Transference and countertransference from an attachment perspective : a guide for professional caregivers

Author(s)
    • McCluskey, Una
    • O'Toole, Michael
Bibliographic Information

Transference and countertransference from an attachment perspective : a guide for professional caregivers

Una McCluskey and Michael O'Toole

Routledge, 2020

  • : pbk
  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [108]-119) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Locating the phenomenon of transference within an evolutionary perspective, this important book develops a new form of dynamic therapy that focuses on the dynamics of attachment in adult life and will be of use to a range of mental health professionals and those at all levels in the caring and education professions. Transference and Countertransference from an Attachment Perspective: A Guide for Professional Caregivers explores the ways in which transferential phenomena can be located in the different aspects of the self that are instinctive, goal-corrected and interrelated. At the centre of the book is the idea that when intrapersonal or interpersonal systems (aspects of the self, such as careseeking, caregiving, sharing interests, sexuality, self-defence, building a home) get aroused, the behaviour that follows is only logically and meaningfully connected when the system (aspect of the self) reaches its goal. Placing this new theoretical and clinical approach within the psychoanalytic tradition, the work of developmental psychologists and the field of neuroscience, the book takes us to the heart of the clinical encounter and explores a range of issues including trauma, the effect of early misattunements, love and hate in the therapeutic relationship, burnout in caregivers, and the need for exploratory care for caregivers themselves. Building on the therapeutic modality that emerged from the research described in McCluskey's To Be Met as a Person (2005), this book provides a valuable guide for psychologists, psychotherapists, medical practicioners, nurses, social workers, organisational consultants, educators, coaches, and workplace managers. The McCluskey model for exploring the dynamics of attachment in adult life which underlies the work described in this book is currently being practised in a variety of settings and with different ages and communities. These include end-of-life care, organizations, homelessness, mental health, dementia care, children, adolescents and families, schools, pastoral work, training of clinical psychologists and attachment-based psychoanalytic psychotherapists, occupational therapy, art therapy, private practice, domestic violence, police training, GP support and consultation, nurse training and support, pain management clinics, foster carers, social workers, couple relationships, supervision of psychotherapists and counsellors, therapeutic communities, and complex grief and learning disabilities.

Table of Contents

1. Transference and countertransference from an attachment perspective: introducing the idea of a keystone system within the dynamic organisation of the self 2. The dynamics of attachment in adult life 3. One's home base: the keystone system to be addressed as the source of the transference 4. One's affectionate careseeking self: the keystone system as the source of the transference 5. One's defensive self: the keystone system as the source of the transference 6. One's internal environment: the keystone system as the source of the transference: an exploration of lack of personal narrative and the presentation of psychosomatic symptoms 7. Early misattunements re-enacted in a group context: regulating virulence in the transference and countertransference from an attachment perspective 8. When one's caregiving self is the keystone system. an exploration of data from McCluskey's work with over 800 professional caregivers who explored the dynamics of attachment in their own lives 9. Locating exploratory goal-corrected psychotherapy (EGCP), a new model of attachment-based practice within the tradition of Fairbairnian object relations and the neuroscience relational psychotherapy of today

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