Social, group or collective psychology Books
Creative Media Partners, LLC Patching the Wetware
£22.75
Creative Media Partners, LLC Patching the Wetware
£14.09
Creative Media Partners, LLC Mental Health Care
£21.80
Creative Media Partners, LLC Group Therapy Inservice Training
£22.75
Creative Media Partners, LLC Mental Health Care
£13.22
Creative Media Partners, LLC Incredible Years Training Series
£21.80
Creative Media Partners, LLC Incredible Years Training Series
£13.22
Creative Media Partners, LLC The Effects of Combat Deployments on Children and Spouses
£21.80
Creative Media Partners, LLC The Effects of Combat Deployments on Children and Spouses
£13.22
Creative Media Partners, LLC Reducing Stereotype Threat in Classrooms
£13.22
Creative Media Partners, LLC Social Process
£29.40
£9.49
FriesenPress Space Is Not Empty
£26.09
ReadHowYouWant Prosocial
£33.24
NAMASTE International LTD Resolving from Within
£13.29
Independently Published A Bíblia dos Golpes
£10.23
£8.99
Viebooks LLC How to Read Body Language
£12.99
Cambridge University Press Heart to Heart
Book SynopsisDo emotions happen inside separate hearts and minds, or do they operate across the spaces between individuals? This book focuses on how emotions affect other people by changing their orientation to what happens in the social world. It provides the first sustained attempt to bring together literature on emotion''s social effects in dyads and groups, and on how people regulate their emotions in order to exploit these effects in their home and work lives. The chapters present state-of-the-art reviews of topics such as emotion contagion, social appraisal and emotional labour. The book then develops an innovative and integrative approach to the social psychology of emotion based on the idea of relation alignment. The implications not only stretch beyond face-to-face interactions into the wider interpersonal, institutional and cultural environment, but also penetrate the supposed depths of personal experience, making us rethink some of our strongly held presuppositions about how emotions work.Trade Review'Twenty-first century affective science has become a sprawl of studies and theories that resisted any unified treatment - until now. Brian Parkinson brings reason to emotion in a tour de force of patient and deeply analytical scholarship that is nonetheless personal and highly approachable. This volume is indispensable for anyone who does emotion research.' Alan J. Fridlund, University of California'This is an impressive scholarly monograph … In his theoretically challenging way, the author reverses the traditional inside-out approach and rethinks the heart of emotions as relational processes. Every emotion researcher should read this book.' Agneta H. Fischer, Universiteit van Amsterdam'Brian Parkinson, a pioneer in the social psychology of emotions, weaves a tale of the social facets of emotion in this new book. He masterfully covers decades of research, while transcending disciplinary boundaries. It is a truly important resource for any researcher interested in emotions.' Arvid Kappas, Jacobs University Bremen, Germany'Welcome to a Copernican view of emotion that sees emotions from 'outside and beyond', rather than from 'inside out'. Brian Parkinson achieves a skilful balance between didactic clarity and deep thoughtfulness, while providing an enlightening review of the social role of this scientific mystery called emotion.' José-Miguel Fernández-Dols, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain'When people reflect on their emotions, they tend to assume that these are private events, individual in nature, that happen to them. In this eloquently written and persuasively argued book, Brian Parkinson, the leading proponent of the view that emotions are fundamentally social, systematically undermines each of these assumptions.' Antony Manstead, Cardiff University'Providing a comprehensive review of the major contemporary issues in emotion research, this book recasts emotions first and foremost as a social lynchpin. Doing In doing so, it provides an important framework that promises to advance the study of this complex and fascinating phenomenon called emotion.' Shlomo Hareli, University of Haifa, Isreal'Comprehensive, provocative in parts and delightfully written, this book addresses a perennially timely question in emotion psychology: are emotions primarily intrapsychological or primarily social phenomena? I very much enjoyed reading the book.' Ursula Hess, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin'Claims that 'emotions are social constructions' are all the rage, but they are often divorced from both rigorous argumentation and empirical data. Brian Parkinson's monograph puts flesh around the slogans of the social constructionist movement, making a powerful case that emotions are strategies of relationship realignment rather than passive feelings to be explained in strictly physiological terms.' Andrea Scarantino, Georgia State University'As a longstanding proponent of the social approach to emotion, Brian Parkinson provides an insightful account of state-of-the-art theories and research on emotions' inherently social constitution. This book is invaluable for anyone who wishes to understand emotion's impact on our social lives.' Gerben van Kleef, Universiteit van Amsterdam'In this comprehensive, theoretically rich, accessible treatise, Parkinson (Univ. of Oxford, UK) challenges and reverses traditional psychological and individualistic accounts of emotions' origins. In a wholesale paradigmatic shift, he presents an approach to their understanding that is interpersonal, interactive, relational, and fundamentally social in nature, beginning from birth … The overall result is a thought-provoking study that will certainly extend emotion research into several new directions for years to come.' J. R. Mitrano, ChoiceTable of Contents1. What's at the heart of emotions?; 2. Words and concepts; 3. Facial activity and emotion expression; 4. Explaining emotional influence; 5. Regulating emotions; 6. Social functions; 7. Groups, teams, and crowds; 8. Working with emotions; 9. Reorientation; References.
