Extending Horizons in Helping and Caring Therapies
Beyond the Liminal in the Healing Encounter
Herausgeber: Nolan, Greg; West, William
Extending Horizons in Helping and Caring Therapies
Beyond the Liminal in the Healing Encounter
Herausgeber: Nolan, Greg; West, William
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Highly qualified contributors explore ways in which insights into individual, cultural and community meanings open further perspectives on human being and help clarify what can feel a confusing present and an increasingly unpredictable future.
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Highly qualified contributors explore ways in which insights into individual, cultural and community meanings open further perspectives on human being and help clarify what can feel a confusing present and an increasingly unpredictable future.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 232
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781138387454
- ISBN-10: 1138387452
- Artikelnr.: 58382461
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 232
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781138387454
- ISBN-10: 1138387452
- Artikelnr.: 58382461
Greg Nolan is Visiting Lecturer in Counselling and Psychotherapy at the University of Leeds, MBACP Senior Registered Practitioner and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. He has a teaching career spanning over 45 years and has research interests in the phenomena of micro-moments in practice and clinical supervision. He has published on therapeutic practice, clinical supervision and counsellor training. William West is a Visiting Professor to the University of Chester and Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Counselling Studies at the University of Manchester, where he was most noted for his interest in counselling and spirituality and for his work with doctorate and PhD students. He has published extensively and remains passionately interested in the overlap between counselling and religious pastoral care.
Introduction Greg Nolan and William West Part I: Personal and Professional Identity 1. Reflections beyond Therapy: To Be or to Not-Be, is That the Question? Bridget Tardivel 2. `Magical
consciousness: An ancient god, synchrony, and anomaly in service of the ego. David Smith & Friday Faraday 3. The immersion of the mermaid: A heuristic autoethnographic approach to working therapeutically with active imagination and traumatic loss. Rachel Mallen 4. Self-identity, redefinition and the trans-relational quest for meaningful connection. Phil Goss Part II: Culture and Personal Context 5. It
s not all just psychology: Context, social class and counselling. Liz Ballinger 6. Confidence with Difficult Conversations: The need to explore taboo subjects in particular relation to the sexual abuse of children. Barry O
Sullivan 7. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part One. George MacDonald 8. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part Two. George MacDonald Part III: Practice Research 9. Hope is a rope: Living with a difficult present and an uncertain future. John Prysor-Jones 10. A Chocolate Santa: Imaging the liminal moment with reverie in research. Lynn McVey 11. Moments of deep encounter in listening relationships: Resisting limiting the interpretive frame to enhance beneficial encounter. James Tebbutt Part IV: Clinical Practice 12. There is no horizon, this side or that side, of our own shadow: The relational (l)edge in clinical supervision. Greg Nolan 13. A dialogue with three voices: Therapist, interpreter, asylum seeker/refugee. Lynn Learman 14. Beyond relationships
into new realms. Allison Brown 15. Client wisdom and holism in anthroposophic psychotherapy. John Lees 16. Dwelling on the edge. William West In Conclusion. William West & Greg Nolan
consciousness: An ancient god, synchrony, and anomaly in service of the ego. David Smith & Friday Faraday 3. The immersion of the mermaid: A heuristic autoethnographic approach to working therapeutically with active imagination and traumatic loss. Rachel Mallen 4. Self-identity, redefinition and the trans-relational quest for meaningful connection. Phil Goss Part II: Culture and Personal Context 5. It
s not all just psychology: Context, social class and counselling. Liz Ballinger 6. Confidence with Difficult Conversations: The need to explore taboo subjects in particular relation to the sexual abuse of children. Barry O
Sullivan 7. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part One. George MacDonald 8. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part Two. George MacDonald Part III: Practice Research 9. Hope is a rope: Living with a difficult present and an uncertain future. John Prysor-Jones 10. A Chocolate Santa: Imaging the liminal moment with reverie in research. Lynn McVey 11. Moments of deep encounter in listening relationships: Resisting limiting the interpretive frame to enhance beneficial encounter. James Tebbutt Part IV: Clinical Practice 12. There is no horizon, this side or that side, of our own shadow: The relational (l)edge in clinical supervision. Greg Nolan 13. A dialogue with three voices: Therapist, interpreter, asylum seeker/refugee. Lynn Learman 14. Beyond relationships
into new realms. Allison Brown 15. Client wisdom and holism in anthroposophic psychotherapy. John Lees 16. Dwelling on the edge. William West In Conclusion. William West & Greg Nolan
Introduction Greg Nolan and William West Part I: Personal and Professional Identity 1. Reflections beyond Therapy: To Be or to Not-Be, is That the Question? Bridget Tardivel 2. `Magical
consciousness: An ancient god, synchrony, and anomaly in service of the ego. David Smith & Friday Faraday 3. The immersion of the mermaid: A heuristic autoethnographic approach to working therapeutically with active imagination and traumatic loss. Rachel Mallen 4. Self-identity, redefinition and the trans-relational quest for meaningful connection. Phil Goss Part II: Culture and Personal Context 5. It
s not all just psychology: Context, social class and counselling. Liz Ballinger 6. Confidence with Difficult Conversations: The need to explore taboo subjects in particular relation to the sexual abuse of children. Barry O
Sullivan 7. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part One. George MacDonald 8. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part Two. George MacDonald Part III: Practice Research 9. Hope is a rope: Living with a difficult present and an uncertain future. John Prysor-Jones 10. A Chocolate Santa: Imaging the liminal moment with reverie in research. Lynn McVey 11. Moments of deep encounter in listening relationships: Resisting limiting the interpretive frame to enhance beneficial encounter. James Tebbutt Part IV: Clinical Practice 12. There is no horizon, this side or that side, of our own shadow: The relational (l)edge in clinical supervision. Greg Nolan 13. A dialogue with three voices: Therapist, interpreter, asylum seeker/refugee. Lynn Learman 14. Beyond relationships
into new realms. Allison Brown 15. Client wisdom and holism in anthroposophic psychotherapy. John Lees 16. Dwelling on the edge. William West In Conclusion. William West & Greg Nolan
consciousness: An ancient god, synchrony, and anomaly in service of the ego. David Smith & Friday Faraday 3. The immersion of the mermaid: A heuristic autoethnographic approach to working therapeutically with active imagination and traumatic loss. Rachel Mallen 4. Self-identity, redefinition and the trans-relational quest for meaningful connection. Phil Goss Part II: Culture and Personal Context 5. It
s not all just psychology: Context, social class and counselling. Liz Ballinger 6. Confidence with Difficult Conversations: The need to explore taboo subjects in particular relation to the sexual abuse of children. Barry O
Sullivan 7. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part One. George MacDonald 8. Culture as a resource in the creation of meaning
Part Two. George MacDonald Part III: Practice Research 9. Hope is a rope: Living with a difficult present and an uncertain future. John Prysor-Jones 10. A Chocolate Santa: Imaging the liminal moment with reverie in research. Lynn McVey 11. Moments of deep encounter in listening relationships: Resisting limiting the interpretive frame to enhance beneficial encounter. James Tebbutt Part IV: Clinical Practice 12. There is no horizon, this side or that side, of our own shadow: The relational (l)edge in clinical supervision. Greg Nolan 13. A dialogue with three voices: Therapist, interpreter, asylum seeker/refugee. Lynn Learman 14. Beyond relationships
into new realms. Allison Brown 15. Client wisdom and holism in anthroposophic psychotherapy. John Lees 16. Dwelling on the edge. William West In Conclusion. William West & Greg Nolan