so rarely, the authors set about looking at many of his clinical and supervisorial examples to infer what might be learned from them. This book factors in the four distinctive periods of Bion''s clinical and supervisorial work in chronological order: the group period of the 1940s; the period of the psychosis papers in the 1950s; the epistemological period of the early 1960s; and, finally, the period of his international group seminars in the late 1960s and 1970s. In all four periods, the authors examine and analyze his method of clinical inquiry, or how he went about knowing and experiencing his analysands and supervisees. The authors offer a uniquely overarching view of his method of clinical inquiry, uncovering an amazing consist
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Clinical Thinking of W. R. Bion in Brazil
Book SynopsisThe Clinical Thinking of W. R. Bion in Brazil is comprised of thirteen transcriptions of supervisions Wilfred Bion conducted during his three teaching and speaking tours of Brazil.During these tours, Bion conducted over 130 public supervisions of analytic cases in English in which he explained his theories and illustrated their clinical application. Following on from the first volume, Bion in Brazil: Supervisions and Commentaries (2017), this book presents each supervision in full, with an accompanying commentary written by a senior Brazilian psychoanalyst and Bionian scholar. Arguably, no psychoanalyst has had as much impact on psychoanalytic development in Brazil than Bion, and this collection of his seminars, presented here for the first time, acts as a historical document and testament to his legacy in contemporary analysis.The Clinical Thinking of W. R. Bion in Brazil provides a unique opportunity for contemporary psychoanalysts, candidates, aTrade Review'This is an extraordinary book. These encounters with Bion and his interlocutors, followed by a rich panoply of commentaries, are thrilling, moving, sometimes funny, occasionally dangerous and deeply wise.'Anne Alvarez, author of The Thinking Heart (Routledge, 2012)'Levine, de Mattos Brito and Junqueiro de Mattos have given us an invaluable gift - an additional collection of seminars, accompanied by perceptive commentaries, which take us into the heart of Bion's clinical thinking, providing us with another vertex from which to observe the complexity of his thinking. Bion does not agree to take on the role of the one who knows, but rather takes us on an excursion through his mind, in the attempt to listen and find words for the ineffable emotional experience. Bion allows himself to be stimulated by the material presented to him, guided by his faith in the psychoanalytic method. If we agree to surrender to this way of listening, we too can be suddenly struck and moved by a new thought that dawns on us. Bion illustrates his way of working, always deeply aware of the immense difficulty in being an analyst, in finding "a language which conveys what you want it to convey, and at the same time, which the patient could understand", struggling against the perpetual "pressure to become insensitive, to grow a crust".'Avner Bergstein, Israel Psychoanalytic Society; author of Bion and Meltzer's Expeditions into Unmapped Mental Life (Routledge, 2018)'It is impossible not to be enthusiastic about this book. These fully recorded events offer readers the opportunity to follow Bion, as he expresses his ideas across 13 supervisions during his four visits to Brazil. Bion’s comments reflect his evolving interest in working with the undifferentiated layers of the mind and the application of his intuitive approach. Additional layers of thought are added by the accompanying commentaries of senior Brazilian psychoanalysts, along with a precious Introduction by Nicola Abel-Hirsch.'João Carlos Braga, Full Member, Supervisor, and Training Analyst at São Paulo’s Brazilian Psychoanalytic Society and Psychoanalytic Group of Curitiba.Table of ContentsForeword Introduction: A Route into the Supervisions 1. Supervision A13 and Commentary 2. Supervision A12 and Commentary 3. Supervision D2 and Commentary 4. Supervision D10 and Commentary 5. Supervision D4 and Commentary 6. Supervision D6 and Commentary 7. Supervision D1 and Commentary 8. Supervision D9 and Commentary 9. Supervision A19 and Commentary 10. Supervision A15 and Commentary 11. Supervision A35 and Commentary 12. Supervision S24 and Commentary 13. Supervision D7 and Commentary
£29.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Work of Donald Meltzer Revisited
Book SynopsisThe Work of Donald Meltzer Revisited: 100 Years After His Birth returns to and reassesses the contributions of Donald Meltzer, one of the most significant disciples of Melanie Klein and who was deeply inspired by Wilfred Bion.An international selection of leading contributors delves into the work of Meltzer and explores a wide range of topics introduced and developed by him, including the claustrum, adhesive identification and preformed and analytic transference. The book also considers Meltzer's approach to dreams and presents relevant clinical vignettes. It provides a thorough account of the way Meltzer's contributions have evolved and enriched psychoanalytic theory and practice.The Work of Donald Meltzer Revisited: 100 Years After His Birth will be of great interest to students and psychoanalysts both in practice and in training, especially those less familiar with the legacy of Meltzer's work.
£34.99
Taylor & Francis Depression
Book SynopsisThis book serves as a practical and comprehensive introduction to depression and its deep roots in trauma.Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber looks at the heterogeneous and complex phenomenon of depression and considers a range of topics essential to those faced with the challenge posed by the illness. Throughout the chapters, Leuzinger-Bohleber looks at the central experience of powerlessness and helplessness, the impact of trauma and transgenerational transmission, as well as clinical research and medical intervention. Throughout, she reviews and explains up-to-date clinical research findings and guides the reader on how to apply these in a clinical setting across a wide range of aspects within the psychodynamic understanding of depression.Including a review of both classical psychoanalytic texts and state-of-the-art empirical research, this introductory book is an invaluable resource for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists in private practice and Public Health institutions
£24.51