Item type | Home library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | South London and Maudsley Trust Library Shelves | WM 420 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Issued | 31/05/2024 | 024853 |
Here and now - there and then -- Part 1: Trust and attachment -- Introducting trust and attachment issues -- 2 Trust and attachment: foundations -- 3 Trust and attachment: relatedness and separateness -- 4 Trust and attachment: in adulthood and in therapy -- Concluding rust and attachment issues -- Part 2: Authority and autonomy -- Introducting authority and autonomy issues -- 5 Authority and autonomy: internalisation -- 6 Authority and autonomy: defending the self -- 7 Authority and autonomy: the therapeutic relationship -- Concluding authority and autonomy issues -- Part 3: Concord and challenge -- Introducing concord and challenge issues -- 8 Concord and challenge: gender, sexuality and sexual relations -- 9 Concord and challenge: making relationships -- 10 Concord and challenge: complementarity and rivalry -- Concluding concord and challenge issues.
A person's past is ever present, from infancy to old age, and it affects the dynamics of therapy and the therapist-patient relationship.
Written by a key founding figure of psychodynamic counselling and now with contributions from pre-eminent researcher, Dawn Freshwater, the bestselling The Presenting Past gives practicing therapists and students keen insight into the subject. The theories of Freud, Winnicott, Klein are now complimented by attachment theory and self-psychology and are organized into three main categories: trust and attachment; authority and autonomy; and concord and challenge.
In this new edition, Jacobs and Freshwater give psychodynamic counselling and therapy a truly human face. The connections between theory and practice are highlighted through the use of compelling case examples and end of chapter exercises. Combined with an approachable writing style, this edition is the go-to for busy professionals and trainees.
Fully updated to include coverage of the prevalence of social media; debates about gender identity and sexuality; the significance of attachment theory and attachment-based practice and self-psychology and its concentration upon the problems of narcissistic wound, The Presenting Past stays wonderfully readable.
The book shows Jacobs at his best and is a testimony to his lifetime of experience. Michael Jacobs and Dawn Freshwater provide a clear modernisation on this classic, best-selling text.
Michael Jacobs is one of the pioneers of psychodynamic counselling in Britain. He developed the counselling and psychotherapy programme at the University of Leicester, UK up to his retirement in 2000.
Dawn Freshwater is adjunct Professor of Mental Health at the University of Leeds, UK and the University of Western Australia, Australia.
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