Psychotherapeutic Change Through the Group Process

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A01=Dorothy Stock Whittaker
A01=Leonard Blank
advanced group therapy research
affective dynamics
Author_Dorothy Stock Whittaker
Author_Leonard Blank
Category=JM
clinical case analysis
Common Group Tension
deviation in group settings
Disturbing Motive
Dorothy Stock Whitaker
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
focal
Focal Conflict
Focal Conflict Terms
focal conflict theory
Follow
Girl Friends
group cohesion mechanisms
Group Focal Conflicts
Group Forces
Group Situation
Group Solution
Habitual Solution
Individual's Therapeutic Experience
Individual’s Therapeutic Experience
Inpatient Group
Maladaptive Solution
Morton A. Lieberman
Patient's Therapeutic Experience
Patient’s Therapeutic Experience
Reactive Fears
Reactive Motive
Restrictive Solutions
Solutional Conflict
therapeutic alliance
Therapeutic Experience
Therapy Group
Vice Versa
Violated

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138531123
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Psychotherapeutic Change through the Group Process discusses the relation between the properties of groups and therapeutic change. The purpose is to develop a view of groups that accounts for the diversity, complexity, and fluidity of the group situation. The view examines the group in depth, attending not only to overt events, but also to covert aspects of specific situations. The work addresses manifest behaviors, underlying motivations; and the cognitive, rational aspects of the group. It explores the intense affect which may be generated under conditions of group interaction; not merely to the group or individual, but to the individual in the group and to the group as the context for personal experience and change.

The research presented here was initially explored in small group studies. Separate investigations considered the ways in which patients and therapists view group events, the nature of deviation, and the development of group standards. They consider factors associated with therapeutic improvement and therapeutic failure; and characteristic concerns of early sessions. These, plus several discussions of theory and methodology have been published separately.

The authors' working procedure has been to study intensively a relatively small number of groups, relying upon careful observation of natural groups rather than upon laboratory experimentation. The overall effort has been to understand the processes of therapy groups in all their clinical richness and intricacy and yet to impose a scientific discipline and control on our analyses. This has meant a continuing attempt to develop appropriate analytic procedures so that clinical analyses can be as firmly rooted as possible in concrete data and reproducible methods. This book is a unique effort at the scientific grounding of social work practice.

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