£110.00
Cambridge University Press More Examples Less Theory
Book SynopsisIn his new book, Michael Billig uses psychology''s past to argue that nowadays, when we write about the mind, we should use more examples and less theory. He provides a series of historical studies, analysing how key psychological writers used examples. Billig offers new insights about famous analysts of the mind, such as Locke, James, Freud, Tajfel and Lewin. He also champions unfairly forgotten figures, like the Earl of Shaftesbury and the eccentric Abraham Tucker. There is a cautionary chapter on Lacan, warning what can happen when examples are ignored. Marie Jahoda is praised as the ultimate example: a psychologist from the twentieth century with a social and rhetorical imagination fit for the twenty-first. More Examples, Less Theory is an easy-to-read book that will inform and entertain academics and their students. It will particularly appeal to those who enjoy the details of examples rather than the simplifications of big theory.Trade Review'In this highly readable work, Michael Billig makes a compelling argument that good examples do far more to advance and enliven theory than fancy jargon ever could. Students and seasoned writers of psychology will find inspiration in his engaging investigation into some of the most effective communicators in psychology's past.' Alexandra Rutherford, York University, Toronto'A common tendency of psychologists is to describe phenomena through the lens of their own pre-existing theories, thus making phenomena resemble their theories rather than vice versa. In this book, Michael Billig argues for a fundamental reversal of psychology's methodological habits, emphasising the value of 'particularising' psychological insights through the use of richly detailed examples, thus subsuming the general within the specific rather than the opposite. It is a lesson that could invigorate psychology, underscoring how the use of concrete examples helps us see and empathise and remember in ways that theoretical accounts rarely do. Through various case studies, Billig shows how we can learn as well as teach by example.' David E. Leary, University of Richmond'The truth is in the details, not in abstract theory. In his new book, Michael Billig shows us how examples can lead to a better understanding of psychological issues. Analysing the thinking and writing of eminent psychologists, he offers the reader a rich and intriguing alternative history of psychology.' Ruud Abma, Universiteit Utrecht, the Netherlands'This thought-provoking and important book by one of the principal scholars in contemporary psychology and social science makes a strong case for investigating human lives as they are lived, rather than searching for universally applicable theories by means of narrowly controlled experimental research.' Christine Griffin, University of Bath'Billig insists that examples are in rhetorical tension to theory. Here there is something gently subversive about More Examples, [Less Theory]. For the book is not just about writing or the use of examples. It is also a scornful critique of that most sacred of modern academic shibboleths: doing theory and being theoretical.' Michael Marinetto, Times Higher Education'Michael Billig's book puts many basic psychological ideas and approaches in their time and place and describes the minds, personalities, situations and histories of their protagonists. It helps the reader to see where psychology had come from, and why it is like it is. At the end Billig adds a few modest but welcome recommendations for young psychologists. I hope this book becomes a standard text for psychologists early in their studies. I for one should have been greatly helped if Michael Billig's book had been available when I started out.' John Richer, Human Ethology'Starting with the examples of nine very different writers, he selects an exemplary work from each of them and discusses the use (or sometimes neglect) of examples within that work. Furthermore, since most of the chapters are based on material presented in Billig's previously published works, they provide examples of one thoughtful scholar's concerns and interests over a long and productive career.' Raymond E. Fancher, Journal of the History of the Behavioral SciencesTable of Contents1. Introduction; 2. Locke and Shaftesbury: foster father and foster son; 3. Tucker and James: in the same stream of thought; 4. Freud: writing to reveal and conceal himself; 5. Lacan: an ego in pursuit of the ego; 6. Lewin: is there nothing as practical as a good example?; 7. Tajfel and Bernstein: the limits of theory; 8. Jahoda: the ultimate example; 9. Concluding remarks.
