(To see other currencies, click on price)
MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
'Profoundly honest, unflinching in examining her own history as a thinker and clinician, Ingrid Pedroni challenges us to see where we have been and where we have failed, each of us.' Donna Orange, from the Foreword
Ingrid Pedroni is multicultural to her core. Fully fluent in German, Italian, and English, she took that multilingual outlook to the varied world of psychoanalysis. Beginning her journey with a Jungian analysis, she later read The Restoration of the Self by Heinz Kohut and discovered a theoretical and clinical framework consistent with her Jungian experience. Thus began her engagement with different theoretical dimensions and clinical settings. Beyond Fragmentation is a masterly overview of the result of her open-minded exploration of not only traditional and contemporary psychoanalytic schools of thought, but also systemic family therapy, plus modern anthropology, theatre, and literature.
Part I explores the integration of different theoretical and clinical models, with special reference to self psychology and relational psychoanalysis. Part II outlines significant areas of experience that build the sense of self and how it is represented in intra-psychic and inter-relational dimensions. Part III focuses on couple and family relations, their evolution over time, and how they represent an essential part of the self. The final part deals with the treatment of cultural diversity, the universality of attachment bonds, and the extreme specificity of their cultural expression. Throughout the book are clinical and theoretical concepts derived from authors such as Adler, Jung, Rank, Fromm, Ferenczi, Klein, Winnicott, Loewald, Bowlby, Bion, and, of course, Freud.
The clinical examples illustrate how it is possible to weave together the various threads of theoretical thinking and clinical practice not only in the many diversified psychoanalytic schools, but also in the larger field of the psychotherapies. The varied themes covered include gender, couple relations, family therapy, spirituality, cultural diversity and integration, migration, transcultural psychotherapy, and collective trauma. This book is essential reading for trainee and practising clinicians, and may well help them to find their own integration of therapeutic experiences. Professionals active in social, educational, and psychological fields will also find much useful and engaging information to help them in their work.
Contents:
Introduction: Widening clinical practice in relation to other therapeutic schools as the future of psychoanalysis
Part I: The need to build therapeutic bridges
1. From drives to relations through culture, the new epistemological paradigm of psychoanalysis
2. Beyond Freud: a contemporary integrative approach to obsessive-compulsive disorder
3. Integrating self psychology and relational psychoanalysis
Part II: The search for subjectivity
1. Creating the self
2. Talking with God: spirituality and religion in the therapeutic encounter
3. Gender identity and subjectivity
Part III: Couples, parents, families: multiple relational dimensions, multiple selves, and sometimes multiple therapists in coordinated treatment
1. The life cycle of the couple relation
2. Couples of spouses and couples of therapists in the dialectic of mutual recognition
3. Family relations in therapy
Part IV: Transcultural psychotherapy and the treatment of individual and collective traumas of migration and wars
1. Transcultural psychotherapy
2. Migrations: cultural mourning and cultural contaminations
3. War, trauma, memory, and resilience
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Phoenix Publishing House
Publication date: March, 2023
Pages: 304
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Psychotherapy