Between Therapist and Client: The New Relationship

by Michael Kahn

Paperback, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

616.8914

Collection

Publication

W H Freeman & Co (1997), Edition: Revised, 199 pages

Description

Perhaps the most important aspect of the therapeutic process is the relationship between therapist and client. For years, two major schools of thought have strongly disagreed about what the nature of that relationship should be. The humanists emphasized warmth and empathy. The psychoanalysts kept a neutral, cool distance. Recently, however, the beginnings of a reconciliation between these traditions have opened new possibilities for the way therapists relate to clients. InBetween Therapist and Client, Michael Kahn shows why this new consensus is promising. Beginning with Freud's discovery of transference, Kahn traces the history of the clinical relationship from Carl Rogers' introduction of humanistic concerns through Merton Gill's theory and technique of transference analysis, to the pioneering work of Heinz Kohut, who has most successfully brought together psychoanalytic and humanistic thought. Using vivid examples from his own practice, Kahn shows how a coherent synthesis of these various approaches leads to the most successful clinical relationships. Completely updated with greater discussion of ethics and countertransference, the new edition ofBetween Therapist and Client is essential reading for those in psychotherapy both therapist and client.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1991

Physical description

192 p.; 5.5 x 0.75 inches

ISBN

0716730731 / 9780716730736
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