£94.00
Palgrave Macmillan Dangerous Discourses of Disability Subjectivity and Sexuality
Book SynopsisAcknowledgments Introduction Corporealities Genealogies Contested Pleasures and Governmentality Sexuality, Subjectivity and Anxiety Transgressing the Law Queer Pleasures Global Corporealities Conclusion: Thinking Differently Notes Bibliography IndexTrade Review“Margrit Shildrick’s Dangerous Discourses of Disability, Subjectivity and Sexuality marks a welcome, needed, and challenging contribution. … scholars from multiple disciplines interested in critical disability studies—from English to gender and sexuality studies and from sociology to bioethics—will find it insightful and provocative.” (Joel Michael Reynolds, IJFAB: International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics, Vol. 11 (1), 2018)Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction Corporealities Genealogies Contested Pleasures and Governmentality Sexuality, Subjectivity and Anxiety Transgressing the Law Queer Pleasures Global Corporealities Conclusion: Thinking Differently Notes Bibliography Index
£71.24
Palgrave MacMillan UK The Psychology of ProEnvironmental Communication Beyond Standard Information Strategies
Book SynopsisThe environment is part of everyone's life but there are difficulties in communicating complex environmental problems, such as climate change, to a lay audience. In this book Klöckner defines environmental communication, providing a comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the issues involved in encouraging pro-environmental behaviour.Trade Review“This book will appeal to those who want a broad, academic, well-referenced foundation to environmental communication which is understandable to educated laypeople. … this book contains a wealth of actionable concepts and techniques. … The Psychology of Pro-Environmental Communication: Beyond Standard Information Strategies provides a valuable resource which environmental communicators may benefit from drawing on for insights and the stimulation of brainstorms.” (George M. Jacobs, Language & Ecology, ecolinguistics-association.org, 2017)“Multidisciplinary in nature, this book offers a comprehensive overview of theory and case studies. The parts of this book dedicated to accounting for the role of intraorganizational dynamics and innovation are arguably the most useful. These insights are applicable not only to environmental communication, but also organizational communication and management.” (Hyun Tae (Calvin) Kim, International Journal of Communication, Vol. 10, 2016)Table of ContentsPreface1. What is Environmental Communication and Why is it Important? 2. Potential and Limitations of Environmental Communication3. Understanding Communication - Insights from Theories of Communication4. Decision models - What Psychological Theories Teach Us about People's Behaviour5. Communication in Large Social Systems - How Information Spreads through Societies6. Traditional and New Media - About Amplification and Negation7. Target Group Segmentation - Why Knowing your Audience is Important8. An Overview of Communication-Based Intervention Techniques9. Promoting Pro-Environmental Behaviour in Groups and Organisations 10. Playing Good? - Environmental Communication through Games and Simulations11. Rock Festivals, Sport Events, Theatre - Some Out-of-the-Ordinary Means of Environmental Communication
£26.59
Palgrave MacMillan Us The Radical Humanism of Erich Fromm Critical Political Theory and Radical Practice
Book SynopsisThis book argues that Fromm is a vital and largely overlooked contribution to twentieth-century intellectual history, and one who offers a refreshingly reconfigured form of humanism that is capable of reintegrating explicitly humanist analytical categories and schemas back into social theoretical (and scientific) considerations.Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. The Life and Writings of a Radical Humanist 2. The Roots of Radical Humanism 3. Radical Humanist Psychoanalysis 4. Psychoanalytic Social Psychology 5. Anti-Humanism: A Radical Humanist Defense 6. The Renaissance of Humanism Conclusion
£85.49
Palgrave MacMillan Us Psychiatry Under the Influence Institutional Corruption Social Injury and Prescriptions for Reform
