Mentalizing the Body: Integrating Body and Mind in Psychotherapy

Author(s) : Ulrich Schultz-Venrath

Mentalizing the Body: Integrating Body and Mind in Psychotherapy

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : January 2024
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 256
  • Category :
    Individual Psychotherapy
  • Catalogue No : 97503
  • ISBN 13 : 9781032384863
  • ISBN 10 : 1032384867

Also by Ulrich Schultz-Venrath

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Mentalizing the Body brings together theory and practice with the latest neurobiological and developmental psychological findings to understand the relevance of the body in a wide range of mental disorders, especially personality and somatization disorders.

Ulrich Schultz-Venrath provides insight on individual bodily phenomena within psychotherapeutic treatments – experienced by patients as well as therapists and focuses on the importance of the intentionality of bodily symptoms and how they can be integrated in the talking cure. Mentalizing the Body expands the work of Anthony Bateman and Peter Fonagy, adding the “body mode” in contrast to the popular concept of “embodied mentalizing”. Promoting mentalizing in psychotherapy while taking the body into account helps not only patients with somatoform and eating disorders, but also those whose psychological complaints have a missing connection to the body. Schultz-Venrath provides detailed insight on the range of therapies and treatments available, from individual and group psychotherapies to body, art, and music therapy, with clinical case studies and diagrams throughout.

Mentalizing the Body will be of great interest to practitioners and researchers – from psychoanalysts and psychotherapists to psychiatrists and psychologists seeking to understand the mentalization model, and all healthcare professionals working with severe mental disorders.

Reviews and Endorsements

This book is about minding the body. And embodying the mind. The author leads us through the challenging field of psychosomatic disorders and beyond. His clinical and theoretical tool is the model of Mentalizing, expanded to include the body mode as the earliest pre-mentalistic mode. This is an updated psychotherapy based on the historically strong tradition of psychosomatics in Germany, and it is an event when such professional richness now becomes available in English.
Finn Skårderud, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Agder, Norway. Founder and Chair of the Norwegian Institute of Mentalizing

Table of Contents


1. Introduction to a Complex Theme
1.1. Affects, Brain, and Body: The Development of an Affective Self
1.2. Attachment and the Development of a Mentalizing Self
1.3. On the Beginnings of the Mentalization Model
1.4. The Role of the Body in the Mentalization Model
1.5. Personality Disorders Without a Body?

2. The Body and its Relationship with Physicians and Psychotherapists
2.1. Mentalizing in the Medical History, the Initial Interview, and the First Contact
2.2. The Disappearing Body in Online Video Therapies

3. The Discovery of the Body in Early Psychosomatics
3.1. Trauma as a Transdiagnostic Affect-Regulation Disorder
3.2. The Paris School of Psychosomatics – The Pioneer of the Mentalization Model
3.3. Alexithymia and/or Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)
3.4. The Diagnostic Dilemma

4. Bodily or Mental States? On the Development of a Mentalizing Self
4.1. Intersubjective Developmental Conditions for a Body-Self
4.2. Body-Mode or Embodied Mentalizing?
4.3. When the Psychotherapist’s Body “Goes on Strike” or “Speaks”
4.4. Dimensions of Mentalization in Somatoform Stress Disorders

5. Somatization or Mentalization?
5.1. Prementalistic Modes
5.2. The Body-Mode – Clinical Examples
5.3. The Teleological Mode and the Body
5.4. The Equivalence Mode and the Body
5.5. The Pretend Mode and the Body

6. Mentalization Enhancement Therapy
6.1. Mentalization in Patients with Somatoform Disorders
6.2. Interactions That Do Not Promote Mentalization
6.3. Mentalizing in Group Therapies for SSD Patients

About the Author(s)

Ulrich Schultz-Venrath is Professor of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy at the University of Witten/Herdecke, Germany, and a psychoanalyst and training group analyst, working in private practice in Cologne, Germany. Until March 2021, he was chair of the group section of EFPP.

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