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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sylvia O'Neill (private practice, Edinburgh and NHS, Glasgow, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.430kg ISBN: 9781138591080ISBN 10: 1138591084 Pages: 180 Publication Date: 28 June 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Introduction. Part One: ‘LINES OF ADVANCE IN PSYCHOANALYTIC THERAPIES’ Chapter 1. Lines of Advance, Then and Now: Continuum, or Radical Break? Chapter 2. Donnet’s Concept of the Analytic Site or Ensemble Part Two: PSYCHOANALYTIC PSYCHOTHERAPY Chapter 3. Juliana and her Faithless Boyfriend: The Psychotherapy Site in a Twice Weekly Therapy Chapter 4. The Dark World of Incest: The Psychotherapy Site in a Once Weekly Therapy Chapter 5. Thraldom to Narcissistic Objects: The Psychotherapy Site in a Three Times Weekly Therapy Chapter 6. Satish’s Weekend: Drama on the Stage of External Reality Part Three: SOCIAL WORK Introduction to Part 3 Chapter 7. Miss M: The Site in Social Work with a Vulnerable Adult Chapter 8. Engaging Families ""Mired in Deep Distress"" Chapter 9. A Question of Allegiance to the Social Work Frame of Reference Chapter 10. After Starting Where the Client Is, What Next? Chapter 11. Weathering a Crisis: Relationship with the Social Worker as Touchstone Chapter 12. Ruth and Mrs F: The Site in a Social Work Case of Non-Accidental Injury to a Child Chapter 13. Joining the Discourse of Contemporary Social Work Part Four: CONCLUSION Chapter 14: A Differential Theory of Therapeutic Engagement"Reviews'This strikingly ambitious book offers a theoretical model of how practitioners of psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic psychotherapy and social work seek to offer transformative help. It is a psychoanalytical theoretical model but its explanatory scope reaches far beyond traditional psychoanalytic work, and this makes it essential reading for the wide range of professionals who work with the disadvantaged. O'Neill writes clearly, explains complex ideas with clarity, gives the reader excellent summaries of what she's covered and signposts to where she's going next. The book fulfils its ambitious aims. O'Neill's thesis is both a new conceptualisation of what might be called social intervention, and a theory of therapeutic change.'-Vic Sedlak, Training Analyst, The British Psychoanalytical Society 'Social work has sometimes valued psychoanalysis for thinking about the relational aspects of its work, but sometimes sees concentration on the inner workings of the mind as neglectful of the reality faced by clients. Sylvia O`Neill`s timely book addresses this conflict and expands, through detailed conceptual writing and fully explored case examples, the richness a sustained effort to realign the two worlds contains. Building on the work of Jean-Luc Donnet she develops his concept of the setting and those discoverable site elements fundamental to the establishment of a psycho-analytic and a social work process. This finely written and thoroughly researched work reinvigorates both worlds and will enhance the understanding of members of both professions.'-Mary Twyman, Member British Psycho-analytic Society; formerly Principal Social Worker, Tavistock Clinic Adult Department 'This strikingly ambitious book offers a theoretical model of how practitioners of psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic psychotherapy and social work seek to offer transformative help. It is a psychoanalytical theoretical model but its explanatory scope reaches far beyond traditional psychoanalytic work, and this makes it essential reading for the wide range of professionals who work with the disadvantaged. O'Neill writes clearly, explains complex ideas with clarity, gives the reader excellent summaries of what she's covered and signposts to where she's going next. The book fulfils its ambitious aims. O'Neill's thesis is both a new conceptualisation of what might be called social intervention, and a theory of therapeutic change.'-Vic Sedlak, Training Analyst, The British Psychoanalytical Society Author InformationSylvia O’Neill is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist practising privately in Edinburgh and in the NHS in Glasgow. She trained in psychotherapy at the Tavistock Clinic after practising social work in Melbourne and London. Her published research interests include therapeutic engagement, autistic pathology, male anorexia and professional cultures. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |