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This is the second book in the pioneering investigation of adult
develop ment by Robert A. Nemiroff and Calvin A. Colarusso. The
first, Adult Development: A New Dimension in Psychodynamic Theory
and Practice, ar rived to critical acclaim in 1981. It presented a
psychodynamic theory of development during the second half of life
and a model of normal adult functioning. This book is the logical
sequel, expanding and elaborating the original formulations and
applying them to the clinical practice of psychotherapy and
psychoanalysis. Nemiroff and Colarusso demonstrate that these are
appropriate techniques for patients in the second half of life,
regardless of age. They lay to rest many stereotypes and myths that
have long interfered with the dynamic treatment of older patients,
and they propose exciting new conceptualizations such as that of
adult develop mental arrests. The genetic approach reaches beyond
childhood and adolescence and takes on important new meaning by
incorporating an adult developmental past that influences both
psychopathology and transference. The relationship between theory
and therapy is richly demonstrated in the clinical presentations,
including ten detailed case histories of pa tients between the ages
of 40 and BO. These and other clinical discussions provide ample
evidence that a psychodynamic approach that is based on a sound
adult developmental psychology can be extraordinarily effective.
They also demonstrate both the similarities and differences in
working with older versus younger patients. This work is a major
contribution in a long-neglected dimension of clinical psychiatry.
SHERWYN M."
This volume is about the normal development of adulthood, as weIl
as its vieissitudes and the contributions of such development to
psycho- pathology. The authors are psychoanalysts of great dinieal
skill and perceptiveness, but while their focus is consistently a
psychodynamie one, their conceptualizations about adult
developmental processes are applicable to virtually all kinds of
therapy. It is extraordinary how little attention has been paid to
the effects of adult developmental experience on mental
development. Obviously mental structures are not statie after the
profound experiences of child- hood and adolescence, nor are they
merely a template upon whieh adult experiences are processed. The
authors dearly demonstrate that current adult experience always
adds to, and interacts with, existing mental structure, whieh is
itself the result of all preceding develop- ment. After a first
section in whieh they examine life cyde ideas on de- velopment from
antiquity to the present, they present their own work as it relates
to adult experience and adult development. Their hypoth- eses about
the psychodynamie theory of adult development are partie- ularly
creative and an enormous contribution to the psychiatrie litera-
ture and the dinical understanding of patients. Consistent with
their views that development in adulthood is an ongoing and dynamic
process, they elaborate their ideas that childhood development is
fo- cused primarily on the formation of psychie structure while
adult de- velopment is concerned with the continued evolution of
existing struc- ture and its use.
This is the second book in the pioneering investigation of adult
develop ment by Robert A. Nemiroff and Calvin A. Colarusso. The
first, Adult Development: A New Dimension in Psychodynamic Theory
and Practice, ar rived to critical acclaim in 1981. It presented a
psychodynamic theory of development during the second half of life
and a model of normal adult functioning. This book is the logical
sequel, expanding and elaborating the original formulations and
applying them to the clinical practice of psychotherapy and
psychoanalysis. Nemiroff and Colarusso demonstrate that these are
appropriate techniques for patients in the second half of life,
regardless of age. They lay to rest many stereotypes and myths that
have long interfered with the dynamic treatment of older patients,
and they propose exciting new conceptualizations such as that of
adult develop mental arrests. The genetic approach reaches beyond
childhood and adolescence and takes on important new meaning by
incorporating an adult developmental past that influences both
psychopathology and transference. The relationship between theory
and therapy is richly demonstrated in the clinical presentations,
including ten detailed case histories of pa tients between the ages
of 40 and BO. These and other clinical discussions provide ample
evidence that a psychodynamic approach that is based on a sound
adult developmental psychology can be extraordinarily effective.
They also demonstrate both the similarities and differences in
working with older versus younger patients. This work is a major
contribution in a long-neglected dimension of clinical psychiatry.
SHERWYN M.
This volume is about the normal development of adulthood, as weIl
as its vieissitudes and the contributions of such development to
psycho- pathology. The authors are psychoanalysts of great dinieal
skill and perceptiveness, but while their focus is consistently a
psychodynamie one, their conceptualizations about adult
developmental processes are applicable to virtually all kinds of
therapy. It is extraordinary how little attention has been paid to
the effects of adult developmental experience on mental
development. Obviously mental structures are not statie after the
profound experiences of child- hood and adolescence, nor are they
merely a template upon whieh adult experiences are processed. The
authors dearly demonstrate that current adult experience always
adds to, and interacts with, existing mental structure, whieh is
itself the result of all preceding develop- ment. After a first
section in whieh they examine life cyde ideas on de- velopment from
antiquity to the present, they present their own work as it relates
to adult experience and adult development. Their hypoth- eses about
the psychodynamie theory of adult development are partie- ularly
creative and an enormous contribution to the psychiatrie litera-
ture and the dinical understanding of patients. Consistent with
their views that development in adulthood is an ongoing and dynamic
process, they elaborate their ideas that childhood development is
fo- cused primarily on the formation of psychie structure while
adult de- velopment is concerned with the continued evolution of
existing struc- ture and its use.
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