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OverviewThe past forty years have revealed a myriad of theoretical advances to Freud’s original conceptions of the personality. It has also witnessed the continued use of projective methods as a vital means of understanding the what and the how of mental health and psychopathology. Understanding Personality Through Projective Testing provides the reader with a comprehensive framework for linking these revitalized key domains of personality functioning to the quality of responses to projective testing in both children and adults. Six core aspects of personality: two facets of object relations (moving towards and away from self and others); the quality of defense mechanisms; the nature of affect maturity; the integrity of autonomous ego functioning and the capacity for playfulness are defined, articulated, and linked to one another in a reciprocal manner. Four commonly used projective testing methods: the Rorschach Inkblot Method (RIM); the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), the Sentence Completion Test (SCT), and the Animal Preference Test (APT) are then described in detail. Each of these projective methods is in turn presented as dynamically-based tools to indicate the relative performance of the patient across the six core personality domains. Clinical case examples provide both the beginning and more seasoned clinician with a comprehensive psychodynamic paradigm with which to view each of the testing methods, as well as enhanced methods with which to use each of the tests more subtly and hence with greater clinical acumen. A comprehensive battery of projective testing is then assessed through the protocol of a single adult patient, allowing the reader to integrate the value of each of the individual projective methods into a comprehensive assessment of the whole person. Readers will find the book a vital complement to both standard reference works on projective methods as well as books that describe personality along developmental and psychodynamic lines. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Steven Tuber, City College of New York; author of Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: WinPublisher: Jason Aronson Publishers Imprint: Jason Aronson Publishers Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.553kg ISBN: 9780765709233ISBN 10: 0765709236 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 09 March 2012 Recommended Age: From 22 from 22 Audience: Professional and scholarly , 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 ContentsAuthor's Note Acknowledgments Dedication Chapter 1: A Story Chapter 2: A Conceptual Framework for Personality Assessment: The Domains of Negative and Positive Object Relations Chapter 3: Affects, Defenses, Ego Functions and the Capacity to Play Chapter 4: The Rorschach: Translating The RIM to our Personality Domains Chapter 5: Linking RIM Movement, Shading And Color Responses to our Personality Domains Chapter 6: A RIM Case Example Chapter 7: The TAT Chapter 8: The Clinical Application Of the TAT Chapter 9: The Sentence Completion and Animal Preference Tasks Chapter 10: The Case of Nicholas: His RIM Chapter 11: The Case of Nicholas: His SCT and APT Chapter 12: The Case of Nicholas: His TAT, and a Case Summary Chapter 13: Epilogue: Some Concluding Remarks References Figures Index About the AuthorReviewsTuber's text is not merely for the graduate student, but also for the practicing clinician. His text is written with heart and soul, examining not just what the patient sees, but also how the patient sees it. Tuber beautifully illustrates difficult concepts through case examples, his own clinical experience, and even through the experiences of his students. He has artfully integrated, and illustrated, the theories of well known experts.- -- Leonard Handler, professor emeritus, University of Tennessee, Knoxville For years I have heard doctoral students rave about Steve Tuber's assessment class-now I know why. Steve Tuber's voice shines through in this wonderful book which offers a clear structure for evaluation that is as useful to experienced evaluators as beginning students. Tuber wears his considerable erudition lightly and the writing reflects his easy command of the material by its humor, concision, and readability. A must for every tester, a book in the great tradition of Rappaport, Gill and Schafer, and Klopfer.- -- Lissa Weinstein Ph.D, City College of CUNY Steven Tuber provides a superb, original, creative, highly readable, and pragmatic work that offers a new look at the Rorschach Inkblot Test, the TAT, and the Sentence Completion Test as methods to evaluate personality functioning. He integrates developmental, dynamic, and relational concepts to construct an understanding of the whole person and to form a scaffold that provides the reader with new steps to follow when using these projective tests to assess a person's personality functioning, the meanings he/she assigns to experiences, and the developmental roots of these meanings. These steps, accompanied by clear, clinical illustrations, are very useful not only for professionals who are entering the field of projective testing in personality assessment, but also for experienced clinicians who are interested in expanding their understanding of, and effectiveness with, the use of projective testing in clinical practice.- -- Sebastiano Santostefano, author, Child Therapy in the Great Outdoors: A Relational View In this, his third book, Steven Tuber again offers us a beautifully rendered teaching text that balances theory with the immediacy of his presence in the clinical moment. Tuber clearly loves his work-as a clinician and as a teacher-and this book illuminates projective testing with both a thoughtful, integrated mastery of his subject and an intimacy that testify to that love. From his rich and vivid portrayals of individual's psychologies as manifested in projective tests, Tuber draws the reader's attention to complexity and detail while never losing sight of the goal of testing-to explore with curiosity and compassion a person's internal world. This book holds promise to restore projective tests' center stage position in training and in our efforts to serve our patients optimally.