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The space between : experience, context, and process in the therapeutic relationship / edited by Carmel Flaskas, Barry Mason, and Amaryll Perlesz ; foreword by John Byng-Hall.

Contributor(s): Series: Systemic thinking and practice seriesPublication details: Abingdon: Routledge, 2018.Description: xxviii, 230 pISBN:
  • 9781855753655
  • 1855753650
Subject(s): NLM classification:
  • WM 432.
Contents:
INTRODUCTION Orientating to therapeutic relationships and the space between; CHAPTER ONE Relational reflexivity: a tool for socially constructing therapeutic relationships; CHAPTER TWO From system to psyche; CHAPTER THREE "Alice and Alice not through the looking glass": therapeutic transparency and the therapeutic and supervisory relationship; CHAPTER FOUR Working with men who use violence and control; CHAPTER FIVE Not getting lost in translation: establishing a working alliance with co-workers and interpreters CHAPTER SIX Intercultural: where the systemic meets the psychoanalytic in thetherapeutic relationshipCHAPTER SEVEN Before and beyond words :embodiment and intercultural therapeutic relationships in family therapy; CHAPTER EIGHT Sticky situations, therapy mess: on impasse and the therapist's position; CHAPTER NINE Systems of the heart: evoking the feeling self in family therapy; CHAPTER TEN Shame and the therapeutic relationship; CHAPTER ELEVEN Relational risk-taking and the therapeutic relationship CHAPTER TWELVE Adopting a research lens in family therapy: a means to therapeutic collaborationCHAPTER THIRTEEN Research on the therapeutic alliance in family therapy
Summary: The papers in this book focus on many different aspects of the therapeutic relationship, including the self of the therapist, working cross-culturally and with language difference, impasse, risk taking, the place of research, and the influence of theory. Clinical examples illustrate successful as well as less succssful outcomes in therapy, and these clinical explorations make the book accessible to both systemic and non-systemic practitioners alike. Part of the Systemic Thinking and Practice Series.Contributors:Rhonda Brown; John Burnham; John Byng-Hall; Alan Carr; Carmel Flaskas; Jo Howard; Alfred Hurst; Ellie Kavner; Sebastian Kraemer; Inga-Britt Krause; Rabia Malik; Maeve Malley; Michael Maltby; Barry Mason; Sue McNab; Amaryll Perlesz; David Pocock; Hitesh Raval; Justin Schlicht; and Lennox K. Thomas.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book South London and Maudsley Trust Library Shelves WM 432 SPA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 023539
Book Whittington Health Library Shelves Available 9781855753655

First published by Karnac in 2005.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 201-221) and index.

INTRODUCTION Orientating to therapeutic relationships and the space between; CHAPTER ONE Relational reflexivity: a tool for socially constructing therapeutic relationships; CHAPTER TWO From system to psyche; CHAPTER THREE "Alice and Alice not through the looking glass": therapeutic transparency and the therapeutic and supervisory relationship; CHAPTER FOUR Working with men who use violence and control; CHAPTER FIVE Not getting lost in translation: establishing a working alliance with co-workers and interpreters
CHAPTER SIX Intercultural: where the systemic meets the psychoanalytic in thetherapeutic relationshipCHAPTER SEVEN Before and beyond words :embodiment and intercultural therapeutic relationships in family therapy; CHAPTER EIGHT Sticky situations, therapy mess: on impasse and the therapist's position; CHAPTER NINE Systems of the heart: evoking the feeling self in family therapy; CHAPTER TEN Shame and the therapeutic relationship; CHAPTER ELEVEN Relational risk-taking and the therapeutic relationship
CHAPTER TWELVE Adopting a research lens in family therapy: a means to therapeutic collaborationCHAPTER THIRTEEN Research on the therapeutic alliance in family therapy

The papers in this book focus on many different aspects of the therapeutic relationship, including the self of the therapist, working cross-culturally and with language difference, impasse, risk taking, the place of research, and the influence of theory. Clinical examples illustrate successful as well as less succssful outcomes in therapy, and these clinical explorations make the book accessible to both systemic and non-systemic practitioners alike. Part of the Systemic Thinking and Practice Series.Contributors:Rhonda Brown; John Burnham; John Byng-Hall; Alan Carr; Carmel Flaskas; Jo Howard; Alfred Hurst; Ellie Kavner; Sebastian Kraemer; Inga-Britt Krause; Rabia Malik; Maeve Malley; Michael Maltby; Barry Mason; Sue McNab; Amaryll Perlesz; David Pocock; Hitesh Raval; Justin Schlicht; and Lennox K. Thomas.

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