|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
The aim of the Aeolian Mode is to release creative energy by
freeing an individual from the restrictive legacy of the past.
Taking Bachelard's paradox "But the image has touched the depths
before it stirs the surface" as a paradigm, the book presents the
therapeutic possibilities inherent in metaphor and image whereby
patients are enabled to tell their story. Authenticity and meaning
are enhanced as unconscious and conscious material become
integrated. 'The joint ticket of Murray Cox's story-telling
clinical style, with his rich literary allusions and Alice
Theilgaard's wide background knowledge of the harder strands of
academic and clinical psychology, with its neurological substrates,
provides what is needed for a creative and more balanced synthesis
for the vote-catching reader who would need to realize that he or
she is taking up not just one book to read and re-read, but a
comprehensive syllabus of exciting new reading in a neglected
shadow area.' - Group Analysis 'It is a wonderfully good read. It
will carry engaged and attending readers into extensions of their
own styles in psychotherapy, whatever their theoretical base ...
Associative reverberations allow the therapist to "wait and
witness" until the moment comes when a mutative metaphor can touch
the depths before it stirs the surface.' - American Journal of
Psychiatry 'This book will add a new dimension to the work of
analytical therapists, provided they are not too steeped in
theoretical orthodoxy.' - British Journal of Psychiatry 'The book
shows how literary material may be incorporated within the working
situation of a therapist: it does not use psychoanalytic concepts
reductively to explain the workings of literature. Mutative
Metaphors demonstrates for the reader- whether from the
psychoanalytic or the literary field - the value of associativeness
as a complex cognitive function not merely a decorative one.' -
British Journal of Psychotherapy 'This book will endure, because it
is both theoretically well-grounded and innovative.' - Psykolog Nyt
'It seems to me one of the most significant theological essays we
are likely to see for a good while and I shall be recommending it
to my students as such. I am personally genuinely grateful for such
a blend of clinical/narrative detail and imaginative exploration.'
- Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury 'This is one of the most
penetrating books known to me on the nature and power of poetic
images, and one might add one of the most illuminating studies of
Shakespeare's use of images... In this period in which a nadir of
trivialization of language and an impoverishment of images has
surely been reached, a look into these depths where `The worst is
not/So long as we can say This is the worst' might be salutary.' -
Kathleen Raine 'This is an important book. The central ideas,
theoretical formulations, and practical clinical suggestions are
original, co-ordinating much established knowledge. It is an
exciting contribution to the development of what might be called
"imaginative psychotherapy". - Robert F Hobson 'This may well be
the first textbook of psychopoetics.' - Noel Cobb
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.