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This is a startlingly frank account of a psychiatrist's and a
psychologist's learnings, milestones and mistakes when working with
people with the characteristics of borderline personality disorder
(BPD). The book is an examination of the physician and therapist as
much as it is of this often alarming and bewildering' group of
people. Throughout their illuminating, frank and often moving
accounts of their work, Doctors Little and Thomson elucidate and
reflect on the principles that inform their practice and the
practice of their mental health team colleagues. Importantly, the
book also presents stories in their own words from the people with
whom they all work. These stories offer further valuable insight
into the experience of BPD and its treatment and therapy.
This is a startlingly frank account of a psychiatrist's and a
psychologist's learnings, milestones and mistakes when working with
people with the characteristics of borderline personality disorder
(BPD). The book is an examination of the physician and therapist as
much as it is of this often alarming and bewildering' group of
people. Throughout their illuminating, frank and often moving
accounts of their work, Doctors Little and Thomson elucidate and
reflect on the principles that inform their practice and the
practice of their mental health team colleagues. Importantly, the
book also presents stories in their own words from the people with
whom they all work. These stories offer further valuable insight
into the experience of BPD and its treatment and therapy.
Duncan Thompson provides a concise summary of the hitherto
neglected history of the NEW LEFT REVIEW and its political and
intellectual development from 1962 to the present. Perry Anderson,
Robin Blackburn et al. emerged as the leading figures of a second
new left around the NEW LEFT REVIEW six years after the new left
first emerged in the wake of the Soviet invasion of Hungary and
Britain and France's invasion of Suez. Thompson traces NLR's
attempts to develop socialist politics, through the 'old' Labour of
Harold Wilson, through heady days in 1968, through new Marxist
theory, through the Cold War years and into the era of contemporary
capitalist globalisation. He surveys the achievements of NLR: a
respectable academic reputation has been won, but it has not
succeeded in achieving or facilitating the primary goal of the
second New Left, that of finding a strategy for transition to
socialism.
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