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This book is the outcome of fruitful engagement between relational psychoanalysis, neo-Bionian psychoanalysis, and Gestalt therapy on a contemporary growing edge of clinical practice: field theory.
What is happening in contemporary clinical practice that seems to be pushing theories towards a field perspective? Clinical issues are complex phenomena-they cannot be separated from social and cultural changes. Suffering, clients, and therapists change over time, and with them so do the needs and theoretical approaches of clinical professionals, so as to be able to update and adjust care…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is the outcome of fruitful engagement between relational psychoanalysis, neo-Bionian psychoanalysis, and Gestalt therapy on a contemporary growing edge of clinical practice: field theory.

What is happening in contemporary clinical practice that seems to be pushing theories towards a field perspective? Clinical issues are complex phenomena-they cannot be separated from social and cultural changes. Suffering, clients, and therapists change over time, and with them so do the needs and theoretical approaches of clinical professionals, so as to be able to update and adjust care practices.

This book is an independent, yet common study, which through the field concept explores what complexity theories and dynamic systems theories have described as "emerging phenomena," or what phenomenological philosophy categorized as phenomenal field, pathic aesthetics, and atmospherology, or, more generally, our understanding of the relationship between clinical practice and critical thinking and of the centrality of the individual, as developed by postmodern thinkers.

With multiple professional perspectives and essential clinical material, this is key reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.
Autorenporträt
Gianni Francesetti, M.D., is a Psychiatrist, Gestalt psychotherapist, Adjunct Professor at the Dep. Psychology, University of Turin (Italy), international trainer and supervisor, co-director of IPSIG and of the Turin School of Psychopathology, co-founder of IG-FEST. Michela Gecele, M.D., is a Psychiatrist and Gestalt psychotherapist. She formerly coordinated, in Turin, a psychological and psychiatric service for immigrants. International trainer and supervisor, co-director of IPSIG and of the Turin School of Psychopathology, co-founder of IG-FEST. Paolo Migone, M.D., is editor of the Italian journal Psicoterapia e Scienze Umane (Psychotherapy and the Human Sciences), co-chair of the Rapaport-Klein Study Group, and member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association and of Psychological Issues. He founded the Italian chapters of SPR.