This book offers practitioners, teachers, and
students of psychotherapy a detailed and comprehensive
account of group analysis. It demystifies the workings
of analytic groups and looks at the great stretch of
issues and tasks confronting the therapist in the
practice of group analytic psychotherapy. Each stage in
the process is fully discussed: the assessment and
preparation of patients for groups, dynamic
administration, beginning, and ending a group, and the
introduction of new members into an established group. A
chapter on psychopathology gives a picture of the main
psychiatric conditions which the group therapist is
likely to encounter, and offers clear guidelines on how
to manage them in a group context. An exposition on the
group in full flow provides an unusual insight into the
processes which constitute the analytic culture,
including the analysis of dreams, the art of
interpreting, use of the transference and
countertransference, and the place of play, humour and
metaphor.Difficult and challenging scenarios, such as
dropping out, scapegoating, the silent group member, and
monopolisation of the group are treated in depth, as are
Large Groups, homogeneous groups, groups for children
and adolescents, family therapy, groups in non-clinical
settings, and the supervision of group therapy. The
impingement of the therapist' s own personal issues is
also given attention. The authors have flanked their
narrative with accounts of the historical, social and
cultural origins of group analysis, and a vision of the
future provided by the newer strands of thinking in the
field. The text is enlivened by colourful vignettes
drawn from the authors' own experiences, and by sharply
focused dialogues between the two authors, designed to
illustrate their contrasting and complementary
perspectives. The book represents a distillation of the
authors' long experience in the field of group analytic
practice and training in the United Kingdom and
internationally. |
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