Description
This book is a timely and relevant book for psychotherapists and psychoanalysts who process loss both in their own lives and in the lives of their patients, offering perspectives from a range of theoretical backgrounds, clinical vignettes and personal insights.
This volume addresses the scope of grief and mourning between the therapeutic dyad, and carefully examines how the patient and therapist experience intersect and imbue the analytic space and the therapeutic process. The book examines personal loss of parents and partners, as well as loss generated by mass trauma through the lens of the Holocaust, the immigrant experience, the COVID-19 pandemic and the environment. There are chapters that cover how the lost other continues to live within one's mind, and within the analytic relationship, how loss impacts one's internal self system, and how loss associated with traumatic experience with the deceased continues to reverberate.
With a unique focus on the therapist's personal experience of loss, and how it shapes the clinical situation, as well as a broad range of perspectives on managing and working with loss in patients, this is an invaluable book for all practicing psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.
Author: Shoshana Ringel
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 10/22/2021
Pages: 264
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.88lbs
Size: 9.21h x 6.14w x 0.60d
ISBN13: 9781032104775
ISBN10: 1032104775
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Movements | Psychoanalysis
- Psychology | Psychotherapy | General
- Psychology | Mental Health
About the Author
Dr. Shoshana Ringel is the author of five books on attachment, trauma, and grief and loss, and has published over fifty clinical papers. She is on the faculty of ICP&P and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and is in private practice in Maryland. Dr. Ringel has presented her work in national and international psychoanalytic conferences, including IARPP and IAPSP
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