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Books > Social sciences > Psychology
Buy this book and you change a life. Read this book and you'll change your own. Notes from a Friend is a concise and easy-to-understand guide to the most powerful and life-changing tools and principles that make Anthony Robbins an international leader in peak performance. Starting in 1991, a self-published version of this book has been handed out to thousands of people in need, as part of the Anthony Robbins Foundation's Thanksgiving "Basket Brigade." The book helped so many individuals overcome the most challenging circumstances that people repeatedly asked to purchase it for themselves and for their friends. Now, for the first time, it is available to you in this special, updated edition containing new material.
Lacan on Depression and Melancholia considers how clinical,
cultural, and personal understandings of depression can be broken
down and revisited to properly facilitate psychoanalytical clinical
practice. The contributors to this book highlight the role of
neurotic conflicts underlying depressive affects, the distinction
between neurotic and psychotic structure, the nature of
melancholia, and the clinical value of Freudian and Lacanian
concepts - such as object a, the Other, desire, the superego,
sublimation - as demonstrated via a variety of clinical and
historical cases. The book includes discussions of bereavement and
mourning, transference in melancholia, suicidality and the death
drive, excessive creativity, melancholic identification, neurotic
inhibition, and manic-depressive psychosis. Lacan on Depression and
Melancholia will be essential reading for psychoanalysts and
psychoanalytic psychotherapists in practice and training, Lacanian
clinicians, and scholars of Lacanian theory.
What is suicide? When does suicide start and when does it end? Who
is involved? Examining narratives of suicide through a discourse
analytic framework, Discursive Constructions of the Suicidal
Process demonstrates how linguistic theories and methodologies can
help answer these questions and cast light upon what suicide
involves and means, both for those who commit an act and their
loved ones. Engaging in close analysis of suicide letters written
before the act and post-hoc narratives from after the event, this
book is the first qualitative study to view suicide not as a single
event outside time, but as a time-extended process. Exploring how
suicide is experienced and narrated from two temporal perspectives,
Dariusz Galasinski and Justyna Ziolkowska introduce discourse
analysis to the field of suicidology. Arguing that studying suicide
narratives and the reality they represent can add significantly to
our understanding of the process, and in particular its experiences
and meanings, Discursive Constructions of the Suicidal Process
demonstrates the value of discourse analytic insights in informing,
enriching and contextualising our knowledge of suicide.
Forcourses in Lifespan Development A compelling blend of lifespan
development research and applications Development Across the Life
Span provides a chronologicaloverview of human development from the
moment of conception through death,examining both the traditional
areas of the field and more recent innovations.Author Robert
Feldman focuses on how developmental findings can be
appliedmeaningfully and practically, helping students to recognize
the relevance ofthe discipline to their own lives. Thoroughly
updated with the latest researchand contemporary examples, the 9th
Edition better ensures thatstudents make connections between course
concepts and their own lives andfuture careers.
Public Opinion is Walter Lippmann's groundbreaking work which
demonstrates how individual beliefs are swayed by stereotypes, the
mass media, and political propaganda. The book opens with the
notion that democracy in the age of super fast communications is
obsolete. He analyses the impact of several phenomena, such as the
radio and newspapers, to support his criticisms of the
sociopolitical situation as it stands. He famously coins the term
'manufactured consent', for the fomenting of views which ultimately
work against the interests of those who hold them. Lippmann
contends that owing to the masses of information flung at the
population on a daily basis, opinions regarding entire groups in
society are being reduced to simple stereotypes. The actual
complexity and nuance of life, Lippmann contends, is undermined by
the ever-faster modes of communication appearing regularly.
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