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Sally has presented workshops on Erotic Transference and counter-transference since She works from an integrative relationship model and is recognised by the International Integrative Psychotherapy Association as a trainer, supervisor and practitioner. This workshop is suitable for all therapists who are working with clients. We anticipate that some group members will have more experience than others and this will allow for greater sharing and learning in the group.
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About us. This trauma becomes enacted in the therapy and becomes a turning point that significantly influences the course of therapy, sometimes with creative or even destructive effect.
Using a wealth of clinical material throughout, the contributors show how therapists from different therapeutic orientations are thinking about and working with enactments in therapy, how trauma enactment can affect the therapeutic relationship and how both therapist and client can use it to positive effect.
The Past in the Present will be invaluable to practitioners and students of analytic and humanistic psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, analytic psychology and counselling. Routledge David Mann shows how the erotic feelings and fantasies experienced by patients and therapists can be used to bring about a positive transformation.
giuliettasprint.konfer.eu: Erotic Transference and Countertransference (Clinical Practice in Psychotherapy) (): David Mann: Books. Review of book: David Mann (Ed.) Erotic Transference and Countertransference: Clinical Practice in Psychotherapy. London: Routledge, , pp.
Combining extensive clinical material with theoretical insights and new research on infants, the author suggests that the development of the erotic derives from interactions between the parent and child and is seldom absent from the therapist-patient relationship. However, while the erotic always contains elements of past relationships, it also expresses hope for a different outcome in the present and future.
Individual chapters explore the function of the erotic within the unconscious; erotic pre-Oedipal and Oedipal material; homoeroticism in therapy; sexual intercourse as a metaphor for psychological change; the primal scene in the transference and the difficulties of working with perversions.
Login to add to list. To include a comma in your tag, surround the tag with double quotes. Comments and reviews What are comments? I am grateful to Mr. Will counselling help me? This author listed the different characteristics of transference in the therapeutic dyads according to the respective genders. Erotic transference usually causes some countertransference reactions in the therapist, and examining such reactions is important to understand the patient.
Psychotherapy: An Erotic Relationship offers practitioners a deeper understanding of the interaction between erotic transference and countertransference and explains how these aspects of therapy can be used to enhance the therapeutic process. This book was translated and published in Germany in by Klett Cotta. David Mann Editor Routledge This book brings together, for the first time, contemporary views on how psychotherapists and analysts work with and think about the erotic in therapeutic practice.
Representing a broad spectrum of psychoanalytic perspectives including object relations, Kleinian, Jungian, self psychology and Lacanian thought, the contributors highlight similarities and differences in their approaches to the erotic in transference and countertransference, ranging from love and sexual desire to perverse and psychotic manifestations. Erotic Transference and Counter-transference offers ways of understanding the erotic which should prove both useful and thought provoking.
Love and Hate: Psychoanalytic Perspectives. David Mann Editor Brunner-Routledge How do therapists work with love and hate?
Love and hate seem to be the dominant emotions that make the world go round and are a central theme in psychotherapy. Love and Hate seeks to answer some important questions about all these consuming passions.
Many patients seeking psychotherapy feel unlovable or full of rage and hate. What is it that interferes with the capacity to experience love? This book explores the origins of love and hate from infancy and investigates how they develop through the life cycle. It brings together contemporary views about clinical practice on how psychotherapists and analysts work with and think about love and hate in the transference and countertransference and explores how different schools of thought deal with the subject.