The Therapeutic Process: A Clinical Introduction to Psychodynamic PsychotherapyJason Aronson, 2005 - 311 Seiten The Therapeutic Process attempts to present an informative, sequential, well-defined, and clinically rich guide to the process of psychodynamic psychotherapy. The book was specifically designed to have broad appeal and value, for the beginning clinician to more experienced clinician, or the clinician who also teaches students of psychoanalytic psychotherapy. For the beginning clinician, the book has many illustrative examples, and terms are well defined. For the long-time clinician, the book attempts to put clearly into words, what many of us have thought all along. This book arose from a series of lectures that were part of a course for the psychiatric residents at UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and Hospital, as well as from the instruction of many therapists from other mental health disciplines. The challenge in the initial instruction of psychoanalytic psychotherapy is always to be able to introduce fundamental concepts and convey the importance of a solid theoretical background, while concurrently addressing the clinician's pressing desire and often immediate requirement to understand the clinical process. Novel heuristic models are described and illustrated in clinical vignettes, in order to quickly bring together clinical and theoretical terms with the practice and process of psychotherapy. |
Inhalt
THE GOALS OF PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY | 1 |
INITIAL EVALUATION OF THE PATIENT | 19 |
FORMULATION | 49 |
LISTENING | 93 |
RESISTANCE AND DEFENSE | 135 |
TRANSFERENCE | 183 |
EMPATHY AND COUNTERTRANSFERENCE | 213 |
INTERPRETATIONS | 229 |
WORKING THROUGH | 259 |
TERMINATION | 293 |
ABOUT THE AUTHORS | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The Therapeutic Process: A Clinical Introduction to Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Mark J. Thompson,Candace Cotlove Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2013 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ability able achieve affect allow American Psychoanalytic Association and/or anger anxiety apist aspect awareness become behavior capacity character character structure child childhood chotherapy clinical concept conflict consequence context countertransference defenses depression desire developmental difficult dream drive ego ideal ego psychology emotional empathic ence event example experience fantasy father feelings felt Freud function goals Hogarth Press individual integrate intense International Journal interpretation Journal of Psycho-Analysis Kohut less loss Lucy meaning Melanie Klein ment mind mother motivation mourning narcissistic neurosis occur pain parents past patient and therapist perception person phase potential primary gain primitive projective identification psychodynamic psychodynamic psychotherapy psychological psychotherapy reality relationship repetitive resistance rience screen memory self-esteem self-object sense serve sexual significant situation Standard Edition story superego symptom termination themes theory ther thera therapeutic alliance therapist therapy thought tient tion transference reactions trauma treatment unconscious understanding wife wish woman