Summary
Contents
Subject index
Handbook of Contemporary Psychotherapy explores a wide range of constructs not captured in the DSM or traditional research but that play important roles in psychotherapy cases. To provide readers with a tool bag of practical techniques they can use in these cases, editors William O’Donohue and Steven R. Graybar present chapters written by leading clinical authorities on such topics as the process of change in psychotherapy, attachment and terror management, projective identification, terminating psychotherapy therapeutically, shame and its many ramifications for clients, dream work, boundaries, forgiveness, the repressed and recovered memory debate, and many others.
Front Matter
Chapters
- Chapter 1: The Scientist Practitioner and Dynamic Constructs
- Chapter 2: The (Dramatic) Process of Psychotherapy
- Chapter 3: Clinical Practice and the Issue of Repressed Memories: Avoiding an Ice Patch on the Slippery Slope
- Chapter 4: Theory and Methods for Studying the Influence of Unconscious Processes: Illustrations from Attachment and Terror Management Research
- Chapter 5: Mediation, Ego, and I: Who, Exactly, is in Conflict?
- Chapter 6: Family Influences and Ecological Context
- Chapter 7: A Psychoanalytic Understanding of the Death Instinct: Problems in Receiving the Good Object
- Chapter 8: Countertransference: A Foundation of Psychotherapy
- Chapter 9: Projective Identification
- Chapter 10: Mindfulness: Being Mindful in Psychotherapy
- Chapter 11: The Science of Forgiveness
- Chapter 12: Dream-Work in Psychotherapy: A Narrative, Commonsense Approach
- Chapter 13: Shame
- Chapter 14: Treatment of Clients Who are Struggling with Depression
- Chapter 15: Therapeutic Boundaries and Effective Therapy: Exploring the Relationships
- Chapter 16: Terminating Psychotherapy Therapeutically
Back Matter
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