Book SynopsisPsychiatry Under the Influence investigates the actions and practices of the American Psychiatric Association and academic psychiatry in the United States, and presents it as a case study of institutional corruption.Trade Review“This is an extraordinary piece of work that should be read by every mental health professional, minimally. The book might also serve well as a supplemental advanced undergraduate or graduate textbook in a psychopathology or even a research methods class. Where research methods courses separate good from bad science, Whitaker and Cosgrove have now provided us with numerous examples of bad science to which we can now add, corrupt science.” (Fred Ernst, Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, Vol. 46, 2016)Table of ContentsForeword PART I: SEEDS OF CORRUPTION 1. A Case Study of Institutional Corruption 2. Psychiatry Adopts a Disease Model 3. Economies of Influence PART II: SCIENCE CORRUPTED 4. The Etiology of Mental Illness is Now Known 5. Psychiatry's New Drugs 6. Expanding the Market 7. Protecting the Market 8. The End Product: Clinical Practice Guidelines PART III: THE SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS 9. A Society Harmed 10. Putting Psychiatry on the Couch 11. Prescriptions for Reform
£44.99
Picador USA How to Stay Sane
£11.39
Celadon Books Youre Not Listening
Book SynopsisWhen was the last time you listened to someone, or someone really listened to you?If you're like most people, you don't listen as often or as well as you'd like. There's no one better qualified than a talented journalist to introduce you to the right mindset and skillsetand this book does it with science and humor. -Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Originals and Give and Take**Hand picked by Malcolm Gladwell, Adam Grant, Susan Cain, and Daniel Pink for Next Big Ideas Club**An essential book for our times.-Lori Gottlieb, New York Times bestselling author of Maybe You Should Talk to SomeoneAt work, we're taught to lead the conversation.On social media, we shape our personal narratives.At parties, we talk over one another. So do our politicians.We're not listening.And no one is listening to us.Despite living in a world where technology
£22.95
Picador USA On Giving Up
£14.40
PublishDrive THE DIY HOME APOTHECARY
£17.41
Lulu.com The Final Covenant
£80.02
Lulu Press ates t a
£13.52
£72.38
Lulu.com Anthology of Deception
£49.58
Palgrave MacMillan UK Critical Discursive Psychology
Book SynopsisIntroduction 1. Theoretical Discourse, Subjectivity and Critical Psychology PART I: ENLIGHTENMENT, REALISM AND POWER (AND THEIR REVERSE) 2. Against Postmodernism: Psychology in Cultural Context 2a. Against Against-ism: Comment on Parker; Fred Newman and Lois Holzman 2b. Critical Distance: Reply to Newman and Holzman 3. Against Relativism in Psychology, On Balance 3a. Regulating Criticism: Some Comments on an Argumentative Complex; Jonathan Potter, Derek Edwards and Malcolm Ashmore 3b. The Quintessentially Academic Position 4. Against Wittgenstein: Materialist Reflections on Language in Psychology 4a. The Practical Turn in Psychology: Marx and Wittgenstein as Social Materialists; John. T. Jost and Curtis D. Hardin 4b. Reference Points for Critical Theoretical Work in Psychology PART II: THE TURN TO DISCOURSE AS A CRITICAL THEORETICAL RESOURCE 5. Discursive Psychology Uncut 6. Discourse: Definitions and Contradictions 6a. Discourse: Noun, Verb or Social Practice?; Jonathan Potter, Margaret Wetherell, Ros Gill and Derek Edwards 6b. The Context of Discourse: Let's Not Throw the Baby Out With the Bathwater; Dominic Abrams and Michael A. Hogg 6c. Real Things: Discourse, Context and Practice PART III: CRITICAL DISCURSIVE RESEARCH, SUBJECTIVITY AND PRACTICE 7. Reflexive Research and Grounding of Analysis: Psychology and the Psy-Complex 8. Tracing Therapeutic Discourse in Material Culture 9. Constructing and Deconstructing Psychotherapeutic Discourse 10. The Psychosocial Turn 11. Critical ReflectionsTrade Review"Critical Discursive Psychology collects more than a decade's intellectual work into a single volume...readers now have easy-access to some of the most pertinent, theoretically inspiring, and discursively engaged of Parker's contributions." - Catriona Macleod and Lindy Wilbraham, Psychology in SocietyTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. Theoretical Discourse, Subjectivity and Critical Psychology PART I: ENLIGHTENMENT, REALISM AND POWER (AND THEIR REVERSE) 2. Against Postmodernism: Psychology in Cultural Context 2a. Against Against-ism: Comment on Parker; Fred Newman and Lois Holzman 2b. Critical Distance: Reply to Newman and Holzman 3. Against Relativism in Psychology, On Balance 3a. Regulating Criticism: Some Comments on an Argumentative Complex; Jonathan Potter, Derek Edwards and Malcolm Ashmore 3b. The Quintessentially Academic Position 4. Against Wittgenstein: Materialist Reflections on Language in Psychology 4a. The Practical Turn in Psychology: Marx and Wittgenstein as Social Materialists; John. T. Jost and Curtis D. Hardin 4b. Reference Points for Critical Theoretical Work in Psychology PART II: THE TURN TO DISCOURSE AS A CRITICAL THEORETICAL RESOURCE 5. Discursive Psychology Uncut 6. Discourse: Definitions and Contradictions 6a. Discourse: Noun, Verb or Social Practice?; Jonathan Potter, Margaret Wetherell, Ros Gill and Derek Edwards 6b. The Context of Discourse: Let's Not Throw the Baby Out With the Bathwater; Dominic Abrams and Michael A. Hogg 6c. Real Things: Discourse, Context and Practice PART III: CRITICAL DISCURSIVE RESEARCH, SUBJECTIVITY AND PRACTICE 7. Reflexive Research and Grounding of Analysis: Psychology and the Psy-Complex 8. Tracing Therapeutic Discourse in Material Culture 9. Constructing and Deconstructing Psychotherapeutic Discourse 10. The Psychosocial Turn 11. Critical Reflections
