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Gestalt Therapy Excitement and Growth in the Human Personality
Perls, Frederick; Hefferline, Ralph E. Goodman, Paul Publisher: Dell Publishing Co., Inc., USA Year Published: 1951 Pages: 470pp Dewey: 150.1982 Resource Type: Book
The authors believe that the Gestalt outlook is the original, undistorted, natural approach to life, to thinking, acting and feeling.
Abstract: -
Table of Contents
Volume One
Introduction
Part One: Orienting the Self
1. The Starting Situation
2. Contacting the Environment Experiment 1: Feeling the Actual Experiment 2: Sensing Opposed Forces Experiment 3: Attending and Concentrating Experiment 4: Differentiating and Unifying
3. Technique of Awareness Experiment 5: Remembering Experiment 6: Sharpening the Body-Sense Experiment 7: Experiencing the Continuity of Emotion Experiment 8: Verbalizing Experiment 9: Integrating Awareness
4. Directed Awareness Experiment 10: Converting Confluence into Contact Experiment 11: Changing Anxiety into Excitement
Part Two: Manipulating the Self
5. The Modified Situation
6. Retroflection Experiment 12: Investigating Misdirected Behavior Experiment 13: Mobilizing the Muscles Experiment 14: Executing the Re-reversed Act
7. Introjection Experiment 15: Introjecting and Eating Experiment 16: Dislodging and Digesting Introjects
8. Projections Experiment 17: Discovering Projections Experiment 18: Assimilating Projections
Index
Volume Two
Part One: Introduction
1. The Structure of Growth 2. Differences in General Outlook and Differences in Therapy
Part Two: Reality, Human Nature, and Society 3. "Mind," "Body," and "External World" 4. Reality, Emergency, and Evaluation 5. Maturing, and the Recollection of Childhood 6. Human Nature and the Anthropology of Neurosis 7. Verbalizing and Poetry 8. The Anti-Social and Aggression 9. Conflict and Self-Conquest
Part 3: Theory of the Self 10. Self, Ego, Id, and Personality 11. Critique of Psychoanalytic Theories of the Self 12. Creative Adjustment, I: Fore-Contact and Contacting 13. Creative Adjustment, II: Final Contact and Post-Contact 14. Loss of Ego-Functions, I: Repression, Critique of Freud's Theory 15. Loss of Ego-Functions, II: Typical Structures and Boundaries
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