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Lives Transformed: A Revolutionary Method of Dynamic Psychotherapy by Patricia Coughlin Della Selva |
Individual Psychotherapy and the Science of Psychodynamics (Hodder Arnold Publication) by Dr David Malan |
by Habib Davanloo
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The Feeling of What Happens: Body, Emotion and the Making of Consciousness by Antonio R. Damasio |
by Jeffrey E. Young
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Patricia Coughlin Della Selva′s Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy shows therapists how to achieve even the most ambitious therapeutic goals, including character change, in as few as 40 sessions. Not a cookbook, but a systematic guide to intervention, it outlines proven techniques for accessing a patient′s ego–functioning, dismantling defenses, intensifying a patient′s affective involvement in the treatment, identifying the transference patterns as they arise, and "unlocking the unconscious" with a speed and degree of accuracy previously considered impossible.
The book opens with a chapter in which the author lays down the theoretical foundations of the method. She supplies a detailed review of the psychoanalytic theory of neurosis, provides operational definitions of dynamic concepts, and defines strategies for observing unconscious processes. The remainder of the book is devoted to clinical practice. Following a format roughly paralleling the psychotherapeutic process, it details the requirements of initial evaluation; describes techniques for working with defenses; explains the role of affect in creating and remediating psychopathology; describes techniques for intensifying affective experience and facilitating its expression; details methods of enhancing and completing the working–through process; and outlines procedures for the successful termination of and follow–up to the course of treatment.
A book whose time has come, Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy makes accessible to the psychotherapeutic community at large a treatment model that has been described as "the most important development in psychotherapy since the discovery of the unconscious."
Of related interest . . .
UNLOCKING THE UNCONSCIOUS
selected papers of Habib Davanloo
These selected papers represent a valuable account of the development over several years of a powerful and innovative technique for overcoming resistance and confronting problems of the unconscious. Davanloo′s Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy offers a body of theoretical, metapsychological, and technical knowledge which can be used with extraordinary precision to mobilize unconscious mental processes in order to achieve therapeutic results. The clinical material presented demonstrates how a single interview can provide an opportunity for both the therapist and the patient to view the multifoci core of the patient′s neurotic structure, which is responsible for the patient′s symptoms and character disturbances. 1995 (0–471–95611–2) 344 pp.
UNBEARABLE AFFECT
a guide to the psychotherapy of psychosis
David A. S. Garfield
Unbearable affect is seen as the focal point around which psychosis turns. When emotion becomes unbearable, some psychotic patients suffer from delusions, hallucinations, incoherence, negativism, autism, or emotional paralysis. In this remarkable book, Dr. David Garfield establishes paradigms for the diagnosis and psychotherapeutic treatment of psychotic disorders based on the location, understanding, and reordering of unbearable affect. He provides concrete clinical advice, vivid examples, and crisp, jargon–free descriptions of theoretical concepts and clinical techniques. 1995 (0–471–02536–4) 177 pp. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Patricia Coughlin Della Selva′s Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy shows therapists how to achieve even the most ambitious therapeutic goals, including character change, in as few as 40 sessions. Not a cookbook, but a systematic guide to intervention, it outlines proven techniques for accessing a patient′s ego–functioning, dismantling defenses, intensifying a patient′s affective involvement in the treatment, identifying the transference patterns as they arise, and "unlocking the unconscious" with a speed and degree of accuracy previously considered impossible.
The book opens with a chapter in which the author lays down the theoretical foundations of the method. She supplies a detailed review of the psychoanalytic theory of neurosis, provides operational definitions of dynamic concepts, and defines strategies for observing unconscious processes. The remainder of the book is devoted to clinical practice. Following a format roughly paralleling the psychotherapeutic process, it details the requirements of initial evaluation; describes techniques for working with defenses; explains the role of affect in creating and remediating psychopathology; describes techniques for intensifying affective experience and facilitating its expression; details methods of enhancing and completing the working–through process; and outlines procedures for the successful termination of and follow–up to the course of treatment.
A book whose time has come, Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy makes accessible to the psychotherapeutic community at large a treatment model that has been described as "the most important development in psychotherapy since the discovery of the unconscious."
Of related interest . . .
UNLOCKING THE UNCONSCIOUS
selected papers of Habib Davanloo
These selected papers represent a valuable account of the development over several years of a powerful and innovative technique for overcoming resistance and confronting problems of the unconscious. Davanloo′s Intensive Short–Term Dynamic Psychotherapy offers a body of theoretical, metapsychological, and technical knowledge which can be used with extraordinary precision to mobilize unconscious mental processes in order to achieve therapeutic results. The clinical material presented demonstrates how a single interview can provide an opportunity for both the therapist and the patient to view the multifoci core of the patient′s neurotic structure, which is responsible for the patient′s symptoms and character disturbances. 1995 (0–471–95611–2) 344 pp.
UNBEARABLE AFFECT
a guide to the psychotherapy of psychosis
David A. S. Garfield
Unbearable affect is seen as the focal point around which psychosis turns. When emotion becomes unbearable, some psychotic patients suffer from delusions, hallucinations, incoherence, negativism, autism, or emotional paralysis. In this remarkable book, Dr. David Garfield establishes paradigms for the diagnosis and psychotherapeutic treatment of psychotic disorders based on the location, understanding, and reordering of unbearable affect. He provides concrete clinical advice, vivid examples, and crisp, jargon–free descriptions of theoretical concepts and clinical techniques. 1995 (0–471–02536–4) 177 pp. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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