" While countless memoirs have been written about depression and
therapy, no one has examined how the ""talking cure"" of
psychotherapy is presented in novels and other works of literature.
Beginning with an overview of the principles of psychotherapy and
its growing use as a treatment for mental and emotional disorders,
Lilian Furst addresses the patient's view of the value of talk.
Patients' portrayals of psychotherapy in literary works range from
serious to satirical and from comic to ironic, with some
descriptions verging on the grotesque. Furst identifies the
overtalkers, undertalkers, and duet voices that shape the
individual experiences of psychotherapy. While the voices of the
overtalkers overwhelm those of their therapists, undertalkers are
reluctant to express or acknowledge their feelings. Particularly
revealing are the instances where patient and therapist provide
separate but parallel renderings of the same therapy. Just Talk
looks at a wide range of questions about psychotherapy. Furst
considers the patient's first impressions of the therapist and how
the patient is prompted to engage in talk. She looks for signs of
self-deception or self-betrayal on the patient's part and asks how
the therapist's behavior affects the patient's responses and the
ultimate outcome of the therapy. Furst examines such well-known
works as Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, Plath's The Bell Jar, and
Lodge's Therapy, as well as lesser-known novels, to discuss how
patients react to psychotherapy as a cure for mental and emotional
disorders. Her analysis of these narratives adds significantly to
our understanding of the dynamic relationship between patient and
therapist and reveals much about the healing process that is not
addressed in technical casebooks.
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