In this beautifully written and deeply moving new book, Donna Orange has once again provided us all with a an emotionally touching, intellectually stimulating, and ethically compelling, philosophically informed but clinically applied treatise. In her prophetic call to live life in the service of the other, other-wise, she addresses the critical protestation that such a set of values enacts the helper's masochism and excessive self-sacrifice. Orange's book will help newer therapists become oriented within a pragmatic and humanitarian framework, and will provide the right balance of disturbing challenge and compassionate comfort for the most experienced clinicians. - Lewis Aron, Ph.D. director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.
To read Donna Orange's book is to be disrupted. Our humanitarian work, she points out, demands of us that we take up the suffering of those who we meet, it demands more of us than we can possible provide. Our 'prophetic (justice-seeking)' work is never enough, never complete. And yet, at the same time, I am nourished and sustained by Orange's reminder of the profundity of the therapeutic meetings that call for my presence. She describes her sustaining 'inner choristers.' Her book will be one of mine. - Lynne Jacobs, - Lynne Jacobs, Co-founder, Pacific Gestalt Institute, Supervising and Training Analyst, Institute of Contemporary Analysis.
In this beautifully written and deeply moving new book, Donna Orange has once again provided us all with a an emotionally touching, intellectually stimulating, and ethically compelling, philosophically informed but clinically applied treatise. In her prophetic call to live life in the service of the other, other-wise, she addresses the critical protestation that such a set of values enacts the helper's masochism and excessive self-sacrifice. Orange's book will help newer therapists become oriented within a pragmatic and humanitarian framework, and will provide the right balance of disturbing challenge and compassionate comfort for the most experienced clinicians. - Lewis Aron, Ph.D. director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis.
To read Donna Orange's book is to be disrupted. Our humanitarian work, she points out, demands of us that we take up the suffering of those who we meet, it demands more of us than we can possible provide. Our 'prophetic (justice-seeking)' work is never enough, never complete. And yet, at the same time, I am nourished and sustained by Orange's reminder of the profundity of the therapeutic meetings that call for my presence. She describes her sustaining 'inner choristers.' Her book will be one of mine. - Lynne Jacobs, - Lynne Jacobs, Co-founder, Pacific Gestalt Institute, Supervising and Training Analyst, Institute of Contemporary Analysis.
Orange's book marks the completion of a trilogy that has, in part, explored the implications of Levinas's ethical philosophy for clinical practice... This most recent work, however, addresses the inevitable concern and discomfort with the language of this ethics, especially within the context of clinical practice... Orange's present work addresses this very concern, maintaining her endorsement of Levinasian ethics while also paying special heed to our limitations and needs for nourishment along the arduous journey of clinical practice... As in her previous works, Orange has communicated complex philosophical ideas with dexterity and clarity. Graduate students and seasoned professionals alike can find this work enriching and inspring. Her writing style mirrors the ideas she promotes, displaying notable sincerity as she non-dogmatically reveals her own internal polyphony that... largely produces a mellifluous harmony of ispirational figures. It challenges the reader to take on the Levinasian call for infinite responsibility while also inviting us to explore literary sources to nourish our inner lives. It is recommended especially for practicing clinicans seeking to augment their moral vocabulary and for understanding their work within the context of a higher ethical calling. -Brian W. Becker, Lesley University, PsycCritiques
But the amazing density of this book, coming in at under 200 pages, and the force of her personal and 'borrowed' conviction, obliges therapists of all kinds, in powerful and decisive ways, to look at themselves and strive to practise humility, humanity and heroism. - Mark Mahemoff, MA, Individual and Couple Therapist, Private Practice