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Explains the patient's identification in treatment with a significant other for purposes of mastering traumatic experiences.
In Christian Antisemitism: A History of Hate, Professor William Nicholls, a former minister in the Anglican Church and the founder of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of British Columbia, presents his stunning research, stating that Christian teaching is primarily responsible for antisemitism.
A primer on resistance. It takes as the heart of the clinical problem the patient's reluctance to change, that ubiquitous and paradoxical phenomenon in psychotherapy in which people come asking for help in changing, and then do their level best to keep change from happening.
Clinicians who read this volume will be richly awarded by an expanded understanding of their patients and the therapeutic process.
Emotional Transformation Therapy (R) is an original psychotherapy approach developed by Steven R. Vazquez, PhD. It is interactive and uses the client's visual ecology to amplify the impact of the therapist-client bond. This method achieves rapid, long-term outcomes, possessing the potential to revolutionize psychotherapy as we know it.
Understanding Personality Through Projective Testing provides a concise, nuanced depiction of six core aspects of personality within a psychodynamic/developmental framework. It then portrays how each of these domains can be assessed with four projective methods: the Rorschach, TAT, Sentence Completion and Animal Preference Tests. The strengths and heuristic value of each of the four methods are described individually and then integrated via case examples to provide a rich, comprehensive methodology for understanding personality functioning.
There is a moment at every level of psychological development in which the mind is presented with a challenge. This moment can last for a literal moment in time or it can extend for years, thus becoming a leading force of development. Disordered Thought and Development: Chaos to Organization in the Moment explores the processes around that moment. On Thought Disorder provides clinicians with a touchstone that can help guide the development of their patients.
In Relating to God: Clinical Psychoanalysis, Spirituality, and Theism, Dan Merkur presents a clinical alternative to both the dismissal and the culturally relative endorsement of the client's religion, proposing a contemporary psychoanalytic distinction between wholesome spirituality and its symbolic and symptomatic displacements. Spirituality compatible with psychoanalysis is identified with the via negativa, "way of negating," that is found historically in selected Christian and Jewish encounters with God.
A basic text for the understanding of patients with pathological narcissism.
In Praise of the Baal Shem Tov is the first complete English translation of the tales surrounding the Besht, a rabbi and kabbalistic practitioner whose teachings bolstered the growing Hasidic movement in the eighteenth century. An important source on the life, philosophy, and mystical works of the Besht, In Praise of the Baal Shem Tov also reveals the daily life and concerns of eastern European Hasidic Jews in the late 1700s.
Compulsive buying is a serious, often secretive affliction, with profound emotional, social, occupational, and financial consequences. This book provides information about this disorder.
The practice of cognitive therapy is used with substance abuse, marital conflict, sexual dysfunction, panic disorders, post-traumatic stress disorders, paranoid delusional disorders, and a variety of other affective, anxiety, and personality disorders. This volume shows therapist why the method works and how to apply it.
To find out more information about Rowman & Littlefield titles please visit us at www.rowmanlittlefield.com.
Subjects of Analysis is a work of incomparable significance for the field of psychoanalysis. Ogden reworks and recombines the basic contributions of Freud, Klein, and Winnicott to create a vision of the analytic process that has never existed before-startling in its freshness, moving in its depth and integrity.
When Bowen was a student and practitioner of classical psychoanalysis at the Menninger Clinic, he became engrossed in understanding the process of schizophrenia and its relationship to mother-child symbiosis.
Can hope be pathological? What is love? How are envy and arrogance related to hatred? What is the optimal distance between the self and others? Why are some individuals excessively vulnerable to nostalgia?
Helping Men: A Psychoanalytic Approach, by Loretta R. Loeb, MD and Felix F. Loeb, Jr., MD, is a series of case studies of male patients with sexual dysfunctions who were able to improve their lives with the help of the two psychoanalysts who wrote this book.