- -- Gemma Marangoni Ainslie Ph.D, Past President, Academy of Psychoanalysis of the American Psychological Association Tuber's text is not merely for the graduate student, but also for the practicing clinician. His text is written with heart and soul, examining not just what the patient sees, but also how the patient sees it. Tuber beautifully illustrates difficult concepts through case examples, his own clinical experience, and even through the experiences of his students. He has artfully integrated, and illustrated, the theories of well known experts.-- -- Handler, Leonard For years I have heard doctoral students rave about Steve Tuber's assessment class--now I know why. Steve Tuber's voice shines through in this wonderful book which offers a clear structure for evaluation that is as useful to experienced evaluators as beginning students. Tuber wears his considerable erudition lightly and the writing reflects his easy command of the material by its humor, concision, and readability. A must for every tester, a book in the great tradition of Rappaport, Gill and Schafer, and Klopfer.-- -- Weinstein, Lissa Ph.D Steven Tuber provides a superb, original, creative, highly readable, and pragmatic work that offers a new look at the Rorschach Inkblot Test, the TAT, and the Sentence Completion Test as methods to evaluate personality functioning. He integrates developmental, dynamic, and relational concepts to construct an understanding of the whole person and to form a scaffold that provides the reader with new steps to follow when using these projective tests to assess a person's personality functioning, the meanings he/she assigns to experiences, and the developmental roots of these meanings. These steps, accompanied by clear, clinical illustrations, are very useful not only for professionals who are entering the field of projective testing in personality assessment, but also for experienced clinicians who are interested in expanding their understanding of, and effectiveness with, the use of projective testing in clinical practice.-- -- Sebastiano Santostefano In this, his third book, Steven Tuber again offers us a beautifully rendered teaching text that balances theory with the immediacy of his presence in the clinical moment. Tuber clearly loves his work--as a clinician and as a teacher--and this book illuminates projective testing with both a thoughtful, integrated mastery of his subject and an intimacy that testify to that love. From his rich and vivid portrayals of individual's psychologies as manifested in projective tests, Tuber draws the reader's attention to complexity and detail while never losing sight of the goal of testing--to explore with curiosity and compassion a person's internal world. This book holds promise to restore projective tests' center stage position in training and in our efforts to serve our patients optimally.-- -- Ainslie, Gemma Marangoni Ph.D Tuber's text is not merely for the graduate student, but also for the practicing clinician. His text is written with heart and soul, examining not just what the patient sees, but also how the patient sees it. Tuber beautifully illustrates difficult concepts through case examples, his own clinical experience, and even through the experiences of his students. He has artfully integrated, and illustrated, the theories of well known experts. -- Leonard Handler, professor emeritus, University of Tennessee, Knoxville For years I have heard doctoral students rave about Steve Tuber's assessment class-now I know why. Steve Tuber's voice shines through in this wonderful book which offers a clear structure for evaluation that is as useful to experienced evaluators as beginning students. Tuber wears his considerable erudition lightly and the writing reflects his easy command of the material by its humor, concision, and readability. A must for every tester, a book in the great tradition of Rappaport, Gill and Schafer, and Klopfer. -- Lissa Weinstein Ph.D, City College of CUNY Steven Tuber provides a superb, original, creative, highly readable, and pragmatic work that offers a new look at the Rorschach Inkblot Test, the TAT, and the Sentence Completion Test as methods to evaluate personality functioning. He integrates developmental, dynamic, and relational concepts to construct an understanding of the whole person and to form a scaffold that provides the reader with new steps to follow when using these projective tests to assess a person's personality functioning, the meanings he/she assigns to experiences, and the developmental roots of these meanings. These steps, accompanied by clear, clinical illustrations, are very useful not only for professionals who are entering the field of projective testing in personality assessment, but also for experienced clinicians who are interested in expanding their understanding of, and effectiveness with, the use of projective testing in clinical practice. -- Sebastiano Santostefano, author, Child Therapy in the Great Outdoors: A Relational View In this, his third book, Steven Tuber again offers us a beautifully rendered teaching text that balances theory with the immediacy of his presence in the clinical moment. Tuber clearly loves his work-as a clinician and as a teacher-and this book illuminates projective testing with both a thoughtful, integrated mastery of his subject and an intimacy that testify to that love. From his rich and vivid portrayals of individual's psychologies as manifested in projective tests, Tuber draws the reader's attention to complexity and detail while never losing sight of the goal of testing-to explore with curiosity and compassion a person's internal world. This book holds promise to restore projective tests' center stage position in training and in our efforts to serve our patients optimally. -- Gemma Marangoni Ainslie Ph.D, Past President, Academy of Psychoanalysis of the American Psychological Association Author InformationSteven Tuber, PhD, ABPP, is professor of psychology and director of clinical training in the doctoral program in clinical psychology of the City University of New York at City College. He is the author of the critically acclaimed books Attachment, Play & Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer, and Starting Treatment with Children and Adolescents: A Process-Oriented Guide for Therapists (with Jane Caflisch) as well as over one hundred papers on the interplay between assessment and treatment in children, adolescents, and adults.Understanding Personality through Projective Testing was also selected as a finalist for the Goethe Award for Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Scholarship (2012). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |