Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 616
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-7657-0256-2 • Hardback • August 2000 • $185.00 • (£142.00)
978-0-7657-0371-2 • Paperback • November 2002 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
Sharon Klayman Farber, Ph.D., is a Board Certified Diplomate in clinical social work practice in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. Dr. Farber earned her Ph.D. in clinical social work from New York University, and trained at the Institute for the Study of Psychotherapy and privately in psychoanalysis and child treatment. She is the founder of Mothertalk, a parent guidance group, and Westchester Eating Disorders Consultation Services. In addition to teaching, writing, and supervising, she maintains a general practice with specializations in child and adolescent treatment and treatment of people with eating and other psychosomatic disorders.
Part 1 The Borderland of Self-Harm
Chapter 2 The Mystery of Self-Harm: Concepts and Paradoxes
Chapter 3 How Common Is Self-Harm?
Chapter 4 Not Wanting to Know about Self-Harm: Trauma, Violence, and Chronic Mental Illness
Part 5 Neglect, Violence, and Traumatic Attachments
Chapter 6 Suffering and Self-Harm: Treating Oneself as the Other Dehumanization of the Other and Violent Suffering
Chapter 7 How Attachments Go Haywire
Chapter 8 The Psyche-Soma and Traumatic Attachments to Pain and Suffering
Chapter 9 Survival and Sacrifice: When the Prey Becomes the Predator
Chapter 10 Trauma, Duality, and the Transformation from Prey to Predator
Part 11 The Body Speaks
Chapter 12 The Body Speaks That Which Cannot Be Spoken
Chapter 13 Self-Harm, Gender, and Perversion
Chapter 14 The Addiction to Wanting: "Do Not Want What You Cannot Have"
Part 15 Clinical Implications
Chapter 16 The Attachment Paradigm
Chapter 17 Diagnosis, Assessment, and Core Features
Chapter 18 Using Attachment Theory in Therapy of Self-Harm Patients
Chapter 19 Transference, Countertransference, and Enactments
Chapter 20 From Self-Harm to Self-Reflection
When the Body Is the Target is impressively comprehensive and jargon-free. Apart from its contents, its up-to-date bibliography alone makes it a must-read for graduate students. But the book is a worthy addition to even a seasoned clinician's library. By unraveling some of the paradoxes of self-harm, by demonstrating a successful method for dealing with individuals who engage in this behavior, she has enlarged the scope of psychoanalytic treatment and provided hope for an underserved group. She earns our gratitude for doing so.
— Psychologist-Psychoanalyst: Division 39 Newsletter
Whether the book is utilized for a course of study on how to understand and treat those who harm themselves, or as a resource for those who wish to advance their knowledge and perfect their skills, or as a general reference book, When the Body is the Target will amply reward the reader for the time and effort devoted to it.
— National Membership Committee on Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work
Using clear and incisive language, Dr. Farber elegantly and empathically cuts to the core of the extreme suffering that our patients who repeatedly harm themselves endure. She provides an exhaustive, scholarly review of the underpinnings of self-mutilation and related behaviors in this beautifully written book. She then goes on to present one of the most sophisticated theoretical and clinical explanations to date showing why these behaviors have become so pervasive, how we can understand them, and what we can do to alleviate the suffering that is at the root of such disorders.
— Edward Khantzian
The present volume will be most helpful to graduate students through faculty and to professionals.
— Choice Reviews
Few patients evoke in their therapists the kind of dread than those who continue to mutilate themselves during treatment do. Dr. Sharon Klayman Farber earns our gratitude for venturing deeply into this difficult domain. Every therapist treating these patients will learn a great deal from this book, but beyond the immediate, all those who are puzzled by the nature of human aggression will appreciate the many insights the author has assembled.
— Martin S. Bergmann, New York University
When the Body Is the Target is an impressive exploration of a disturbing part of the human experience; the book has the potential to help many clinicians, and by extension their patients.
— Paula Wolk; The Psychoanalytic Quarterly
In an insightful exploration of self-harm, pain, and traumatic attachments, Farber considers anything from eating disorders to body modifications in an attempt to better understand the roots and motivations behind self-harm, and how its psychic functions in the therapeutic setting. . . . Richly supported by relevant, innovative research, the book offers a more practical approach to the diagnosis, following assessment, and adjusted treatment of the patients whose inner emotions are expressed through bodily harm.
— United States Association For Body Pyschotherapy Newsletter, Summer/Fall 2009
In a brilliant and unique work, Dr. Farber helps us to see the genius and hope of the symptoms of those who articulate self-harm in the lexicon of their bodies, to understand the creative attempt to reveal and conceal that which is inchoate and unformulated, and to listen to how the body speaks. With rich case material using the prototypes of eating disorders and self-mutilating behaviors, this is a definitive and comprehensive theoretical, developmental, and clinical reference work, eminently readable.
— David W. Krueger