About this item
Highlights
- The techniques of psychotherapy are often given undue emphasis, slighting the importance of the psychotherapist.
- About the Author: Edward W.L. Smith has published nine nonfiction books, more than 50 essays, a memoir, magazine articles, short stories, and a good bit of poetry.
- 199 Pages
- Psychology, General
Description
Book Synopsis
The techniques of psychotherapy are often given undue emphasis, slighting the importance of the psychotherapist. Research suggests that the same techniques are differently effective when used by equally trained and supervised therapists. Not only are some therapists more effective, irrespective of the type of therapy they practice, but some, because of their personal qualities, may actually harm those with whom they work. This research reflects the vast importance of the personality of the therapist, evoking the question of how a therapist may develop personhood.
Aimed at training as well as practicing psychotherapists--social workers, counselors, psychologists, and psychiatrists--this scholarly exploration of personhood includes various models for classifying the types of psychotherapy and the place of personhood in this context, as well as a review of existing theory and research literature on specific personal therapist variables as they relate to therapy outcome. The role of traditional spirituality in the development of personhood is given particular emphasis.
Review Quotes
"thoroughly comprehensive...impressive...an enormous amount of research is integrated here. Thank you, Edward W.L. Smith, for this foundational and comprehensive theoretical work. You have done us a great service. You have moved our understanding of our personhood forward"-International Gestalt Journal.
About the Author
Edward W.L. Smith has published nine nonfiction books, more than 50 essays, a memoir, magazine articles, short stories, and a good bit of poetry. He is an emeritus professor of psychology, Georgia Southern University, and lives in Statesboro, Georgia.