£49.49
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Phenomenology and the Social Context of Psychiatry Social Relations Psychopathology and Husserls Philosophy Bloomsbury Studies in Continental Philosophy
Book SynopsisMagnus Englander is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Work at Malmö University, Sweden and Faculty Member in the Department of Humanistic and Clinical Psychology, Saybrook University, USA. He also serves as the Book Review Editor for the Journal of Phenomenological Psychology. Trade ReviewContributors include clinicians and scholars from the US and northern Europe; their varied perspectives provide a multifaceted view of the contributions phenomenological approaches can make to psychological research … Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, and faculty. * CHOICE *This is a scholarly and thought provoking book, written by philosophically sophisticated contributors, that provides an appealing vision of psychiatry that takes seriously the social dimension of human existence. It includes several chapters that have direct clinical relevance. I believe that it would interest a broad range of readers and scholars, especially in psychology and philosophy. -- Steen Halling, Professor Emeritus, Department of Psychology, Seattle University, USATable of ContentsIntroduction: Magnus Englander Towards a Phenomenological Social Psychiatry Chapter 1: Larry Davidson Transcendental Intersubjectivity as the Foundation for a Phenomenological Social Psychiatry Chapter 2: Mads Gram Henriksen Schizophrenia, Psychosis, and Empathy Chapter 3: Magnus Englander Empathy in a Social Psychiatry Chapter 4: Scott D. Churchill On the Empathic Mode of Intuition: A Phenomenological Foundation for Social Psychiatry Chapter 5: Frederick J. Wertz, Miraj U. Desai, Emily Maynard, Justin R. Misurell, Mary Beth Morrissey, Batya Rotter, Nicoletta C. Skoufalos Research Methods for Person-Centered Health Science: Fordham Studies of Suffering and Transcendence Chapter 6: Idun Røseth & Rob Bongaardt A Phenomenological Understanding of Postpartum Depression and its Treatment Chapter 7: Samuel Thoma & Thomas Fuchs A Phenomenology of Sensus Communis: Outline of a Phenomenological Approach to Social Psychiatry Chapter 8: Susi Ferrarello Husserl's Ethics and Psychiatry Chapter 9: Marc Applebaum The I and the We: Psychological Reflections on Husserl’s Egology Index
£33.99
£36.19
£10.66
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Marriage and Divorce in America
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction Encyclopedia Entries Abortion Absent Father Absent Mother Ackerman Institute for Family Therapy Addiction (non-substance) Addictions, Drugs, and Alcohol Adoption Adoption of Stepchildren Adults and Illness Age Differences in Relationships American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy American Indian Marriage and Divorce Annulment Anti-miscegenation Laws Arranged Marriage, Association of Family and Conciliation Courts Attachment Theory of Love Bachelor Party Bachelorette Parties Bankruptcy Blended Families Bridal Showers Celibate Marriage Child Abuse Child Custody Child-Inclusive Mediation Child Marriage Child Support Child Support Calculations Childcare and Eldercare Children and Illness Children with Exceptionalities Children’s Rights Council Collaborative Divorce Common Law Marriage Communication between Couples in Divorce Communication between Parents and Children in Divorce Conflict Management Contraception Co-parenting and Divorce Co-Parenting Typologies Cycle of Abuse Dating, Paradigm Shifts Dating, Technology and Dating after Divorce Dating and Courtship, 1950–2000 Dating and Courtship 2000–Present Dating and Courtship pre-1950 Death of a Child Death of A Spouse Deinstitutionalization of Marriage Delaying Marriage Destination Wedding Disillusionment Diversity in Marriage Division of Assets Divorce, Economic Consequences (Personal) Divorce, Economic Consequences (Taxpayers) Divorce, Grandparents and Divorce, Intergenerational Transmission Divorce, No-Fault and Fault-Based Divorce, Process of Divorce, Psychological Effects Divorce, Stigma Divorce, types of Divorce and Incarceration Divorce and Legal Planning Divorce