Group Psychotherapy: The Psychoanalytic Approach by S. H. Foulkes, E. J. Anthony

By S. H. Foulkes, E. J. Anthony

This vintage paintings makes an attempt to offer a complete account for the lay reader of the foundations and strategies of team psychotherapy. 2d version.

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In this sense verbal communication is indeed a vital and indispensable part of such a therapeutic group and in a deeper sense an understanding of verbal communication is of special importance for the understanding of the therapeutic process itself. We have now, perhaps, made clearer some of the important characteristics of group-analytic groups. They are not communities, and their members are not dependent on each other in any way in ordinary life, being in fact total strangers. Nor are they organized societies in the sense in which we have defined this term, nor again are they gangs or bands, or similar in type to any of those groups which form in society at large or within working institutions.

In the group, the minds of strangers with a totally Merent individual conditioning are reacting and responding to each other. If we find - as we do - that their responses, verbal or non-verbal, conscious or unconscious, to each other's productions, can be used as quasi-associations to a common context, we make a totally new assumption. We now treat associations as based on the common ground of unconscious instinctive understanding of each other. We no longer take as our basis of operation the conditioning by old experiences based on traces in the brain, on memory traces.

However great the importance of transference in all human relationships - and therefore also in our groups it is equally important to observe and to operate with other relationships which belong to the existing life situation of the patient and which manifest themselves much more fully in the therapeutic group. It is only by observing both the transferencecharacteristics and the reality characteristics of a relationship and by noting how they contrast, overlap, and interact that we can do full justice to the facts before us.

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Group Psychotherapy: The Psychoanalytic Approach by S. H. Foulkes, E. J. Anthony
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