Supervision Can Be Playful focuses on the dynamic nature of the clinical supervisory relationship when the supervisee is a mental health professional working with children. The contributors focus on the unique issues faced in supervising child and play therapists, as well as the unique challenges faced by these clinicians in treatment. The rationale for using play-based techniques in supervision, along with the varying facets of transference, countertransference, cultural sensitivity and engagement of the supervisee are addressed.
As with the first two volumes in this series, The Talmud for Beginners, Volume 3: Living in a Non-Jewish World, introduces the beginner to an important book of the Talmud; in this case, Avodah Zarah, translated as "Strange Worship." The theme, generally speaking, is Jewish relations with non-Jews.
Suitable for suicidologists, this book brings together work that the author undertook and completed between 1971 and 1993.
Dynamic Psychotherapy with Adult Survivors: Living Past Neglect by Lori Bennett examines the aftereffects of emotional neglect in order to help clinicians to better serve survivors. Bennett creates a more profound understanding of the effects of childhood neglect on adult survivors by contributing new theory and expanding on practice information for graduate students and mental health clinicians who are serving these survivors.
This book contains a detailed presentation and analysis of verbatim transcripts of actual Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy sessions and describes a comprehensive approach to treatment, Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy, which is an evidence-based, effective, and empirically validated family based treatment. Therapists, social workers, residential treatment programs, psychologists, and child welfare professionals will find this book of immediate practical value. Professors teaching family therapy, child welfare, and child treatment courses will find the book a good adjunct text.
Chapter 1 IntroductionPart 2 Part I: Supervisory Styles and Critical ConsiderationsChapter 3 Chapter 1:Supervision: Models, Principles and Process IssuesChapter 4 Chapter 2: Sanding in Supervision: A Sand Tray Technique for Clinical SupervisorsChapter 5 Chapter 3: When Approaches Collide: A Decision-Making Model for Play TherapistsChapter 6 Chapter 4: Through a Cross-cultural Lens: How Viewing Childhood as a Distinct Culture Impacts SupervisionChapter 7 Chapter 5: Culturally Competent Supervision of Child and Play TherapistsPart 8 Part II: Supervising Special PopulationsChapter 9 Chapter 6:Supervising Counselors Who Work With Special Needs ChildrenChapter 10 Chapter 7:The Supervision Process: Working with Traumatized Children in Outpatient Mental Health ClinicsChapter 11 Chapter 8:Supervision of Play Therapists Working With Aggressive ChildrenChapter 12 Chapter 9:Supervising Filial TherapyChapter 13 Chapter 10:Supervision of Group Play TherapyChapter 14 Chapter 11: Enhancing Role Play Activities in Play Therapy Supervision GroupsPart 15 Part III: Facilitating Self-AwarenessChapter 16 Chapter 12: Play SpaceChapter 17 Chapter 13: Expressive Arts in a Humanistic Approach to Play Therapy Supervision: Facilitating Therapist Self Awareness andTherapeutic ProcessChapter 18 Chapter 14: Supervision in the SandChapter 19 Chapter 15:Countertransference Play: Informing and Enhancing Therapist Self-Awareness Through PlayPart 20 Part IV: Potpourri of Playful TechniquesChapter 21 Chapter 16: Playful Activities for Supervisors and TrainersChapter 22 Chapter 17: Playful Supervision: Sharing Exemplary Exercises in the Supervision of Play Therapists
Forensic psychologist Reid Meloy identifies psychopathology as a deviant development disturbance characterized by inordinate instinctual aggression and the absence of a capacity bond. It is the definitive book on the subject.
Emphasizing the transformational possibilities that grow out of their relational model of therapy, David E. and Jill Savege Scharff invite us into the territory of interactive journeys with individual patients. A contemporary classic.
A mixture of theory and practice, this study of individual and group resistance in psychotherapy is illustrated by numerous clinical vignettes. Offering techniques for handling and resolving resistance within the group setting, it should appeal to clinicians and group therapists.
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