|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Self-criticism is a personality trait that has been implicated in a
wide range of psychopathologies and developmental arrests. Defined
as the tendency to set unrealistically high standards for one's
self and to adopt a punitive stance towards the self once these
standards are not met, self-criticism is both active and cyclical.
Self-critics actively create the social-interpersonal conditions
that generate their distress, and their distress itself exacerbates
self-criticism. Erosion offers a comprehensive treatment of
self-criticism based in philosophy, developmental science,
personality and clinical psychology, social theories, and
cognitive-affective neuroscience. Professor Golan Shahar expertly
summarizes the most recent research on the topic and synthesizes
theory, empirical research, and clinical practice guidelines for
assessment, prevention, and treatment. The book rests upon three
elements that, as Shahar argues, are central to the maintenance of
self-critical vulnerability: the importance of a concept of an
authentic self or the need to "feel real"; the importance of
intentionality and goal-directedness; and the power of
interpersonal relationships and cultural context. Shahar argues
that exploring these elements requires an integrated clinical
approach that incorporates multidimensional assessment and
interventions which reconcile science, practice, and policy. The
result is a broad and scholarly volume that is useful to
practitioners, researchers, and theorists interested in
self-criticism.
In this empirical yet deeply humanistic work, Golan Shahar
investigates the dynamic relationship between personality and
social factors in complex depression, identifying avenues for
research and offering hope for sufferers and treatment providers.
 Shahar synthesizes research and clinical wisdom to enhance
our understanding of complex depression, a mental illness defined
by its chronicity, heterogeneity, and serious consequences
including suicide. He focuses on Melanie Klein’s object relations
theory and depressive position, reconceptualizing both from a
transtheoretical perspective, with an emphasis on four key factors:
demeaning affect; affect regulation; maladaptive schemas and
scripts; and a time axis consisting of past, current, and projected
future experiences. Shahar also explores how individuals
externalize self-critical feelings, in turn creating a malignant
social environment and a vicious cycle of self-recrimination. To
explain this toxic relationship, Shahar presents ecodynamics, a
novel theory examining relationship patterns between the self and
their social contexts. Â The book offers tools and procedures
for assessing complex depression and guidelines for integrative
psychotherapy. Case examples, including the author’s profound
personal investigation into his stepfather’s suicide, vividly
demonstrate the causes and consequences of complex depression.
|
You may like...
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R50
Discovery Miles 500
The Wonder Of You
Elvis Presley, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
CD
R48
Discovery Miles 480
|