The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry
Herausgeber: Sullivan, Harry Stack
The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry
Herausgeber: Sullivan, Harry Stack
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Reproduced here in facsimile, this volume was originally published in 1955 and is available individually. The collection is also available in a number of themed mini-sets of between 5 and 13 volumes, or as a complete collection.
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Reproduced here in facsimile, this volume was originally published in 1955 and is available individually. The collection is also available in a number of themed mini-sets of between 5 and 13 volumes, or as a complete collection.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 414
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. September 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 222mm x 145mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9780415264778
- ISBN-10: 0415264774
- Artikelnr.: 21388065
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 414
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. September 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 222mm x 145mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9780415264778
- ISBN-10: 0415264774
- Artikelnr.: 21388065
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Harry Stack Sullivan, HELEN SWICK PERRY, MARY LADD GAWEL, M.D. MABEL BLAKE COHEN
Part I Introductory Concepts; Chapter 1 The Meaning of the Developmental
Approach; Chapter 2 Definitions; Chapter 3 Postulates; Part II The
Developmental Epochs; Chapter 4 Infancy: Beginnings; Chapter 5 Infancy: The
Concept of Dynamism-Part 1; Chapter 6 Infancy: The Concept of Dynamism-Part
2; Chapter 7 Infancy: Interpersonal Situations; Chapter 8 The Infant as a
Person; Chapter 9 Learning: The Organization of Experience; Chapter 10
Beginnings of the Self-System; Chapter 11 The Transition from Infancy to
Childhood: The Acquisition of Speech as Learning; Chapter 12 Childhood;
Chapter 13 Malevolence, Hatred, and Isolating Techniques; Chapter 14 From
Childhood into the Juvenile Era; Chapter 15 The Juvenile Era; Chapter 16
Preadolescence; Chapter 17 Early Adolescence; Chapter 18 Late Adolescence;
Part III Patterns of Inadequate or Inappropriate Interpersonal Relations;
Chapter 19 The Earlier Manifestations of Mental Disorder: Matters Schizoid
and Schizophrenic; Chapter 20 Sleep, Dreams, and Myths*, Editors' note: The
illustrative material from myths that Sullivan has used in this lecture has
not been changed, although the stories are not in precise agreement with
the legends and stories that we know: for instance, the published version
of Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger has a different setting,
characters, and events.; Chapter 21 The Later Manifestations of Mental
Disorder: Matters Paranoid and Paranoiac*, Editors' note: Through p. 348 of
this chapter, we have had to rely largely on the Notebook, since no
recording of the lecture itself was made. In order to provide the
continuity of Sullivan's thinking, we have put into sentence form the
topical outline given in his Notebook and expanded this on the basis of
related material given elsewhere in this book. Beginning with the section
on the Wish-Fulfilling Fantasy, the chapter is from a recorded lecture.;
Part IV Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples; Chapter 22 CHAPTER 22*, Editors'
note: This chapter is mainly taken from "Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples"
(Psychiatry 11:105-116). Beginning with the section headed "Whence the
Urgency," there appears an excerpt from "Remobilization for Enduring Peace
and Social Progress" (Psychiatry 10:239-252; p. 244). Most of the chapter
has also been reprinted in Tensions That Cause Wars, edited by Hadley
Cantril (Univ. of Ill. Press, 1950).;
Approach; Chapter 2 Definitions; Chapter 3 Postulates; Part II The
Developmental Epochs; Chapter 4 Infancy: Beginnings; Chapter 5 Infancy: The
Concept of Dynamism-Part 1; Chapter 6 Infancy: The Concept of Dynamism-Part
2; Chapter 7 Infancy: Interpersonal Situations; Chapter 8 The Infant as a
Person; Chapter 9 Learning: The Organization of Experience; Chapter 10
Beginnings of the Self-System; Chapter 11 The Transition from Infancy to
Childhood: The Acquisition of Speech as Learning; Chapter 12 Childhood;
Chapter 13 Malevolence, Hatred, and Isolating Techniques; Chapter 14 From
Childhood into the Juvenile Era; Chapter 15 The Juvenile Era; Chapter 16
Preadolescence; Chapter 17 Early Adolescence; Chapter 18 Late Adolescence;
Part III Patterns of Inadequate or Inappropriate Interpersonal Relations;
Chapter 19 The Earlier Manifestations of Mental Disorder: Matters Schizoid
and Schizophrenic; Chapter 20 Sleep, Dreams, and Myths*, Editors' note: The
illustrative material from myths that Sullivan has used in this lecture has
not been changed, although the stories are not in precise agreement with
the legends and stories that we know: for instance, the published version
of Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger has a different setting,
characters, and events.; Chapter 21 The Later Manifestations of Mental
Disorder: Matters Paranoid and Paranoiac*, Editors' note: Through p. 348 of
this chapter, we have had to rely largely on the Notebook, since no
recording of the lecture itself was made. In order to provide the
continuity of Sullivan's thinking, we have put into sentence form the
