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Self-Agency in Psychotherapy: Attachment, Autonomy, and Intimacy (Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology)

Author Jean Knox
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
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Book Details
Author(s)Jean Knox
ISBN / ASINB0041OTAZM
ISBN-13978B0041OTAZ5
Sales Rank764,832
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

A discussion of the self, both in and out of therapy.

For each of us, our thoughts, beliefs, desires, expectations, and fantasies constitute our own sense of a unique identity.
Here, Jungian and relational psychoanalyst Jean Knox argues that this experience of self-agency is always at the heart
of psychological growth and development, and it follows a developmental trajectory that she examines in detail, from the
realm of bodily action and reaction in the first few months of life, through the emergence of different levels of agency, to
the mature expression of agency in language and metaphor.

Knox makes the case that the achievement of a secure sense of self-agency lies at the heart of any successful psychotherapy,
and argues for an updated psychoanalytic therapy rooted in a developmental and intersubjective approach.
Drawing on a range of therapeutic disciplines—including interpersonal neurobiology, attachment theory, and developmental
research—she proposes an integrated and flexible clinical approach that is based on the actual interpersonal
agency of analyst and patient, rather than any one specific theory about the human unconscious being imposed on the
patient by the analyst’s interpretations. Detailed clinical examples explore this approach.

Part of the Norton Series on
Interpersonal Neurobiology, Self-Agency in Psychotherapy deftly balances theory and practice, offering practical applications
for groundbreaking research on self-agency.