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Are You Considering Therapy? [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 138 pages, kõrgus x laius: 198x130 mm, kaal: 181 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: Karnac Books
  • ISBN-10: 1855758571
  • ISBN-13: 9781855758575
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 138 pages, kõrgus x laius: 198x130 mm, kaal: 181 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: Karnac Books
  • ISBN-10: 1855758571
  • ISBN-13: 9781855758575
Teised raamatud teemal:
Are You Considering Therapy? is a guidebook for people who are thinking about going into therapy but aren't quite sure where to start. It will look at the various aspects of choosing a therapist, from sorting through the numerous types of treatment on offer, to deciding whether an individual practitioner is someone you might want to work with. The book will not only explain the differences between a psychiatrist, a psychotherapist and a psychologist, say, but will also give people some sense of the sorts of things that might happen in a session - as well as looking at the many and varied notions of 'cure'. For example, while a behavioural counsellor might make it their mission to rid you of your symptom as quickly as possible, a Lacanian psychoanalyst may consider it their ethical duty to see you through an experience of subjective destitution. (The book would also explain what on earth this means.) Are You Considering Therapy? will aim to treat all therapies equally, and to allow readers to make their own choices about what might suit them. As well as outlining different treatments, the book will explore the possibilities of going into therapy one-to-one, with a child or partner, or with a group. It will try to be as light-hearted as possible about this serious and often anxiety-provoking process, and to speak straightforwardly about a notoriously unstraightforward field.

Arvustused

'In Are You Considering Therapy?, Anouchka Grose leads us through the forests of available treatments, from the original theories of Freud, Jung, and fellow psychoanalysts to the proliferating schools of modern therapy. Grose writes with concision, with knowledge and balance, and what is a happy surprise in this territory of mind-control, she possesses an unbiased and delightful wit. An enjoyable read and a trustworthy map to all the new and newest therapies! At last!'- Irma Kurtz, Agony Aunt, Cosmopolitan

About The Author vii
Introduction ix
Chapter One What are the different types of therapy?
1(96)
Qualifications
2(4)
Counselling and psychotherapy
6(48)
Art therapy
10(2)
Behavioural therapy
12(5)
Biodynamic therapy
17(2)
Cognitive therapy
19(4)
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and cognitive analytic therapy (CAT)
23(7)
Computerized CBT
30(2)
Existential psychotherapy
32(2)
Gestalt therapy
34(3)
Humanistic counselling
37(4)
Integrative psychotherapy
41(3)
Person-centred psychotherapy
44(1)
Psychodynamic psychotherapy
45(3)
Psychosynthesis
48(3)
Systemic therapy
51(3)
Brief therapies and life coaching
54(15)
Brief therapy
55(2)
Emotional brain training (EBT)
57(3)
Hypnotherapy and hypno-analysis
60(3)
Life coaching
63(2)
Neurolinguistic programming
65(4)
Psychoanalysis
69(28)
Freudian psychoanalysis
75(6)
Jungian analysis
81(4)
Kleinian psychoanalysis and object relations theory
85(4)
Lacanian psychoanalysis
89(4)
Relational psychoanalysis
93(4)
Chapter Two Psychiatry versus psychology
97(12)
Medication or conversation?
99(3)
Therapy and psychosis
102(3)
Which drugs?
105(4)
Antipsychotics (or neuroleptics)
105(2)
Antidepressants
107(2)
Chapter Three Individuals, groups, couples, and children
109(8)
Couples and families
109(2)
Group therapy
111(2)
Child psychology
113(4)
Chapter Four Finding a therapist
117
To pay or not to pay?
118(5)
Finding a therapist independently
123
Anouchka Grose is a psychoanalyst and writer practising in London. She is a member of CFAR and The College of Psychoanalysts-UK. She has written non-fiction: 'No More Silly Love Songs: a realist's guide to romance' (Portobello, 2010) and 'Are you Considering Therapy' (Karnac, 2011), as well as writing fiction: 'Ringing for You' (Harper Collins, 1999) and 'Darling Daisy' (Harper Collins, 2000). She is the editor of 'Hysteria Today' (2015), a collection of essays on hysteria in the contemporary psychoanalytic clinic. Her journalism is published in The Guardian, and she also writes for numerous art and fashion publications. She has taught at Camberwell School of Art and gives talks on art and psychoanalysis in museums and galleries, as well as sometimes speaking on the radio.