Introduction to Group Therapy: A Practical Guide - Rilegato

De Piano, Frank; Fehr, Scott Simon

 
9780789006127: Introduction to Group Therapy: A Practical Guide

Sinossi

Introduction to Group Therapy: A Practical Guide is designed to help you understand the extraordinary effect group therapy provides in helping to relieve human suffering. Practical and at times humorous, this book combines theory, practice, and practical suggestions in areas that are rarely covered in academic settings such as the problematic client, the setting for your group sessions, a group contract, and several group therapy approaches. A plethora of information is offered for graduate students and practicing clinicians. Introduction to Group Therapy will give students and clinicians a solid direction, eliminating feelings of disorientation when starting groups. In this excellent text, you'll explore several areas of group therapy to help you alleviate your clients’suffering, including:

  • the history of group therapy
  • how to set up your office
  • internship, practice, and residency transference
  • forum dialogues with senior clinicians
  • discussions about the group therapy circle
  • the physical representation of group
  • contemporary issues in group therapy
  • problematic clients

Thorough, well-organized, and based on first-hand accounts, this book is also a great resource for experienced clinicians who need proven and expert advice from colleagues in the field. Introduction to Group Therapy effectively combines theory and practical suggestions in one volume to help you offer improved therapy to clients.

Le informazioni nella sezione "Riassunto" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.

Contenuti

Contents
Foreword

  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1. Part I: The Development of a History (1895-1943)
  • The Circle
  • Le Bon
  • Pratt
  • Freud
  • Burrows
  • Wender
  • Moreno
  • Bion
  • Review
  • Chapter 2. Part II: The Story Continues (1951 and Beyond)
  • Dreiker
  • Foulkes
  • Corsini and Rosenberg
  • Berne
  • Rogers
  • Yalom and Lieberman
  • Rioch
  • Horowitz
  • Ormont
  • Review
  • Chapter 3. Why Group Therapy?
  • The Group Therapist
  • Review
  • Chapter 4. Preparation and Practicality
  • The Setting
  • The Group Contract
  • Cohesion
  • Review
  • Chapter 5. Self-Protection: Ego Defense Mechanisms and the Process of Adjustment
  • Acting Out
  • Compensation
  • Conversion
  • Denial
  • Displacement
  • Dissociation
  • Emotional Insulation
  • Fantasy
  • Identification
  • Intellectualization
  • Introjection
  • Projection
  • Rationalization
  • Reaction Formation
  • Regression
  • Repression
  • Sublimation
  • Undoing
  • Review
  • Chapter 6. The Life-Cycle of a Group and Client Inclusion/Exclusion
  • Stage One: Adaptation
  • Orientation
  • Formation
  • Initial Engagement
  • Inclusion
  • Stage Two: Reactive Phase
  • Control
  • Differentiation
  • Disinclination to Participate
  • Transition
  • Conflict and Confrontation
  • Resistance
  • Stage Three:Togetherness
  • Commitment
  • Cohesion
  • Bonding
  • Attraction
  • Identification
  • Family
  • Stage Four: Mature
  • Work
  • Resolution
  • Productivity
  • Task Oriented
  • Cooperation
  • Stage Five: Termination
  • Farewell
  • Closure
  • The End
  • Client Inclusion and Exclusion
  • Review
  • Chapter 7. Transference and Countertransference
  • Transference
  • Countertransference
  • Transference and Its Relationship to Group Therapy
  • Review
  • Chapter 8. Modalities: Structural Empiricism and Application to Group Therapy
  • Adlerian
  • Psychodrama
  • Existentialism
  • Person-Centered
  • Transactional Analysis
  • General Systems Theory (GST)
  • Gestalt
  • Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
  • Review
  • Chapter 9. Modalities--Continued
  • Behavior Therapy
  • Focal Conflict Paradigm
  • Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
  • Basic Assumption Model
  • Reality Therapy
  • Here and Now Modality
  • Review
  • Chapter 10. A Case in Study
  • Group Analytical-Medical Model
  • An Occupational Therapy Approach
  • Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler
  • Process-Directed Approach
  • Reality Therapy Approach
  • Analysis Using the Psychodramatic Modality
  • A Three-Layer Approach
  • Adler's Individual Psychology
  • Systemic Group Therapy Approach
  • The Modern Group Analytic Approach
  • Transactional Analysis Approach
  • A Cognitive Behavior Approach
  • Review
  • Chapter 11. The Training Site and the Problematic Client
  • Scenario
  • Ideal Scenario
  • The Problematic Client
  • Review
  • Chapter 12. Issues and Perspectives
  • Issue: Humor and Its Relationship to Psychotherapy
  • Issue: Therapist Self-Disclosure
  • Issue: Should a Group Therapist Have the Experience of Being a Group Member?
  • Issue: Monopolizers
  • Issue: Subpoena Group Members
  • Issue: When a Client Is Seeing You in Group Therapy and Another Therapist in Individual Psychotherapy
  • Issue: Therapist Abuse
  • Issue: Suicide
  • Review
  • Appendix A: Structured Exercises for Developing Group Cohesion
  • Nonverbal Exercises
  • Verbal Exercises
  • Appendix B. The Many Forms of Group Therapy
  • A Selection of Some Groups in Existence
  • Glossary
  • References
  • Index

Product Description

Book by Fehr Scott Simon

Le informazioni nella sezione "Su questo libro" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.

Altre edizioni note dello stesso titolo

9780789017642: Introduction to Group Therapy: A Practical Guide, Second Edition

Edizione in evidenza

ISBN 10:  0789017644 ISBN 13:  9780789017642
Casa editrice: Routledge, 2003
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