Coaching Divorce Education Divorce Initiation Divorce Later in Life Divorce Mediation Divorce Mill Divorce 1950–200 Divorce Pre-1950 Divorce Support Groups Donor Insemination Dowries Economic Independence Elopement Endogamy Engagements Exhibitionism Exogamy Father Support Groups Five Love Languages Focus on the Family Friendship and Divorce Gender Roles Genealogy Gottman Institute Half-Siblings and Step-Siblings Halo Effect Homogamy Honeymoon Hypomogamy and Hypermogamy Incarceration, Coparenting and Incarceration, Couples Therapy and Incest Individualized Marriages Infidelity In-Laws Interfaith Marriage International Association for Relationship Research International Marriage Interracial Marriage Intimate Partner Violence LGBTQ, Divorces and Separations LGBTQ, Marriages and Unions LGBTQ Parenthood Living Apart Together Love at First Sight Love, Connection, and Intimacy Mail-Order Brides Marital Expectations Marital Success Marriage, Financial Implications Marriage, Five Types of Marriage, Sleep and Marriage and African American Population Marriage and Divorce, Latino Americans Marriage and Popular Culture Marriage and Divorce White Americans Marriage and Education Level Marriage and Immigration Marriage and Incarceration Marriage and Legal Planning Marriage and Military Families Marriage and Relocation Marriage Certificate/License Marriage Counseling Marriage Retreats Marriage Squeeze Maternal Gatekeeping Monogamy Name Changes National Council on Family Relations National Father Initiative Neurodiversity and Marriage 90 Day Fiancé Nonresidential Fathers Nonresidential Mothers On-Again, Off-Again Relationships Open Marriage Parallel Parenting Parent Education Programs Parental Alienation Parenthood, Transition Parenthood, Unmarried Parenting Plans and Custody Arrangements Planned Parenthood viii | Contents Planned Parenthood (Organization) Polyamory Polygamy Pornography Postnuptial Agreement Premarital Counseling Premarital Pregnancy Premarital Sex Prenuptial Agreement Registry (Bridal and Wedding) Relationship Education Relationship Self-Sabotage Relationships, Technology and Remarriage Sexual Compatibility Shared Custody Socioeconomic Status and Marriage Spousal Support Styles of Love (John Lee) Step-families Step-families, Developmental Stages Step-families, Laws and Policies Step-family Education Swingers Tender Years Doctrine Toxic Relationship Triangular Theory of Love (Sternberg) Trophy Husband Trophy Wife Unmarried Cohabitation Unplanned Pregnancy Value Theory/Role Theory Visitation Wedding Industry Wedding Officiant Wedding Part Wedding Reception Wedding Rituals Wedding Venues Wedding Vows Work Wives and Work Husbands About the Editor and Contributors Index
£999.99
Springer New York Nonviolence and Peace Psychology Peace Psychology Book Series
Book SynopsisRecent events worldwide have increased public interest in nonviolence, pacifism, and peace psychology. This important volume assembles multiple perspectives to create a comprehensive and nuanced understanding of the concepts and phenomena of nonviolence.Trade ReviewFrom the reviews: “Mayton (Lewis-Clark State College) presents the foundations of peace psychology in this release in the ‘Peace Psychology Book Series.’ … this accessible book will serve both experienced and inexperienced readers in psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science, and philosophy. … Each chapter includes an annotated list of relevant recommended reading and Web sites. … gives specific recommendations for future research. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.” (E. E. Gratz, Choice, Vol. 47 (7), March, 2010) “Mayton has written an impressive and scholarly text that blends theory, historical references, and empirical research to address the nuances of nonviolence from an intrapersonal to cultural and societal level. … Nonviolence and Peace Psychology is an essential text for individuals across a range of domains from education to clinical practice. … Each chapter is well organized, carefully researched, inclusive of critical evaluation of the theory and research, and extensively referenced. … this book will make a valuable addition to anyone’s personal or university library.” (Linda M. Woolf, PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 55 (24), June, 2010)Table of ContentsMeaning of Nonviolence and Pacifism.- Recent History of Nonviolent Responses to Conflict.- Theories of Nonviolence.- Intrapersonal Perspectives of Nonviolence.- Interpersonal Perspectives of Nonviolence.- Cultural and Societal Perspectives of Nonviolence.- Nonviolent Perspectives Within the Abrahamic Religions.- Situational Influences on Nonviolent Action.- Measurement Tools for Research on Nonviolence and Related Concepts.- New Directions for Research on Nonviolence.
