Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 216
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-0-7657-0077-3 • Hardback • July 2005 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Althea Horner is an honorary member of the Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute and Society and a scientific associate of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis. She is listed in Who's Who in America and is the author of The Primacy of Structure, Object Relations and the Developing Ego in Therapy, The Wish for Power and the Fear of Having It, and Being and Loving.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The Core Relationship Problem as Resistance
Chapter 3 Constructing the Developmental Hypothesis
Chapter 4 Countertransference Resistance and Therapeutic Impasse
Chapter 5 Transference Resistance of the "Good Boy" and the "Good Girl"
Chapter 6 The Sexualization of the Core Relationship Problem as Resistance
Chapter 7 The Wish for Power as Resistance
Chapter 8 Envy as Resistance
Chapter 9 The "Constructed Self" as Resistance
Chapter 10 The Need to Understand as Resistance
Chapter 11 Common Attitudes as Sources of Resistance
Chapter 12 Motives as Resistant
Chapter 13 Symptoms as Resistant
Chapter 14 Interpretation of Transference Resistance in Brief Psychotherapy
Chapter 15 Epilogue, Refernces, Index
Reading this book will help both new and experienced therapists to gain a greater understanding of resistance in both short-term and long-term treatments.
— The American Journal of Psychoanalysis
Once again, Dr. Horner has brought forth a valuable book that clarifies one of the central, brain-hammering difficulties we face in our clinical work—how to identify and manage resistance in psychotherapy. Not content to deal with the patient's resistance, she takes up the therapist's resistance as well, which as a supervisor of psychotherapists, she is eminently qualified to take on.
— Dr. Douglas H. Ingram, Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis; Dynamic Psychiatry
Her clear exposition of theory and clinical cases renders her writings valuable for inexperienced therapists as well. Beginner and veteran alike will be better therapists after reading this book.
— Dr. William Rickles, California Graduate Institute for Clinical Psychology, Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis
Reflecting quite literally more than a half-century of clinical experience, Dr. Horner's new book offers compelling ways to think about the psychotherapeutic process. Armed with this superior understanding of resistance and the core relationship problem, readers of this well-constructed and well-written volume will return to their consulting rooms better prepared to break through resistance and, thereby, more effectively and confidently help their patients.
— Alan M. Karbelnig Ph.D., Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute