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This book draws together radical critiques of therapy and shows how
therapists have become too willing administrators of the mind, and
how they then delight in the bureaucratic management of therapeutic
practice.
This book provides a thought-provoking examination of the present
state and the future of Humanistic Psychology, showcasing a rich
international contributor line-up. The book addresses head-on the
current state of a world in crisis, not only placing the current
conjuncture within a wider evolutionary context, but also
demonstrating the specifically humanistic-psychological values and
practices that can help us to transform and transcend the world's
current challenges. Each chapter looks in depth at a variety of
issues: counselling and psychotherapy, creativity and the
humanities, post-traumatic stress, and socio-political movements
and activism. The book amply confirms that Humanistic Psychology is
as alive, and as innovative and exciting, as it ever has been, and
has tremendous relevance to the uncertainties that characterize the
unprecedented individual and global challenges of the times. It
celebrates the diverse and continuing significance of Humanistic
Psychology by providing a robust and reliable roadmap for a new
generation of counsellors and psychotherapists. In these richly
diverse chapters will be found inspiration, pockets of resistance,
mature critical reflexivity and much much more - a book accurately
reflecting our present situation, and which is an invaluable
addition to the psychology literature.
This book provides a thought-provoking examination of the present
state and the future of Humanistic Psychology, showcasing a rich
international contributor line-up. The book addresses head-on the
current state of a world in crisis, not only placing the current
conjuncture within a wider evolutionary context, but also
demonstrating the specifically humanistic-psychological values and
practices that can help us to transform and transcend the world's
current challenges. Each chapter looks in depth at a variety of
issues: counselling and psychotherapy, creativity and the
humanities, post-traumatic stress, and socio-political movements
and activism. The book amply confirms that Humanistic Psychology is
as alive, and as innovative and exciting, as it ever has been, and
has tremendous relevance to the uncertainties that characterize the
unprecedented individual and global challenges of the times. It
celebrates the diverse and continuing significance of Humanistic
Psychology by providing a robust and reliable roadmap for a new
generation of counsellors and psychotherapists. In these richly
diverse chapters will be found inspiration, pockets of resistance,
mature critical reflexivity and much much more - a book accurately
reflecting our present situation, and which is an invaluable
addition to the psychology literature.
This radical and provocative book challenges the very foundations
of therapy itself. In examining the hidden assumptions of therapy,
the author poses the question 'Is therapy more concerned with
preserving its own hegemony than with an honest authenticity of
procedure and practice?'
In this book Dr Hardtmuth chronicles the takeover of the medical
field by private companies and corporations over the past decades,
bringing the profit motive and conflicts of interest into health
care to such an extent that there is a growing alienation of the
helping professions from their own core identity. Human care,
attention and appropriate help are increasingly hindered by the
specifications and supposed constraints of economic logic and
rationality…. The one-sided profit orientation has not only
brought corruption into the health field; Hardtmuth further
illustrates how income inequalities and inappropriately applied
economic rationality are correlated with illnesses in people as
well as ‘illnesses’ in wider society and the environment.
Independent thinking, courage and reflection are urgently needed on
the core value of a civil society based on mutual support…. In
the Afterword, Dr House describes how a separation of economic,
political and cultural/spiritual life (which includes health-care)
is urgently needed and how a number of initiatives have recently
been started which point in this direction.
In Beyond Mainstream Medicine, Thomas Hardtmuth, M.D. and Richard
House, Ph.D. dive deeply into the very foundations of human
well-being, exhaustively detailing what is wrong philosophically
and clinically with the current prevailing biomedical paradigm of
health and disease; how these shortcomings have been highlighted in
the course of the Covid crisis; and what changes need to occur for
the radical re-founding of a genuinely holistic understanding of
health, illness and healing to occur.
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Kills (Hardcover)
Richard House
bundle available
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R1,201
R998
Discovery Miles 9 980
Save R203 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A MASTERWORK OF INTERNATIONAL INTRIGUE SET IN THE ASHES OF WAR-TORN
IRAQ, ITALY, AND AREAS IN BETWEEN.
"The Kills" is an epic novel of crime and conspiracy told in four
books. It begins with a man on the run and ends with a burned body.
Moving across continents, characters, and genres and with the
intelligence of John le Carre's "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold"
and the scope of Roberto Bolano's "2666," there will be no more
ambitious or exciting novel published in 2014.
In, "Against and Beyond Therapy" challenges the foundations of many
of therapy's most take-for-granted and self-serving assumptions.
Yet despite its title, it is very far from being yet another
anti-therapy book. Rather, the book's central aim is to retrieve
what is best in therapy work from what Richard House sees as the
pernicious and ultimately deadening forces of institutional
professionalisation; credentialism and careerism; 'audit-culture'
obsessions with 'evidence-based practice'; and the 'apolitical'
psychopathologising of clients - concerns well captured by the term
'the ideology of modernity'. In, "Against and Beyond Therapy"
assembles some 15 years of updated critical writings within the
broad therapy field, with incisively provocative commentaries on
the professionalisation process, the client voice, therapeutic
education and training, and research. For practitioners who are
highly sceptical about the beneficence of the state regulation of
the psychological therapies, this book promises to be a
rallying-point for the development of a 'post-professional' therapy
culture.It will be indispensable reading for critical
psychologists, and for therapists of all persuasions and modalities
who value critical thinking and challenge, and who welcome the
opportunity to step outside of therapy's conventional,
taken-for-granted 'regimes of truth'.
This book offers both a wide range of critical perspectives from
around the world, and substantial responses to them. It represents
the first attempt to engage in print with the controversies and
complexities that have exercised - sometimes painfully - the
therapy and counseling world, as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)
has risen to such cultural prominence as Western governments take a
serious interest in the psychological therapies as instruments of
public policy-making."Against and For CBT" will be essential
reading for psychotherapists, psychoanalysts and counselors of each
and every approach who are concerned with understanding the
phenomenon that is 'CBT and its discontents'. It will be core
reading both on IAPT/CBT and contrasting modality training courses
that wish to encourage critical engagement with the meaning and
cultural context of therapeutic help in the modern world.Professor
Andrew Samuels writes: 'This welcome new collection - provides us
with many cogent and convincing arguments for, at the very least,
questioning the epistemological underpinnings and the
methodological validity of the 'evidence-based' ideology in which
CBT and its supporters have become accustomed to basking - This
splendid new book - promises to open up a crucial and long-overdue
dialogue, and introduce the associated 'battle for the soul' of
therapy work itself'. Professor Stephen Palmer writes: 'CBT is
constantly developing , aquiring and integrating new ideas, many
underpinned by research, and adapting to the requirements of the
day. Unlike some approaches, it is not moribund, nor held back by
dogma. Its commonsense, pragmatic approach will continue to have
wide appeal, regardless of how it is viewed within the counseling
and psychotherapy professions.
Richard House's startling debut, Bruiser, is a spare yet lyrical
love story about people who can't fall in love. "Supple, deep,
perfectly regulated, full of high, shy intelligence and cool, sweet
wit, Bruiser is an amazing novel". -- Dennis Cooper
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