£94.99
Rowman & Littlefield Psychoanalysis and Literature
Book SynopsisPsychoanalysis offers many concepts that are extremely useful clinically but not always accessible in the original. In Psychoanalysis and Literature: The Stories We Live, Marilyn Charles pairs case vignettes with examples from literature to highlight the essential human struggles that play out in the consulting room. This pairing depathologizes those struggles and offers a conceptual framework that can help the clinician facilitate these journeys of discovery. Describing first how literature affords an opportunity for vicarious engagement with struggles endemic to the human condition, she then focuses on trauma, dreams, and cultural collisions' turning more explicitly to the developmental challenges of identity, relatedness, aging, and generativity. Psychoanalysis and Literature is accessible, relevant, and timely.Trade ReviewA psychoanalyst in private practice, Charles provides an adroit exploration of the ways in which literature and clinical work often function as mappings of the same terrain—terrain that is at once intellectual, emotional, and behavioral. By bringing her work with patients in sync with her readings of literary texts—by writers from Herman Melville to Virginia Woolf to John Fowles—the author is able to look at the human condition, and the lived lives of her patients, from a vantage point outside the individual therapeutic case. Literature and literary metaphor afford Charles a mode of inquiry that has the special capacity to highlight the structures and patterns that underlie the particulars of a person's life. Charles's investigations of texts and lives crosses the territory of sensory experience, trauma, dreams, relatedness, and identity issues related to the collision of culture, aging, and death. One strength of the book is the author's refusal to pathologize the individual dilemmas playing out in her consulting room; she always sees her patients' lives as part of the larger human condition that literature has mapped independent of the healing arts and sciences. This book will have great appeal to those whose interests are humanistic, clinical, and philosophical, whatever the level of preparation. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals; general readers. -- Michael Uebel, University of Texas * CHOICE *One of my graduate school professors was fond of telling us that our role as therapists was to be the keepers of others’ stories. Psychoanalysis is a perspective keenly centered on the stories we tell ourselves, both about our own lives and in the realm of fictions. Charles’ Psychoanalysis and Literature is a great contribution to this ever-fruitful conversation. * Psychology Today *"Marilyn Charles unites the dimensions of literature and clinical encounters, creating a fresh perspective of their mutually illuminating interplay. Exploring the value of the unconscious, dreams, myths and metaphors, this precious volume brims with transformative wisdom. Charles conveys the poetry of life’s journey, directing us to live fully, in the experience of mind, body and world and to open deeply to pain and pleasure, trauma and insight––from birth to death." -- Danielle Knafo, Ph.D., Long Island University, author of Dancing with the Unconscious“Marilyn Charles has given us a profound work, a writing clearly destined to become a classic in contemporary psychoanalytic thinking. Her powerful, deeply creative, moving, and accessible prose carries us from literature to dreams to the clinical experience, with an unparalleled intellectual grace and spacious depth of feeling. She succeeds in her effort ‘to understand some essential patterns at the core of the dilemma of being human.’ This is truly a remarkable book that will leave a deep and lasting impression on our field and beyond.” -- Paul Lippmann, Ph.D., William Alanson White Psychoanalytic Institute“Readers from many fields—clinical, academic, and non-professional—will be enriched by this book. With her emphasis upon metaphor, creativity, and the discovery of human experience, Marilyn Charles explores literary and psychoanalytic relations with fresh, sensitive, and smartly subtle intelligence.” -- Marshall Alcorn, PhD, George Washington UniversityFrom the narratives of The Stories We Live, one cannot fail to appreciate Marilyn Charles’s devotion to psychoanalysis….This book shows exquisite breadth in its choices and illuminations of psychoanalytic foundations and directions. Her case studies shadowed by literary tales, bring analysis very close to the reader.