At the interface of transactional analysis, psychoanalysis, and body psychotherapy :
General Material Designation
[Book]
Other Title Information
clinical and theoretical perspectives /
First Statement of Responsibility
William F. Cornell.
EDITION STATEMENT
Edition Statement
1st
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
London :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Routledge,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2018.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 online resource
GENERAL NOTES
Text of Note
Introduction: In Acknowledgement and Appreciation--Keeping Our Work Alive Section I: Deepening Our Capacities for Therapeutic Work Chapter 1) Opening to the Vitality of Unconscious Experience Chapter 2) Play at your own risk: Games, play, and intimacy Chapter 3) Fostering Freedom for Play, Imagination, and Uncertainty in Professional Learning Environments Chapter 4) The Intricate Intimacies of Psychotherapy and Questions of Self-Disclosure Chapter 5) Failing to Do the Job: When the Client Pays the Price for the Therapist's Countertransference Chapter 6) Life Script: A Critical Review from a Developmental Perspective Chapter 7) Babies, Brains, and Bodies: Somatic Foundations of the Child Ego State Chapter 8) "My Body is Unhappy": Somatic Foundations of Script and Script Protocol Chapter 9) Aspiration or Adaptation?: An Unresolved Tension in Eric Berne's Basic Beliefs Chapter 10) What Do You Say if You Don't Say Unconscious?: Dilemmas Created for Transactional Analysis by Berne's Shift Away from the Language of Unconscious Experience Chapter 11) Impasse and Intimacy: Applying Berne's Concept of Script Protocol, coauthored with N.M. Landaiche, III Chapter 12) Nonconscious Processes and Self Development: Key Concepts from Eric Berne and Christopher Bollas, coauthored with N.M. Landaiche, III Chapter 13) The Old Stone House: Eric Berne's Memories and Mourning for his Father's Life and Death Section II: When Life Grows Dark Chapter 14) Grief, Mourning, and Meaning: In a Personal Voice Chapter 15) The Inevitability of Uncertainty, the Necessity of Doubt, and the Development of Trust Chapter 16) In Conflict and Community: A Century of Turbulence Working and Living in Groups
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
Text of Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of figures; Acknowledgments; PART I: Deepening our capacities for therapeutic work; 1. Opening to the vitality of unconscious experience; A brief pause with Eric Berne; Two-person, separate; The therapist as an unconscious object in the evolving psyche of the client; Sexuality and eros in psychotherapy; In closing; 2. Play at your own risk: Games, play, and intimacy; Play as a time structure; The game/play shift; Game/play vignette; Winnicott's Playing and Reality; Play, reality, and intimacy; Play in psychotherapy
Text of Note
An overview of selected developmental theoriesSummary and critique of major script theorists; Summary; 7. Babies, brains, and bodies: Somatic foundations of the Child ego state; The roots of transactional analysis in ego psychology; The problematic Child ego state; Implicit and explicit knowing; Emotion and the brain; Movement and sensorimotor organization; Subsymbolic experience; Evolving concepts in transactional analysis; Clinical implications; Conclusion; 8. "My body is unhappy": Somatic foundations of script and script protocol; Twenty years ago
Text of Note
Applying Bucci's multiple code theory to script and script protocolCase discussion: Script protocol in action; In conclusion; 9. Aspiration or adaptation?: An unresolved tension in Eric Berne's basic beliefs; Pro-growth concepts in Berne's writings; Lessons in resilience; Aspiration and resilience: Berne's aspiration in action; Conclusion; 10. What do you say if you don't say "unconscious"?: Dilemmas created for transactional analysis by Berne's shift away from the language of unconscious experience; Perspectives from members of the original San Francisco TA Seminar
Text of Note
At play in psychotherapy: A case vignetteIn closing; 3. Fostering freedom for play, imagination, and uncertainty in professional learning environments; 4. The intricate intimacies of psychotherapy and questions of self-disclosure; 5. Failing to do the job: When the client pays the price for the therapist's countertransference; Starting at the end; The crisis; Seeking consultation; Self-examination; Returning to therapy and recovering my capacity to think; Working at the psychotic edge; In conclusion; 6. Life script: A critical review from a developmental perspective
Text of Note
Berne's critique of the Freudian conceptualization of the unconsciousBerne's error; The richness and vitality of unconscious modes; Conclusion; 11. Impasse and intimacy: Applying Berne's concept of script protocol; Theoretical perspectives on the nature of impasses; Transference and countertransference; Parallel process; Projective identification; The working couple; Protocol: The relational template for intimate contact and disturbance; Getting "under the skin": A case of protocol at work; Discussion: Applying the concept of the protocol to move through an impasse
0
8
8
8
8
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
At the Interface of Transactional Analysis, Psychoanalysis, and Body Psychotherapy revolves around two intertwined themes: that of the critique and expansion of the theory and practice of transactional analysis and that of the generative richness discovered at the intersection of transactional analysis, psychoanalysis, and somatic psychotherapy. William F. Cornell explores the work of psychotherapists and counsellors through the lenses of clinical theory, practice, supervision, and ethics. The reader is thus invited into a more vivid experience of being engaged and touched by this work's often deep, and at times difficult, intimacy. The book is grounded in the approaches of contemporary transactional analysis and psychoanalysis, using detailed case discussions to convey the flesh of these professional, and yet all too human, working relationships. Attention is paid to the force and richness of the transferential and countertransferential tensions that pervade and enliven the therapeutic process. Unconscious processes are viewed as fundamentally creative and life-seeking, with the vital functions of fantasy, imagination, and play brought into the foreground. In the era of short-term, cognitive-behavioural, solution-focused, and evidence-based models of counselling and psychotherapy, At the Interface of Transactional Analysis, Psychoanalysis, and Body Psychotherapy seeks to demonstrate the power and creativity of longer-term, dynamically oriented work.