
Being and Relating in Psychotherapy
Description
Reviews / Votes
"This is a profound book- thoughtful, humane and at times passionate about what it means to be human and how psychotherapists explore the experience and pain of humanity with our patients. It offers a refreshingly non-partisan approach with the best kind of clinical writing and should be on all our reading lists." - Dr. Jean Knox, training Analyst at the Society of Analytical Psychology and Associate Professor at the University of Exeter, UK "This is a serious book which has amassed the creative thought of a number of impressive writers on what the contemporary twenty-first century approach to psychotherapy should look like. It should be required reading for anyone interested in therapy as a genuinely humanitarian process, including the next generation of trainees, and of course clients who want to know what they are in for." - Bob Hinshelwood, Professor, Centre for Psychoanalysitc Studies, University of Essex, UK "Applies philosophical discussions of ontology to the width and depth of feeling and thinking required within clinical practice." - therapytoday.netMore details
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Additional editions


Persons
Stephen Crawford is a Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist. He is a Senior Programme Manager at WPF Therapy and teaches and supervises there, while also working in private practice. He taught Ontology at WPF for several years and has written several papers on psychotherapy and supervision
John Stewart is a Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist and a Jungian Analyst. He was formerly Assistant Director of Training at WPF Therapy and now teaches, supervises and works in private practice. He was a contributing author to Supervising Psychotherapy, (Sage, 2002).
Content
PART I: THE THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP.- 1. Ontology and Therapeutic Practice; C.Driver.- 2. The Healing Relationship; M.Elfred.- 3. Not Speaking: Thinking more about the 'Talking Cure'; M.Errington.- 4. The I.- Thou Relationship; S.Gross.- PART II: THE PERSONAL AND INTERPERSONAL.- 5. Generosity; S.Crawford.- 6. Love and Relationship; C.Driver.- 7. Shame; J.Rignell.- 8. On Loneliness; G.Brown.- 9. Living with Mortality; L.Hotchkies and N.Hudson.- PART III: THE PERSONAL, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL.- 10. An Exploration Into the Nature of the Self; J.Stewart.- 11. The Diversity Agenda in the Consulting Room; J.Newbigin.- 12. Sexuality and Therapeutic Practice; B.Greally.- 13. The Artist's Fear of the Psychotherapist; M.Thomas.- 14. Religions in Relation to Values; D.Black.- 15. Time and Rites of Passage; L.Murdin.