Psychoanalysis Books
You are currently browsing 771–780 of 842 new and published books in the subject of Psychoanalysis — sorted by publish date from newer books to older books.
For books that are not yet published; please browse forthcoming books.
You are currently browsing 771–780 of 842 new and published books in the subject of Psychoanalysis — sorted by publish date from newer books to older books.
For books that are not yet published; please browse forthcoming books.
Series: Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series
Lichtenberg collates and summarizes recent findings about the first two years of life in order to examine their implications for contemporary psychoanalysis. He explores the implications of these data for the unfolding sense of self, and then draws on these data to reconceptualize the analytic...
Published June 30th 1991 by Routledge
Published May 1st 1991 by Routledge
In recent decades the relationship between psychoanalysis and psychotherapy has been a focal point for debate about the distinctiveness of analysis as a particular kind of therapeutic enterprise. In Interpretation and Interaction, Jerome Oremland invokes the interventions of "...
Published April 30th 1991 by Routledge
In this volume, a well-known psychoanalyst, dance therapist, and educational consultant chronicles her clinical work with deeply troubled children who fall between the cracks of our diagnostic and educational systems. These children, who frequently turn out to have been sexually or punitively...
Published April 30th 1991 by Routledge
Termination of psychoanalysis or psychotherapy is centrally important both to the process of treatment and to the patient's experience of treatment. It is surprising, then, that there has heretofore been no comprehensive study of the subject. This book begins to bridge the gap in this area. It is...
Published April 30th 1991 by Routledge
What can psychoanalysis contribute to an understanding of the etiology, treatment, and prevention of substance abuse? Here, Louis Berger contests both the orthodox view of substance abuse as a "disease" explicable within the medical model, and the fashionable dissenting view that substance abuse is...
Published April 30th 1991 by Routledge
Published April 11th 1991 by Routledge
Published March 31st 1991 by Routledge
Slap and Slap-Shelton proffer the schema as the basis of an internally consistent and clinically relevant model of the mind. Wedded to the dynamic and genetic points of view, the schema model accommodates the clinical realities of trauma, repetition, and sublimation while dispensing entirely with...
Published January 31st 1991 by Routledge
Object relations, which emphasizes the importance of the preoedipal period and the infant-mother relationship, is considered by many analysts to be the major development in psychoanalytic theory since Freud. In this reinterpretation of its history Peter L. Rudnytsky focuses on two pivotal...
Published December 31st 1990 by Routledge