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Book Reviews: Introduction to the Technique of Psychotherapy: Practice Guidelines for Psychotherapists, by Samuel I. Greenberg, M.D., Charles Thomas, 1998, 106 ps

Book Reviews: Introduction to the Technique of Psychotherapy: Practice Guidelines for... The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, Vol. 60, No. 2, 2000 Book Reviews Edited by Robin Steier Goldberg, Ph.D. The Therapeutic Process; Essays and Lectures, edited and with an introduction by Bernard J. Paris, Yale University Press, 1999, 266 ps. The Therapeutic Process is at once a scholarly achievement, a fascinating demon- stration of Karen Horney’s intellectual and clinical development, and a guide to Horney’s ideas about what clinical psychoanalysis can be for both analysand and analyst. Professor Paris is no stranger to readers of this Journal, and the esteem and admiration with which so many of us view him will only be enhanced by reading this homage. While he expresses his reservations about venturing into territory in which he is not expert, that is, clinical psychoanalysis, any concerns are put to rest by Professor Paris’s letting the material speak for itself. (That is, letting Horney speak for herself.) As her biographer and one who uses Horneyan theory in literary criti- cism, Professor Paris’s mastery of the theory and the context of its development in the psychoanalytic culture and in the wider culture makes his introductory essays and brief prefaces to each paper, as well as his outlining of Horney’s http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The American Journal of Psychoanalysis Springer Journals

Book Reviews: Introduction to the Technique of Psychotherapy: Practice Guidelines for Psychotherapists, by Samuel I. Greenberg, M.D., Charles Thomas, 1998, 106 ps

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis , Volume 60 (2) – Sep 24, 2004

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Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 by Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis
Subject
Psychology; Clinical Psychology; Psychotherapy; Psychoanalysis
ISSN
0002-9548
eISSN
1573-6741
DOI
10.1023/A:1001973110431
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, Vol. 60, No. 2, 2000 Book Reviews Edited by Robin Steier Goldberg, Ph.D. The Therapeutic Process; Essays and Lectures, edited and with an introduction by Bernard J. Paris, Yale University Press, 1999, 266 ps. The Therapeutic Process is at once a scholarly achievement, a fascinating demon- stration of Karen Horney’s intellectual and clinical development, and a guide to Horney’s ideas about what clinical psychoanalysis can be for both analysand and analyst. Professor Paris is no stranger to readers of this Journal, and the esteem and admiration with which so many of us view him will only be enhanced by reading this homage. While he expresses his reservations about venturing into territory in which he is not expert, that is, clinical psychoanalysis, any concerns are put to rest by Professor Paris’s letting the material speak for itself. (That is, letting Horney speak for herself.) As her biographer and one who uses Horneyan theory in literary criti- cism, Professor Paris’s mastery of the theory and the context of its development in the psychoanalytic culture and in the wider culture makes his introductory essays and brief prefaces to each paper, as well as his outlining of Horney’s

Journal

The American Journal of PsychoanalysisSpringer Journals

Published: Sep 24, 2004

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