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Rewriting the Self Mordechai Rotenberg

Rewriting the Self By Mordechai Rotenberg

Rewriting the Self by Mordechai Rotenberg


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Summary

While the term midrash--from the Hebrew darash, searched or interpreted--can refer to both legal and extralegal scriptural exegesis, it most commonly refers to symbolic legends, stories, and parables used to make moral or ethical concepts accessible to the layman

Rewriting the Self Summary

Rewriting the Self: Psychotherapy and Midrash by Mordechai Rotenberg

While the term midrash--from the Hebrew darash, searched or interpreted--can refer to both legal and extralegal scriptural exegesis, it most commonly refers to symbolic legends, stories, and parables used to make moral or ethical concepts accessible to the layman. As such, midrash encompasses an open-ended method of exposition that often allows for the coexistence of seemingly contradictory interpretations of holy writ in a kind of dialogue with each other. In Rewriting the Self, Mordechai Rotenberg illustrates how midrashic dialogue between a person's past and present may assist in the reorganization of ostensibly contrasting conditions or positions, so that by reinterpreting a failing past according to future aspirations, cognitive discord may be reduced and one may begin to rehabilitate and enhance one's life.

Rotenberg argues that the foundations of what he calls a dialogic psychology of progress, as well as a pluralistic, free choice approach to psychotherapy, may be identified in Judaism's midrashic metacode. From a practical, therapeutic perspective, a teacher or therapist would no longer be an elite interpreter of a student or client's past, authorized to give the only authentic analysis of that person's problems. Rather, he would be able to offer a variety of options, both rational and emotional. In Rewriting the Self, Rotenberg demonstrates his theory with several case studies of rewriting oneself from both the Midrash and Talmud. He contrasts this method with other psychotherapies. This volume is the third in a trilogy (the previous two, Damnation and Deviance and Hasidic Psychology, are also published by Transaction) that seeks to present a dialogistic psychology as an alternative framework to the perspective that predominates in Western social sciences. It is an original work that will be welcomed by psychotherapists, social scientists, and students of theology.

About Mordechai Rotenberg

Mordechai Rotenberg

Table of Contents

1: Introduction: Living through Midrashic Interpretation; 2: Narrative Missionarism in Dialectic Psychotherapy; 3: The Midrash and Biographic Rehabilitation; 4: Philosophies of History and the Psychology of Self-Renewal; 5: The Oedipal Conflict and the Isaac Solution; 6: The Non-Melting Pot; 7: The Hermeneutic Dialogue and Interhemispheric Balance; 8: Linear Conversion versus Cyclistic Teshuvah: An Empirical Differentiation; 9: The Midrashic Dialogue between Past and Future; 10: The Temporal Dialogue as Chutzpah Therapy

Additional information

NLS9780765805676
9780765805676
0765805677
Rewriting the Self: Psychotherapy and Midrash by Mordechai Rotenberg
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Inc
2004-03-31
236
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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