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Internal Family Systems Therapy Broché – 9 septembre 1997
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Most theorists who have explored the human psyche have viewed it as inhabited by subpersonalities. Beginning with Freud's description of the id, ego, and superego, these inner entities have been given a variety of names, including internal objects, ego states, archetypes and complexes, subselves, inner voices, and parts. Regardless of name, they are depicted in remarkably similar ways across theories and are viewed as having powerful effects on our thoughts and feelings.
In his important new book, Richard C. Schwartz applies systems concepts of family therapy to this intrapsychic realm. The result is a new understanding of the nature of people's subpersonalities and how they operate as an inner ecology, as well as a new method for helping people change their inner worlds. Called the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model, this approach is based on the premise that people's subpersonalities interact and change in many of the same ways that families or other human groups do. The model provides a usable map of this intrapsychic territory and explicates its parallels with family interactions.
The IFS model can be used to illuminate how and why parts of a person polarize with one another, creating paralyzing inner alliances that resemble the destructive coalitions found in dysfunctional families. It can also be utilized to tap core resources within people. Drawing from years of clinical experience, the author offers specific guidelines for helping clients release their potential and bring balance and harmony to their subpersonalities so they feel more integrated, confident, and alive. Schwartz also examines the common pitfalls that can increase intrapsychic fragmentation and describes in detail how to avoid them. Finally, the book extends IFS concepts and methods to our understanding of culture and families, producing a unique form of family and couples therapy that is clearly detailed and has straightforward instructions for treatment.
Offering a comprehensive approach to human problems that allows therapists to move fluidly between the intrapsychic and family levels, this book will appeal to both individual- and family-oriented therapists. Easily integrated with other orientations, the IFS model provides a nonpathologizing way of understanding problems or diagnoses, and a clearly delineated way to create an enjoyable, collaborative relationship with clients.
- Nombre de pages de l'édition imprimée248 pages
- LangueAnglais
- ÉditeurGuilford Publications
- Date de publication9 septembre 1997
- Dimensions15.88 x 1.91 x 22.86 cm
- ISBN-109781572302723
- ISBN-13978-1572302723
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Détails sur le produit
- ASIN : 1572302720
- Éditeur : Guilford Publications (9 septembre 1997)
- Langue : Anglais
- Broché : 248 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781572302723
- ISBN-13 : 978-1572302723
- Poids de l'article : 376 g
- Dimensions : 15.88 x 1.91 x 22.86 cm
- Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon : 819 en Thérapies de couple et familiales
- 2,067 en Psychiatrie
- 3,644 en Psychothérapie
- Commentaires client :
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Despite my doubts, I stuck with it, and slowly things started to happen for me, and then when my therapist mentioned IFS by name, I found this book and all these pieces started to come together. Although the book is really a textbook for therapists, I found it quite readable as a client, and so many things began to make sense about what was happening to me in therapy, and what role I needed to play in the process for the technique to be really effective. Having a big picture sense of the IFS methodology was incredibly enlightening and helpful, and I've made all sorts of progress that I think would have been much slower had I not read the book.
I think that the book would also be readable for someone who wasn't either a therapist or a client in an IFS setting, but there are limited examples and case studies in the book, so some things might be a bit vague and theoretical. Although Jay Norick's book on Parts Psychology is not as rich or intellectual as this book (and is not on IFS per se), it is a nice companion book in the sense that the Noricks book is strictly made up of case studies, and I found that it increased my comfort level with having all these named characters running around my head.
I was surprised by this book. Especially by the final chapter. I thought that Schwartz had said all that there was to say but the he surprised me by, like other great theraputic theorists have in the past, applying his theories to wider society and theorising how internal family systems may have been affected by the modern Western ideals.