… [who] is necessarily engaged with Charles’s love of psychoanalysis, her love of literature, and her fidelity to her patients. -- Kareen Malone, PhD, University of West GeorgiaTable of ContentsPart I: LITERATURE, PSYCHOANALYSIS, AND SENSORY EXPERIENCE Introduction 1.Epiphany: The Poet’s Art, The Analyst’s Instrument: Formal Structure as a Vehicle for the Expression of Primary Experience: To the Lighthouse 2.The Waves: Tensions between Creativity and Containment in the Life and Writings of Virginia Woolf Part II: TRAUMA 3.Falling Man: Encounters with Catastrophic Change 4.Telling Trauma: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle Part III: DREAMS 5.The Book of Intimate Grammar: Transgenerational Trauma 6.Dreamscapes: Rectangular Spaces in Memoirs of a Survivor and in Dreams 7.Pictures at an Exhibition: Reparation and Redemption, Nightmare and Memory Part IV: CULTURAL COLLISIONS 8.Collisions Between Conscious and Unconscious; East and West; Enigma and Transparency: Kafka on the Shore 9.Cultural Chasms: Catastrophic Change and the Excluded Other: Mulberry and Peach Part V: THE HERO’S QUEST: IDENTITY AND RELATEDNESS 10.The Labyrinth, Part I: The Magus 11.Journeys into the Labyrinth, Part II: Through the Unknown, Remembered Gate: The Glass Bead Game 12.Standing Outside the Gates: Pierre, or the Ambiguities 13.Identity Derailed: The Echo Maker Part VI: RELATEDNESS, AGING, AND GENERATIVITY 14.Identity, Community, and Object Choice, Part I: Mrs. Dalloway and Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing 15.Identity, Community, and Object Choice, Part II: Possession 16. Aging and Death: The Map and the Territory, The Sense of an Ending, and All Passion
£84.00
Rowman & Littlefield Erik Eriksons Verbal Portraits
Book SynopsisIn his late teens and early twenties Erik H. Erikson, the widely acclaimed psychoanalyst and developmental theorist, aspired to be an artist. In Erik Erikson's Verbal Portraits: Luther, Gandhi, Einstein, Jesus, Donald Capps contends that Erikson's portraits of respective historical figures not only reflect his artistic gifts but also make a highly creative contribution to psychoanalytic discourse. Moreover, his verbal portraits are vivid and compelling representations of his multifaceted conception of identity. His emphasis on the formative role of the mutual recognition of mother and infant in human portraiture, the importance he attaches to the Self and the sense of I, and his use of psychoanalysis as a means to experience the living presence of noteworthy historical figures are especially noted. In addition to his portraits of the four men, his brief verbal portrait of Ruth Benedict is presented, and his personal identification with a fifteenth century painting of Mary, the mother oTrade ReviewCapps is on form. Much like Erikson’s work in his own time, Capps delivers a new way of looking at things ‘already familiar.’ Readers will not be disappointed. These beautiful and articulate depictions of Erikson’s verbal portraits give us a new way of looking at the ‘already familiar’ life and achievements of Erikson as a portraitist. I have never seen Erikson in this way before. I admire and deeply enjoy what this book accomplishes. -- Kate Miriam Loewenthal, emeritus, University of LondonErik Erikson put the word ‘identity’ on the map of modern vocabulary, in part because he had his own struggles with identity. Having given up his dream of becoming an artist, Erikson reclaimed this aspect of himself by means of ‘verbal portraits.’ In this remarkable book, Capps demonstrates the ongoing relevance of Erikson’s [portraits] of inspiring individuals and, in so doing, inspires us all. -- Nathan Carlin, PhD, University of Texas Medical School, HoustonDonald Capps does in this book for Erik Erikson what Erikson does in his quartet of 'verbal portraits.' He offers a way of looking at his subject that is richly illuminating because it is informed by his own longstanding personal engagement with one of the towering psychoanalysts of the mid-twentieth century. -- Peter L. Rudnytsky, University of Florida and the Florida Psychoanalytic InstituteTable of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1. The Identity Concept and the Verbal Portrait 2. Creative Recovery: Portrait of Martin Luther 3. Mutual Recognition: Portrait of Mohandas Gandhi 4. Radiant Intelligence: Portrait of Albert Einstein 5. Self-Reconciliation: Portrait of Jesus of Galilee Epilogue Bibliography
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