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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 616
EAN num: 9780465095636
ISBN number: 0465095631
Label: Basic Books
Manufacturer: Basic Books
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 256
Printing Date: December 23, 1999
Publishing house: Basic Books
Sale Popularity Level: 796443
Studio: Basic Books
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
The therapeutic implications of the view that neurotic symptoms are consistent with the overall quality of one's subjective life surface in Shapiro's clinical model, now issued in accessible paperback on the tenth anniversary of its publication.
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Rated by buyers
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David Shapiro is a long time favorite since I read Neurotic Styles as a young clinician. His writing is clear and exciting. He provides numerous in-session transcript excerpts to highlight the language clients use as they distance themselves from their experience. He renders the complexity of the clinical setting into an exciting possibility of discovery and offers well reasoned opinions on the origins of psychopathology (see also Autonomy and Rigid Character). I require this book in my graduate training practicum course. Part theoretical treatise and part inspiration, it is the stuff young (and seasoned) clinicians need to help maintain perspective in our current age of symptom driven manualized treatments. Along with the works of Nancy McWilliams and select others, Shapiro offers acess to the insights of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic theory with clear language. This is an essential need in the task of translating the clinical wisdom of so many psychoanalytic thinkers into a form current students can grasp and apply.
Rated by buyers
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David Shapiro's work has been well known in the field of psychotherapy. His earlier works, Neurotic Styles and Autonomy and Rigid Character, became instant classics as they appeared. In this third book Shapiro delineates his character analytic approach to therapy in the tradition of Helmut Kaiser. Following the theoretical discourse in the very first chapter, he explains his major thesis eloquently: the patient him/herself is the therapeutic material. In so doing, Shapiro provides many examples, probably his own as a gifted therapist, that make this book highly readable. I have assigned this book to my interns who are interested in learning the art of therapy. Shapiro is a true master! I highly recommend this book to the readers of this review.
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