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Revenge: Narcissistic Injury, Rage, and Retaliation addresses the
ubiquitous human wish to take revenge and settle scores. Featuring
the contributions of eleven distinguished mental health
professionals, it offers a panoramic and yet deep perspective on
the real or imagined narcissistic injury that often underlies
fantasies of revenge and the behavioral trait of vindictiveness. It
describes various types of revenge and introduces the concept of a
'good-enough revenge.' Deftly blending psychoanalysis, ethology,
religious studies, literary criticism, and clinical experience, the
book goes a long way to enhance empathy with patients struggling
with hurt, pain, and desires to get even with their tormentors.
This volume is of great clinical value indeed!
From childhood onwards, humans use their environment's responses to
construct models or schemata to link feelings and impulses with
actions and effects. If the environment during those formative
years is unreliable, frustrating, or violating, the construction of
those internal models can be disrupted and create a disjointed
perception of the world, where violence is the only way to feel
strong or good about oneself. Before and After Violence explores
the complex network of experiences and relationships that
contribute to both the origins and consequences of violence,
starting in the early stages of life and compounding over time. The
contributors to this collection examine the different settings in
which violence takes place, look at the variables that propel its
occurrence in local and global instances, and depict how each can
be traced back to profound feelings of betrayal, helplessness, and
anger that manifest in the physical discharges of aggression
towards a single person or a whole group. Through a psychoanalytic
lens, the contributors analyze and explain violence in its many
forms, delve into its myriad of causes, as well as offer a variety
of solutions that can be applied to various instances of violence
whether it be physical or mental, self-directed or other-directed.
Revenge: Narcissistic Injury, Rage, and Retaliation addresses the
ubiquitous human wish to take revenge and settle scores. Featuring
the contributions of eleven distinguished mental health
professionals, it offers a panoramic and yet deep perspective on
the real or imagined narcissistic injury that often underlies
fantasies of revenge and the behavioral trait of vindictiveness. It
describes various types of revenge and introduces the concept of a
'good-enough revenge.' Deftly blending psychoanalysis, ethology,
religious studies, literary criticism, and clinical experience, the
book goes a long way to enhance empathy with patients struggling
with hurt, pain, and desires to get even with their tormentors.
This volume is of great clinical value indeed!
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.
Using data from infant observation, and child, adolescent, and
adult analyses, the Novicks explicate a multidimensional,
developmental theory of sadomasochism that has been recognized as a
major innovation. According to the Novicks, each phase of
development contributes to the clinical manifestations of
sadomasochism. Painful experiences in infancy are transformed into
a mode of attachment, then into an embraced marker of specialness
and unlimited destructive power, then into a conviction of equality
with oedipal parents, and, finally, into an omnipotent capacity to
gratify infantile wishes through the coercion of others. By school
age, these children have established a magic omnipotent system of
thought which undermines alternate means of competent interactions
with reality. In adolescence and adulthood it becomes increasingly
hard for them to deny, avoid, or distort reality without resorting
to escalating self-destructive behaviors. Sadomasochistic phenomena
are the source of severe resistances and counterreactions in all
phases of therapy. This book helps clinicians recognize and
overcome these blocks to treatment progress and success. Here can
be found an introduction to the Novicks' reformulation of the
therapeutic alliance, and their distinctive contributions to the
transformations of memory and the termination of treatment.
Today more pediatric therapists are centering their work on the
parent-child relationship and are turning to parents as a primary
modality in solving children's problems. Parent-Focused Child
Therapy: Attachment, Identification, and Reflective Functions is an
edited collection, drawing from leading psychotherapists with
specialties in family therapy. Carrol Wachs and Linda Jacobs tap
into the current literature on the efficacy of working with parents
in therapy situations. The collected essays in this book, from
renowned psychotherapists, focus on identifying and evaluating a
variety of approaches and their effects on standard questions of
attachment, identity, and reflection in dealing with children in
therapy. Parent-Focused Child Therapy is especially attractive
given its currency, integrating relational theory, attachment
theory and infant research.
Life is full of comings and goings, helloes and goodbyes, meetings
and partings. Good Goodbyes highlights the crucial importance of
how the end of therapy is structured and experienced. Bad endings
can destroy good therapies. Good endings can consolidate the work
accomplished, transform relationships, and foster growth in both
patient and therapist. Within the framework of the therapeutic
relationship and a clearly articulated set of goals for therapy,
Jack Novick and Kerry Kelly Novick describe how to recognize and
respond to termination themes from the very beginning of treatment.
Each phase of treatment brings its own challenges, as well as the
risk of premature ending by patient or therapist. Each chapter in
this book addresses specific danger signals to look out for and
helpful techniques to support treatment. With vivid clinical
examples from all diagnostic groups and all stages of development,
the Novicks demonstrate how to engage each patient in building the
"emotional muscle" needed to master life's challenges, transform
early losses, and integrate new experiences of joy and sadness into
the personality.
Working With Parents Makes Therapy Work demonstrates the crucial
role of parent work in child and adolescent therapy. The Novicks
suggest that restoring the parent-child relationship contributes to
long-lasting therapeutic change in children and adolescents. With a
multitude of vivid clinical examples, the authors provide a
practical guide to clinical techniques for integrating parent work
with individual child and adolescent treatment. Working With
Parents Makes Therapy Work demonstrates that parents and therapists
can form a strong alliance to support the child's healthy
development. Kerry and Jack Novick apply their revised models of
the therapeutic alliance and two systems of self-regulation to help
parents from evaluation to termination and beyond. The book covers
a wide range of situations, for instance, work with fathers,
addressing problems of divorce and diverse family structures, and
many modes of communicating with parents. Family secrets and
loyalty conflicts; what happens when parents are troubled; the
importance of parents in the lives of teenagers-these are all
discussed in detail. Privacy and secrecy are defined and
differentiated to clarify the meaning and importance of genuine
confidentiality.
Working With Parents Makes Therapy Work demonstrates the crucial
role of parent work in child and adolescent therapy. The Novicks
suggest that restoring the parent-child relationship contributes to
long-lasting therapeutic change in children and adolescents. With a
multitude of vivid clinical examples, the authors provide a
practical guide to clinical techniques for integrating parent work
with individual child and adolescent treatment. Working With
Parents Makes Therapy Work demonstrates that parents and therapists
can form a strong alliance to support the child's healthy
development. Kerry and Jack Novick apply their revised models of
the therapeutic alliance and two systems of self-regulation to help
parents from evaluation to termination and beyond. The book covers
a wide range of situations, for instance, work with fathers,
addressing problems of divorce and diverse family structures, and
many modes of communicating with parents. Family secrets and
loyalty conflicts; what happens when parents are troubled; the
importance of parents in the lives of teenagers-these are all
discussed in detail. Privacy and secrecy are defined and
differentiated to clarify the meaning and importance of genuine
confidentiality.
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