Description

Book Synopsis
Language plays a major role in our daily lives. Humans are specialized to live in a social environment, and our brains are designed to manage interactions with others which are, for the most part, accomplished through words. Language allows us to function both cognitively and interpersonally, and without language there are constraints on our ability to interact with others.Language also plays a major role in that specialized form of interpersonal interaction that we call psychotherapy or psychoanalysis. In that setting we use words to express and communicate meaning clearly, and through spoken language we help our patients to organize and modify their experiences of self and of the world, fostering adaptive change.Like the air we breathe, when our language serves its function it is transparent to us. We notice it most when it fails. When it does fail its basic function, in life and in psychotherapy, it fails to reliably, effectively, and comfortably help us to connect with others, as w

Trade Review
From the perspective of the brain, mental ideas are always expressed in the ‘language’ of the BODY, and sometimes they are also expressed in the ‘language’ of WORDS. Dr. Mary Davis weaves together a series of clear, sensitive, and fully alive clinical stories to illustrate how the analyst must become fluent in both ‘languages’ in order to fully understand and communicate with the patient. This book makes it obvious that Dr. Davis exhibits the rare capacity to hone to the analytic task, while remaining fully engaged and fluid in how she connects with patients. -- Regina Pally, MD, Center for Reflective Parenting
Davis is a child/adolescent psychiatrist and "graduate psychoanalyst" for children and adults. She has been in practice since 1980. In this brief volume, she shares her understanding of how communication occurs in her therapeutic work with a wide range of patients. The volume is well written, and the jargon is scant. The author does not specify an intended audience; rather, she says that her intention is to share what she has come to understand about her work. She reveals her presence across a range of actual patients. She clearly has reflected, through her professional work, across major theorists, but this is not a scholarly volume per se. Davis writes of translating patients to oneself and then to them, of helping them see how others misunderstand their intent, and how they misunderstand the intentions of others. Chapters include easy-to-grasp case examples. This volume will be appreciated by undergraduates in developmental psychology courses and by beginning therapists in the helping professions. Davis conveys care, openness, readiness to regroup, and discipline without rigidity. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; professionals. * CHOICE *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: The Language of Color and Hope Chapter 2: Bringing Meaning to Words in Psychotherapy Chapter 3: Function Follows Form Chapter 4: Bridging the Gap: Language and Relational Distance Chapter 5: Normal Language Development Chapter 6: Interferences with Normal Language Development Chapter 7: Speaking the Unspeakable: Language and Trauma Chapter 8: Saying the Unsayable: How We Say What There Are No Words For Chapter 9: Why (and How) Do Words Matter? Bibliography Index About the Author

Language and Connection in Psychotherapy

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    A Paperback by Mary H. Davis

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      View other formats and editions of Language and Connection in Psychotherapy by Mary H. Davis

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 1/12/2014 12:06:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781442238206, 978-1442238206
      ISBN10: 1442238208

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Language plays a major role in our daily lives. Humans are specialized to live in a social environment, and our brains are designed to manage interactions with others which are, for the most part, accomplished through words. Language allows us to function both cognitively and interpersonally, and without language there are constraints on our ability to interact with others.Language also plays a major role in that specialized form of interpersonal interaction that we call psychotherapy or psychoanalysis. In that setting we use words to express and communicate meaning clearly, and through spoken language we help our patients to organize and modify their experiences of self and of the world, fostering adaptive change.Like the air we breathe, when our language serves its function it is transparent to us. We notice it most when it fails. When it does fail its basic function, in life and in psychotherapy, it fails to reliably, effectively, and comfortably help us to connect with others, as w

      Trade Review
      From the perspective of the brain, mental ideas are always expressed in the ‘language’ of the BODY, and sometimes they are also expressed in the ‘language’ of WORDS. Dr. Mary Davis weaves together a series of clear, sensitive, and fully alive clinical stories to illustrate how the analyst must become fluent in both ‘languages’ in order to fully understand and communicate with the patient. This book makes it obvious that Dr. Davis exhibits the rare capacity to hone to the analytic task, while remaining fully engaged and fluid in how she connects with patients. -- Regina Pally, MD, Center for Reflective Parenting
      Davis is a child/adolescent psychiatrist and "graduate psychoanalyst" for children and adults. She has been in practice since 1980. In this brief volume, she shares her understanding of how communication occurs in her therapeutic work with a wide range of patients. The volume is well written, and the jargon is scant. The author does not specify an intended audience; rather, she says that her intention is to share what she has come to understand about her work. She reveals her presence across a range of actual patients. She clearly has reflected, through her professional work, across major theorists, but this is not a scholarly volume per se. Davis writes of translating patients to oneself and then to them, of helping them see how others misunderstand their intent, and how they misunderstand the intentions of others. Chapters include easy-to-grasp case examples. This volume will be appreciated by undergraduates in developmental psychology courses and by beginning therapists in the helping professions. Davis conveys care, openness, readiness to regroup, and discipline without rigidity. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; professionals. * CHOICE *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: The Language of Color and Hope Chapter 2: Bringing Meaning to Words in Psychotherapy Chapter 3: Function Follows Form Chapter 4: Bridging the Gap: Language and Relational Distance Chapter 5: Normal Language Development Chapter 6: Interferences with Normal Language Development Chapter 7: Speaking the Unspeakable: Language and Trauma Chapter 8: Saying the Unsayable: How We Say What There Are No Words For Chapter 9: Why (and How) Do Words Matter? Bibliography Index About the Author

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