This wide-ranging work takes up some of the pressing cultural, political, organizational and ethical issues for psychoanalytic psychotherapy, placing them firmly in a clinical context. The contributors examine a range of issues from the experiences of a particular group of people in therapy (children, immigrants, gay men, short-term clients), who may challenge psychoanalytic assumptions, to the difficulties psychoanalytic psychotherapy has in organizing itself creatively in a risk-averse culture, and to the openings and connections with other disciplines that may extend and enliven critical work. The contributors write from the critical edge of psychotherapy and offer their own challenges to the profession.
"Do not dance on top of This Refrigerator", Accountability and Transparency in psychotherapy.
Creativity and The Soul, Dilemmas of Training - Evidence, legitimacy and Validation.
Ways of Knowing, Counter-transference, Neuroscience and The Therapy Relationship.
Do you Always Listen to What Your Patients Say, the Ethics of Psychotherapy.
No Place Like Utopia, The Inner Experience of migration.
Blue Stockings, Boiler Suits, Business Suits, is Feminism Still necessary?
Unfamiliar Sorts of People, Redescribing Sexuality.
The Lure of the Norm and The Challenge of Children, Carol Dasgupta.
Brief Psychoanalytic psychotherapy, a Contradiction in Terms? Jenny Corrigall.
Are Words Enough?
Music Therapy as an Influence in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy.
The Blue River of Truth.
Writer, Reader and Critic in The Consulting Room.
Telling it Like it is.
Index.
This wide-ranging work takes up some of the pressing cultural, political, organizational and ethical issues for psychoanalytic psychotherapy, placing them firmly in a clinical context. The contributors examine a range of issues from the experiences of a particular group of people in therapy (children, immigrants, gay men, short-term clients), who may challenge psychoanalytic assumptions, to the difficulties psychoanalytic psychotherapy has in organizing itself creatively in a risk-averse culture, and to the openings and connections with other disciplines that may extend and enliven critical work. The contributors write from the critical edge of psychotherapy and offer their own challenges to the profession.
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Lucy King and Rosemary Randall are the authors of The Future of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, published by Wiley.