1st Edition

Transactional Analysis in Contemporary Psychotherapy

By Richard G. Erskine Copyright 2016
    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    After fifty years of development and refinement in Transactional Analysis (TA), the theory of methods and the actual methods have changed considerably from those originally published by Eric Berne. Many concepts and methods have emerged and been subject to clinical experimentation, some have been refined and expanded and some are no longer used. This book includes contributions from several authors, each of whom presents his or her unique focus on how TA is used in their psychotherapy practice. This book will address the therapeutic effectiveness of various methods in TA and will cover a variety of topics such as unconscious experience, transference-countertransference, the therapist's transparency, transgenerational scripts, trauma and regression, psychological games, the self-destructive client, an integrative approach to the psychotherapy of obsession, gender psychopolitics, and psychotherapy from a social-cognitive perspective. It is written for both psychotherapists and counsellors who want to learn and refine their knowledge of contemporary TA methods that are most effective with today's clients.

    Foreword , Preface , A Transactional Analysis of obsession: integrating diverse concepts and methods , Transference-countertransference focused Transactional Analysis , The heart of redecision therapy: resolving injunctive messages , Opening to the vitality of unconscious experience , From impenetrability to transparency: the ā€œIā€ of the beholder , Changing transgenerational scripts , Inference, re-experiencing, and regression: psychotherapy of Child ego states , Evolving theory and practice with the self-destructive individual , Psychological games and intersubjective processes , Transactional Analysis in the psychotherapy of personality disorders , Social-cognitive Transactional Analysis: from theory to practice , Gender psychopolitics: men becoming, being, and belonging

    Biography

    Richard G Erskine