Existential Group Counselling and Psychotherapy provides a theoretical and practical foundation for practice. It serves as a guide that provides a solid grounding in the `why¿ and `how¿ of therapeutic group-work from an existential perspective.
Existential Group Counselling and Psychotherapy provides a theoretical and practical foundation for practice. It serves as a guide that provides a solid grounding in the `why¿ and `how¿ of therapeutic group-work from an existential perspective.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Karen Weixel-Dixon is a psychotherapist, supervisor, and accredited mediator in private practice, and a visiting lecturer at Regent's University London. Her paradigm is existential phenomenological, and she is particularly interested in how people experience, and engage with, time.
Inhaltsangabe
00. Introduction 01. Part One: Modern Western Origins Historical Overview 02. Kurt Lewin 03. Wilfred Bion 04. S.H Foulkes 05. Carl Rogers 06. Irvin D. Yalom 07. Conclusion and Summary part one 08. Part Two: Being and Doing Towards an Existential Phenomenological Model for Group psychotherapy and Counselling 09. Why Group 10. The Existential `Givens¿ Human Existence 11. Time and Temporality 12. Relatedness 13. Uncertainty, Angst and Anxiety 14. Freedom, Choice, and Change 15. Death 16. Meaning, Meaninglessness, and Nothingness 17. Embodiment and Spatiality 18. Emotions 19. Language 20. The World-View 21. The Contributions of Existential Phenomenology 22. The Contributions of Hermeneutics 23. The Nature of Problems and the Process of Change 24. Relational Issues 25. Conclusion and Summary part two 26. Part Three: Doing and Being Forming, Maintaining, and Ending the Group 27. Risks, disappointments, benefits, and therapeutic effects 28. Focal points: responsibilities of the facilitator, the members, the group 29. The Ways of Dialogue 30. An existential phenomenological model for dreamwork in group 31. Difficult and Challenging Behaviours 32. The Ambiguity of Ethics (with apologies to Simone De Beauvoir) 33. Conclusion and Summary part three
00. Introduction 01. Part One: Modern Western Origins Historical Overview 02. Kurt Lewin 03. Wilfred Bion 04. S.H Foulkes 05. Carl Rogers 06. Irvin D. Yalom 07. Conclusion and Summary part one 08. Part Two: Being and Doing Towards an Existential Phenomenological Model for Group psychotherapy and Counselling 09. Why Group 10. The Existential `Givens¿ Human Existence 11. Time and Temporality 12. Relatedness 13. Uncertainty, Angst and Anxiety 14. Freedom, Choice, and Change 15. Death 16. Meaning, Meaninglessness, and Nothingness 17. Embodiment and Spatiality 18. Emotions 19. Language 20. The World-View 21. The Contributions of Existential Phenomenology 22. The Contributions of Hermeneutics 23. The Nature of Problems and the Process of Change 24. Relational Issues 25. Conclusion and Summary part two 26. Part Three: Doing and Being Forming, Maintaining, and Ending the Group 27. Risks, disappointments, benefits, and therapeutic effects 28. Focal points: responsibilities of the facilitator, the members, the group 29. The Ways of Dialogue 30. An existential phenomenological model for dreamwork in group 31. Difficult and Challenging Behaviours 32. The Ambiguity of Ethics (with apologies to Simone De Beauvoir) 33. Conclusion and Summary part three
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