Psychodynamic Techniques
Second Edition
Working with Emotion in the Therapeutic Relationship
HardcoverPaperbacke-bookprint + e-book
Digital professor copy available on VitalSource once published ?
Acclaimed for its practical guidance and candid, personal style, this instructive book is now in a revised and updated second edition. Karen J. Maroda explores the vital role of emotion processing in the therapeutic relationship and presents ways that therapists can work with emotions—both their own and the client's—to make treatment more effective. The book discusses how to become more attuned to one's own experience of a client, use direct feedback and self-disclosure constructively, and manage intense feelings and conflict in the relationship. Specific techniques are illustrated with vivid case material, including examples of both successful and unsuccessful interventions.
New to This Edition
- Chapter on transference and extratransference.
- Chapter on the ethics of self-disclosure.
- Significantly revised chapter on regression.
- Updated throughout with over 15 years of developments in theory and research.
“The process of reading the book parallels the process of a successful therapy in which one has come to engage with and trust her guide and emerges a more flexible, confident, insightful person and professional. Maroda's continued reassurances and frank openness to sharing her own vulnerabilities leaves the reader feeling infused with a sense of possibility that a fuller, deeper therapeutic relationship is possible.”
—Psychotherapy (on the first edition)
“Maroda illustrates all of the basic principles with honest and explicitly detailed case examples from her own practice....This book is an empirically substantiated, practical guide to the therapeutic landscape.”
—Division/Review (on the first edition)
“Written primarily for new therapists, this book has a broader appeal....Extends our understanding of the psychodynamic approach.”
—Therapy Today (on the first edition)
“This book is a fascinating and valuable resource for new and established therapists. By exploring and applying the guidelines Maroda offers, therapists can create a body of useful psychodynamic techniques for effective therapy.”
—The Psychologist (on the first edition)
“Maroda has something worthwhile to share with us regarding the essential ingredients of therapeutic change....This simply and straightforwardly written book is the work of a courageous, emotionally honest, skilled, and wise clinician.”
—Journal of Phenomenological Psychology (on the first edition)
“With this engaging, readable book, Maroda answers a long-standing need for a primer on psychodynamic technique. In her characteristic melding of professional and personal experience, theoretical sophistication, research findings, and plain-spoken common sense, Maroda serves up a banquet of good advice that will nourish not only students and beginning therapists, but also experienced practitioners. She keeps the focus on the practical and generously illustrates her points with clinical vignettes that exemplify the emotional honesty she so consistently recommends. I look forward to assigning this welcome text to my graduate students in clinical psychology.”
—Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Visiting Professor Emerita, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
“Trainees, regardless of their theoretical commitments, will appreciate Maroda’s practical, plain-speaking approach to common clinical challenges, along with her generous illustrations of clinical work drawn from her own practice. The chapter on 'Overcoming Our Fear of Anger and Conflict' is pure gold.”
—Jonathan Shedler, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California San Francisco
About the Author
Karen J. Maroda, PhD, ABPP, is Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the Medical College of Wisconsin and is in private practice in Milwaukee. She is the past ethics chair and a board member of Division 39 (Psychoanalysis) of the American Psychological Association and past president of Division 39’s Section III, Women, Gender, and Psychoanalysis. Dr. Maroda has published several books and numerous journal articles, book chapters, and book reviews. She lectures nationally and internationally on a variety of aspects of the therapeutic process, including the place of affect, self-disclosure, countertransference, legitimate authority, enactment, the analyst’s gratification, and the need for clinical guidelines. Dr. Maroda serves on the editorial boards of
Psychoanalytic Psychology and the
Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association and is a corresponding editor for
Contemporary Psychoanalysis. She actively encourages her colleagues to write and talk about what they actually do as therapists.
Audience
Clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, psychoanalysts, clinical social workers, mental health counselors, and psychiatric nurses.
Course Use
May serve as a supplemental text in graduate-level courses.
Previous editions published by Guilford:
First Edition, © 2010
ISBN: 9781462509591
New to this edition:
- Chapter on transference and extratransference.
- Chapter on the ethics of self-disclosure.
- Significantly revised chapter on regression.
- Updated throughout with over 15 years of developments in theory and research.