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Koinonia
Koinonia
★★★★★
★★★★★
Regular price
€137.99
association
Category=JMAF
dialogue
Direct Democracy
ecological perspectives
End Opsychic Structure
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Face To Face
fellowship
free
Greek English Lexicon
group
Group Analytic Approach
group dynamics
groups
Human Suffering
impersonal
Impersonal Fellowship
Infra-and Superstructures
large
Large Group Approach
large group micro-culture emergence
Large Group Phenomenon
Large Group Section
Large Groups Context
larger
Larger Group Dialogue
Larger Group Method
Larger Group Settings
Leicester Conferences
median
Medium Sized Groups
Northfield Military Hospital
object relations
Oligarchic Dictatorships
Patrick de Mare
psychoanalytic theory
Robin Piper
Sexual Dysfunction Clinics
Sheila Thompson
Small Group Analysis
structuralism in psychology
systems thinking
Traumatic Neuroses
Triadic Dialectic
Vice Versa
Vincent Van Gogh
Product details
- ISBN 9780367325282
- Weight: 690g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 27 Sep 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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A study of the larger group, focusing on the processes and dynamics whereby the group micro-culture emerges. As the initial frustrations of the group find expression in hate, this is transformed through dialogue to what the Greeks knew as 'koinonia', or the state of impersonal fellowship. Essentially, Koinonia concerns itself with an opera
Patrick de Mare was born in London in 1916. He qualified as a doctor in 1941 and enlisted in the RAMC in 1942. After the war he became a Consultant Psychotherapist at St. George's Hospital; he set up the Group Analytic Society with S.H. Foulkes, and later established the Institute of Group Analysis and the Group Analytic Practice. He authored various publications including 'Perspectives in Group Psychotherapy' and 'Introduction to Group Treatment in Psychiatry'. Robin Piper trained as a social worker at the London School of Economics. He has worked in child and adult psychiatry and later specialised in Family Therapy at the Marlborough Family Service. He went on to train as a psychotherapist with the British Association of Psychotherapists, and the London Centre for Psychotherapy. For several years he was the co-conductor of the large group at the Institute of Group Analysis with Patrick De Mare. Sheila Thompson qualified as a psychiatric social worker in 1955 and subsequently worked at Great Ormond Street, at the Portman Clinic and the Newnham Community Mental Health Service. She has lived in East Africa working with refugees and in New York where she pursued an interest in family therapy and in the care of patients with terminal cancer. She is now a freelance teacher and writer on group work, bereavement, and terminal care. She has been a member of the Group Analytic Society since 1970 and she is a founding member of the Large Group Section. She is the co-author of 'The Group Process as a Helping Technique' (1970) with Dr. J. H. Kahn, and 'The Group Process and Family Therapy' (1998). She also contributed to 'The Evolution of Group Analysis', edited by M. Pines.
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