Description
About the Author
Dorothy Heard is a pyschoanalytic psychotherapist in private practice and was formerly a Consultant in John Bowlby's Department at the Tavistock Clinic, London. Brian Lake was formerly Consultant in Psychotherapy at St James's University Hospital, Leeds. Una McCluskey graduated from University College Dublin, did her professional social work training at the University of Edinburgh, and got her PhD from the University of York. She has written extensively on individuals, couple, family and group systems, and has developed her own model for exploring attachment dynamics in adult life. Her research on affect attunement in adult psychotherapy led her to develop a theory of interaction for psychotherapy and particularly to identify and rate the concept of goal corrected empathic attunement. Throughout the last ten years she has been providing courses for workers and experienced professionals in the field of psychology, psychotherapy, social work, medicine, organisational management and development, education, nursing, art therapy, legal practice, religious and pastoral carers, to enable them explore their own dynamics of attachment in adult life as outlined by the work of Heard and Lake and to check its application to their personal and work life.
Reviews
'This book should appeal to a very wide audience. All of us seek to understand one another and in doing so we all draw on a kind of biological insight into what behaviour 'means'. Watching children from another culture and with another language we understand instinctively much of what their behaviour is about. This is a book that draws systematically on watching people and thinking about behaviour in a biological way. It is both thoughtful and fascinating. It is surely a foundation on which others will want to build.'- Ian Sinclair BA (Oxon), PhD (London), OBE, Professor Emeritus, University of YorkCONTENTSPART 1: THE THEORETICAL BACKGROUND OF AN AUTONOMOUS SELF THAT IS IMMERSED IN THE DYNAMICS OF ATTACHMENT AND INTEREST SHARING1. Introducing a new attachment paradigm2. Introducing a new conceptualisation of the self3. How the self communicates with other people and with itself4. The defensive self5. The careseeking self6. The caregiving self7. The interest sharing self8. The sexual self9. Diagrams depicting the interplay between five of the systems that take part in the dynamics of attachment and interest sharing10. The self under threat and alone: supported or unsupported by the sixth and seventh systemsPART 2: THERAPY GUIDED BY THE NEW ATTACHMENT PARADIGM11. The principles of therapy guided by the dynamics of attachment and interest sharing12. Descriptions of training events that enable participants who are professional caregivers to experience the effects on the self of achieving and not achieving the goal of careseeking.13. Working with an individual adult client with a focus on her defensive identity14. Exploring the dynamics of attachment and interest sharing with groups of professional caregivers: The structure, composition and timing of the course of therapy attended by a group of professional caregivers15. Exploring the dynamics of attachment and interest sharing with groups of professional caregivers: Findings that support a paradigmatic shift in therapeutic practice16. Exploring the dynamics of attachment and interest sharing with groups of professional caregivers: How learning from attending the course is applied in a variety of work settings.PART 3Appendix 1. Bowlby's original ideasAppendix 2. Ainsworth's contribution to Bowlby's ideasAppendix 3. The Strange Situation TestAppendix 4. The Adult Attachment InvestigationThe Glossary
Book Information
ISBN 9781780490427
Author Dorothy Heard
Format Paperback
Page Count 268
Imprint Karnac Books
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd