Unconscious Communication in Practice SULLIVAN
* How significant is the management of the therapeutic boundaries?
* How important is the client's contribution to the curative process in psychotherapy?
This book represents the most up-to-date thinking on psychoanalysis. Communicative theory re-visions the therapeutic encounter, addressing some of the criticisms which have been levelled at classical psychoanalytic technique. Rather than focusing on the distorted elements of clients' communications, and relating these to past experience, it highlights clients' valid unconscious perceptions of therapists' management of the therapeutic environment. The hallmark of communicative technique is that it gives precedence to clients' innate capacity to guide the treatment process. Thus the balance of power - a thorny issue in psychoanalytic psychotherapy - is consistently addressed.
Those who work in the field of psychotherapy may gain fresh clinical skills from the innovative ideas set out in this book; those interested in human interaction will find a new perspective on the purpose of unconscious communication and insight into how to decode the stories we all tell each other in everyday life.