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Sex Therapy with Erotically Marginalized Clients: Nine Principles
of Clinical Support provides a clinical guide to relational sex
therapy with individuals, partnerships, polyships, and alternative
family structures where one or more of the clients are erotically
marginalized. This term refers to people who are at risk of being
pathologized and oppressed both outside and inside the clinical
setting due to their gender identities, sexual orientations, or
sexual practices. The book outlines nine principles for therapeutic
practice which meet the needs of erotically marginalized clients,
whose forms of sexuality and desire are rarely spoken about and for
whom there is a dearth of language in therapeutic contexts. Each
principle concludes with a series of 'key points' and then followed
by illustrative clinical case studies, contributed by sex
therapists and clinicians who self-identify as erotically
marginalized and who also work with erotically marginalized
clients. The book also provides a full glossary, 'Defining
Erotically Marginalized Identities'. The authors and case
contributors use a radical and affirming lens to examine erotically
marginalized identities that are often neglected. The book bridges
gaps between the past, present, and future in the field of sex
therapy and greatly expands the diversity of experiences and
identities within the field, particularly the experience of
multiple oppressions. The book marks a valuable contribution not
only to sex therapists but to the wider clinical and therapeutic
community.
Sex Therapy with Erotically Marginalized Clients: Nine Principles
of Clinical Support provides a clinical guide to relational sex
therapy with individuals, partnerships, polyships, and alternative
family structures where one or more of the clients are erotically
marginalized. This term refers to people who are at risk of being
pathologized and oppressed both outside and inside the clinical
setting due to their gender identities, sexual orientations, or
sexual practices. The book outlines nine principles for therapeutic
practice which meet the needs of erotically marginalized clients,
whose forms of sexuality and desire are rarely spoken about and for
whom there is a dearth of language in therapeutic contexts. Each
principle concludes with a series of 'key points' and then followed
by illustrative clinical case studies, contributed by sex
therapists and clinicians who self-identify as erotically
marginalized and who also work with erotically marginalized
clients. The book also provides a full glossary, 'Defining
Erotically Marginalized Identities'. The authors and case
contributors use a radical and affirming lens to examine erotically
marginalized identities that are often neglected. The book bridges
gaps between the past, present, and future in the field of sex
therapy and greatly expands the diversity of experiences and
identities within the field, particularly the experience of
multiple oppressions. The book marks a valuable contribution not
only to sex therapists but to the wider clinical and therapeutic
community.
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