The love cure : therapy erotic and sexual
Material type: TextWoodstock, CT Spring Publications c1996*Description: 174p 23 cm appendix, bib. refsContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0882145134
- RC489.E75 H38 1996
Item type | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Zeller Library | Pa.Hau (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | 1 | B02901 |
Psychotherapy -- Erotic Aspects : 'What would therapy look like if we framed it as an essentially erotic enterprise? What would that bring to light about the therapuetic process?' - p11. Chapt. 1: Erotic therapy and the shape of Eros, p19-35.. Analyst and Analysand : 'Psychotherapy is experienced as a human relationship of central importance in people's lives...While there is always a transference and countertransference of some kind... patients are ashamed and elated as they find themselves falling in love with their therapists, and therapists are no less affected in return' - p10.. Love : ('Therapy is found to be essentially a love cure' - p15) Chapt. 4: The love cure - part 1: The love they longed for as children; Chapt. 5: The love cure - part 2: If no bond of love exists, they have no soul; Chapt. 7: The ethics of the love cure, p82-98; p99-117; p137-153.. Transference and Countertransference : ('A marriage based on transference is bound to fail' - p156) Chapt. 8: Marrying the patient. ( 'Jung first introduced the term 'transference neurosis' in 1907, to describe neuroses in which the patient's transference to the doctor was of prime importance. Freud developed its meaning as a therapeutic repetition of the patient's more general neurosis in 1914' - p11), p154-163.. Desire : Intro.: Framing Eros; Chapt. 1: Erotic therapy and the shape of Eros; Chapt. 3: Eros and union.. Sexuality : Chapt. 6: Therapy and sex, p118-136.. Jung, Carl Gustav. 1875-1961 and Sigmund Freud. 1856-1939 : 'Jung first introduced the term 'transference neurosis' in 1907, to describe neuroses in which the patient's transference to the doctor was of prime importance. Freud developed its meaning as a therapeutic repetition of the patient's more general neurosis in 1914' - p11.
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