Titre :
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Interactions: The Realm of Transference and Countertransference
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Auteurs :
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Robert, M.D. Langs, Auteur
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Type de document :
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texte imprimé
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Editeur :
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New York, London (USA) : Jason Aronson, Inc., 1980
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ISBN/ISSN/EAN :
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ISBN 0-87668-428-5
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Format :
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568 p. / Couv. ill., non ill. / 23,4 cm
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Note générale :
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Table of Contents (PP. ix-x)
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Langues originales:
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Américain
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Index. décimale :
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Psychologie Appliquée (158) (Psychologie morale et Philosophie)
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Catégories :
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Philosophie et Psychologie
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Mots-clés:
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Patient, Transference, Noncountertransference, Alliance, Relationship, Truth Therapy, Lie Therapy
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Résumé :
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In Interactions Robert Langs focuses on the spiraling communicative interaction occurring both consciously and unconsciously between patient and therapist. This for Langs is the real heart of the therapic process; it is this that one must listen to in doing therapy, this whose relatively undisturbed unfolding the ground rules are meant to facilitate. This interaction is the context in which interventions are in fact made, and it must always be taken into account if they are to have their intended effect.
The volume comprises two sections. The first is a series of nine chapters based on case presentations to a supervisory seminar. The discussion is lively, and Langs shows his skill at developing and validating new formulations and concepts on the basis of clinical material he is hearing for the first time. Where erroneous interventions have been made, or where the therapist has been inappropriately silent, Langs offers model interventions.
The second part consists of five chapters which elaborate and synthesize the most important ideas emerging from the case presentations. Here Langs turns to the clinical literature and with a sharp eye examines the the limitations and technical implications of present conceptions of transference and counterctransference. His chapter on truth therapy/lie therapy emerges from these considerations and is intented to provoke a reconsideration of present therapeutic practice. It is certain to ignite contrversy.
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Note de contenu :
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Preface (xi); 1. Some Dimensions of the Therapeutic Relationship; 2. Three Forms of Communicative Relatedness; 3. Therapistor Others: The Level of Greater Meaning; 4. Designated and Functional Patients and Therapists; 5. Dealing with Transference and Countertransference; 6. The Structure of Lie Therapy; 7. A Therapist's Inattention to a Patient's Therapeutic Efforts; 8. The Alliance Sector and the Reality in the Relationship; 9. Noncountertransference and Transference. PART II. 10. Sequences Within the Therapeutic Interaction; 11. Inevitable Countertransference; 12. Truth Therapy/Lie Therapy; 13. The Clinical Referents of Transference and Countertransference; 14. Forms of Relatedness between Patients and Therapists. Glossary. References. Index.
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