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- many contributors are well-known Routledge authors -
well-structured primer likely to be used in both professional and
teaching contexts
- many contributors are well-known Routledge authors -
well-structured primer likely to be used in both professional and
teaching contexts
Psychotherapy in the Wake of War presents the ways in which
differing views of various psychoanalytic schools and traditions
spanning developments for more than one hundred years may affect
theoretical and technical issues in psychoanalytic treatments.
Colleagues representing different traditions of psychoanalytic
thinking comment on a selection of nine cases and suggest ways of
managing these both technically and theoretically. They have a
variety of theoretical structures and axioms in their minds, a
range of understandings of the symptoms of patients and of which
type of interventions to make. This is based on their own internal
reflective processes, their trainings and their personal
development within their particular schools over time. These
different approaches reflect the evolution and divergences of
psychoanalytic thinking. Some of the writers write in the language
of their school, while others have developed their own style. Still
others show that there can be issues that arise in clinical work
which cannot be easily and fully conceptualized within the confines
of one single and particular theoretical orientation. Interesting
convergences and divergences are demonstrated in the comments of
the practitioners in this present book. Clinical experience may be
approached in different ways, as the commentators say, and
unexpected ideas thought previously to be incompatible may
converge.
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