Description
By (author) Yalom, Irvin
Short /annotation:
Distills the essence of a wide range of therapies into a creative synthesis, opening up a new way of understanding each person”s confrontation with four ultimate concerns: isolation, meaninglessness, death, and freedom.
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Existential therapy has been practiced and continues to be practiced in many forms and situations throughout the world. But until now, it has lacked a coherent structure, and analysis of its tenets, and an evaluation of its usefulness. Irvin Yalom, whoseTheory and Practice of Group Psychotherapyhas rendered such a service to that discipline since 1970, provides existential psychotherapy with a background, a synthesis, and a framework.Organized around what Yalom identifies as the fourultimate concerns of life”,death, freedom, existential isolation, and meaninglessness,the book takes up the meaning of each existential concern and the type of conflict that springs from our confrontation with each. He shows how these concerns are manifested in personality and psychopathology, and how treatment can be helped by our knowledge of them.Drawing from clinical experience, empirical research, philosophy, and great literature, Yalom has written a broad and comprehensive book. It will provide an intellectual home base for those psychotherapists who have sensed the incompatability of orthodox theories with their own clinical experience, and it opens new doors for empirical research.The fundamental concerns of therapy and the central issues of human existence are woven together here as never before, with intellectual and clinical results that will surprise and enlighten all readers.
Table of contents:
* IntroductionDeath * Life, Death, and Anxiety* The Concept of Death in Children* Death and Psychopathology* Death and PsychotherapyFreedom * Responsibility* WillingIsolation * Existential Isolation* Existential Isolation and PsychotherapyMeaninglessness * Meaninglessness* Meaninglessness and Psychotherapy* Epilogue
Biographical note:
Irvin D. Yalom, M.D., is professor emeritus of psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He was the recipient of the 1974 Edward Strecker Award and the 1979 Foundation”s Fund Prize in Psychiatry. He is the author of When Nietzsche Wept (winner of the 1993 Commonwealth Club gold medal for fiction), Love”s Executioner, Every Day Gets a Little Closer (with Ginny Elkin), and the classic textbooks Inpatient Group Psychotherapy and Existential Psychotherapy.





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