topical outline given in his Notebook and expanded this on the basis of
related material given elsewhere in this book. Beginning with the section
on the Wish-Fulfilling Fantasy, the chapter is from a recorded lecture.;
Part IV Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples; Chapter 22 CHAPTER 22*, Editors'
note: This chapter is mainly taken from "Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples"
(Psychiatry 11:105-116). Beginning with the section headed "Whence the
Urgency," there appears an excerpt from "Remobilization for Enduring Peace
and Social Progress" (Psychiatry 10:239-252; p. 244). Most of the chapter
has also been reprinted in Tensions That Cause Wars, edited by Hadley
Cantril (Univ. of Ill. Press, 1950).;
Part I Introductory Concepts; Chapter 1 The Meaning of the Developmental
Approach; Chapter 2 Definitions; Chapter 3 Postulates; Part II The
Developmental Epochs; Chapter 4 Infancy: Beginnings; Chapter 5 Infancy: The
Concept of Dynamism-Part 1; Chapter 6 Infancy: The Concept of Dynamism-Part
2; Chapter 7 Infancy: Interpersonal Situations; Chapter 8 The Infant as a
Person; Chapter 9 Learning: The Organization of Experience; Chapter 10
Beginnings of the Self-System; Chapter 11 The Transition from Infancy to
Childhood: The Acquisition of Speech as Learning; Chapter 12 Childhood;
Chapter 13 Malevolence, Hatred, and Isolating Techniques; Chapter 14 From
Childhood into the Juvenile Era; Chapter 15 The Juvenile Era; Chapter 16
Preadolescence; Chapter 17 Early Adolescence; Chapter 18 Late Adolescence;
Part III Patterns of Inadequate or Inappropriate Interpersonal Relations;
Chapter 19 The Earlier Manifestations of Mental Disorder: Matters Schizoid
and Schizophrenic; Chapter 20 Sleep, Dreams, and Myths*, Editors' note: The
illustrative material from myths that Sullivan has used in this lecture has
not been changed, although the stories are not in precise agreement with
the legends and stories that we know: for instance, the published version
of Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger has a different setting,
characters, and events.; Chapter 21 The Later Manifestations of Mental
Disorder: Matters Paranoid and Paranoiac*, Editors' note: Through p. 348 of
this chapter, we have had to rely largely on the Notebook, since no
recording of the lecture itself was made. In order to provide the
continuity of Sullivan's thinking, we have put into sentence form the
topical outline given in his Notebook and expanded this on the basis of
related material given elsewhere in this book. Beginning with the section
on the Wish-Fulfilling Fantasy, the chapter is from a recorded lecture.;
Part IV Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples; Chapter 22 CHAPTER 22*, Editors'
note: This chapter is mainly taken from "Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples"
(Psychiatry 11:105-116). Beginning with the section headed "Whence the
Urgency," there appears an excerpt from "Remobilization for Enduring Peace
and Social Progress" (Psychiatry 10:239-252; p. 244). Most of the chapter
has also been reprinted in Tensions That Cause Wars, edited by Hadley
Cantril (Univ. of Ill. Press, 1950).;
Approach; Chapter 2 Definitions; Chapter 3 Postulates; Part II The
Developmental Epochs; Chapter 4 Infancy: Beginnings; Chapter 5 Infancy: The
Concept of Dynamism-Part 1; Chapter 6 Infancy: The Concept of Dynamism-Part
2; Chapter 7 Infancy: Interpersonal Situations; Chapter 8 The Infant as a
Person; Chapter 9 Learning: The Organization of Experience; Chapter 10
Beginnings of the Self-System; Chapter 11 The Transition from Infancy to
Childhood: The Acquisition of Speech as Learning; Chapter 12 Childhood;
Chapter 13 Malevolence, Hatred, and Isolating Techniques; Chapter 14 From
Childhood into the Juvenile Era; Chapter 15 The Juvenile Era; Chapter 16
Preadolescence; Chapter 17 Early Adolescence; Chapter 18 Late Adolescence;
Part III Patterns of Inadequate or Inappropriate Interpersonal Relations;
Chapter 19 The Earlier Manifestations of Mental Disorder: Matters Schizoid
and Schizophrenic; Chapter 20 Sleep, Dreams, and Myths*, Editors' note: The
illustrative material from myths that Sullivan has used in this lecture has
not been changed, although the stories are not in precise agreement with
the legends and stories that we know: for instance, the published version
of Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger has a different setting,
characters, and events.; Chapter 21 The Later Manifestations of Mental
Disorder: Matters Paranoid and Paranoiac*, Editors' note: Through p. 348 of
this chapter, we have had to rely largely on the Notebook, since no
recording of the lecture itself was made. In order to provide the
continuity of Sullivan's thinking, we have put into sentence form the
topical outline given in his Notebook and expanded this on the basis of
related material given elsewhere in this book. Beginning with the section
on the Wish-Fulfilling Fantasy, the chapter is from a recorded lecture.;
Part IV Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples; Chapter 22 CHAPTER 22*, Editors'
note: This chapter is mainly taken from "Towards a Psychiatry of Peoples"
(Psychiatry 11:105-116). Beginning with the section headed "Whence the
Urgency," there appears an excerpt from "Remobilization for Enduring Peace
and Social Progress" (Psychiatry 10:239-252; p. 244). Most of the chapter
has also been reprinted in Tensions That Cause Wars, edited by Hadley
Cantril (Univ. of Ill. Press, 1950).;







