Weathering the Storms: Psychotherapy for Psychosis

Author(s) : Murray Jackson

Weathering the Storms: Psychotherapy for Psychosis

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : 2001
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 392
  • Category :
    Individual Psychotherapy
  • Catalogue No : 7789
  • ISBN 13 : 9781855752672
  • ISBN 10 : 1855752670

Reviews and Endorsements

'Despite significant advances in medical and social care, the inner experience of severe mental illness - the 'storms' of this book's title - remain as elusive as ever. In this unusual book Murray Jackson charts the deep waters of psychosis in a creative and convincing way. Jackson is a prophet who for three decades has kept the flame of psychoanalytic approaches to psychosis alive in the English speaking world... This work should be placed in the office of every acute psychiatric ward and Community Mental Health Team and on the essential reading list of every psychotherapist who seriously aspires to work with the psychiatrically ill.'
- Jeremy Holmes MD, Consultant Psychotherapist, Department of Mental Health, University of Exeter.

'Based on the author's vast clinical experience, Murray Jackson's new book provides exceptionally valuable keys to understanding and treating severely ill psychiatric patients. Problems of numerous patients with different kinds and phases of psychotic illness and the challenges inherent in their individual psychotherapy are described in a very clear, gradually deepening way, also taking notice of the treating context. I have rarely, if ever, read a book with as much practical value for psychoanalytically oriented individual psychotherapists working with this kind of patients, both with regard to their therapeutic work and to various teaching and learning purposes.'
- Yrjö O. Alanen, Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus, University of Turku, Finland

'Murray Jackson's unique pedagogical ability in integrating modern clinical psychiatry and psychoanalytic thinking opens a road for communication between the two disciplines without undue reductions in theoretical thinking.'
- Johan Cullberg, Professor of Psychiatry, Stockholm, Sweden

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