"Including the complete original text of Psychoanalysis and behavior therapy."
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 445-468) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Preface: Psychoanalysis, Behavior Therapy, and the Relational World -- Foreword to Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy / Gerald C. Davison -- Foreword to Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy / Hans H. Strupp -- Preface to Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy -- pt. 1. Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy. 1. Introduction to Part One. 2. Psychoanalysis: From Medicine to Psychology. 3. The Historical and the Intrapsychic. 4. An Interpersonal Alternative. 5. Some Therapeutic Implications of the Interpersonal View. 6. Anxiety, Conflict, and Learning in Neurosis. 7. Psychoanalysis and Behavioral Analysis. 8. The Reduction of Fears: Foundations of Systematic Desensitization and Related Methods. 9. Anxiety Reduction Through Exposure: Clinical Issues. 10. Facilitating Action in the Real World: Assertive Training and Related Approaches. 11. Reinforcement and Interpretation. 12. Some Questions of Ethics and the Image of Man -- pt. 2. The Relational World. 13. Introduction to Part Two. 14. From Periphery to Mainstream: The Evolution of Psychotherapy Integration. 15. The Changing Visions of Psychoanalytic Therapists: Object Relations, Self Psychology, and the Relational Paradigm. 16. From Behavior Therapy to Cognitive-Behavior Therapy. 17. Including the System. 18. Bringing Integration to the Heart of the Therapy: An Integration Approach to the Therapist's Language. 19. Reprise and Future Directions.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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In this update of Dr. Wachtel's seminal work, Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy, the author has developed a new integrative theory, cyclical psychodynamics, that has reworked traditional psychoanalytic concepts and proved capable of addressing observations and clinical experiences on which both psychoanalytic and behavioral theories are based. Psychoanalysis, Behavior Therapy, and the Relational World carefully examines the implications of new developments in both psychoanalytic and behavioral approaches and significantly extends the cyclical psychodynamic model clinically and theoretically. The book addresses the increasingly powerful influence of cognitive perspectives in the thinking of behavior therapists and the emergence of a distinctive and integrative "relational" point of view in psychoanalysis. Both developments have been incorporated into the evolving cyclical psychodynamic model, as has increasing attention to the systemic point of view that guides the work of family therapists. In addition, this book introduces the reader to an innovative approach to the therapist's use of language. Dr. Wachtel considers in detail what the therapist says and how his or her choice of words can enhance or impede the therapeutic process.