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New Models of Bereavement Theory and Treatment
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Table of Contents

Dedication. Acknowledgements. Chapter 1: Preface: New Mourning. Chapter 2: Introduction, Robert A. Neimeyer. Chapter 3: Mourning: A Review And Reconsideration. Chapter 4: Object Loss and Selfobject Loss: A Contribution to Understanding Mourning and the Failure to Mourn, Estelle Shane and Morton Shane. Chapter 5: The Psychoanalytic Understanding and Treatment of Double Parent Loss. Chapter 6: Flight from the Subjectivity of the Other: Pathological Adaptation to Childhood Parent Loss. Chapter 7: Mourning Theory Reconsidered, R. Dennis Shelby. Chapter 8: The Role Of The Other In Mourning. Chapter 9: Mourning and the Holding Function of Shiva, Joyce Slochower. Chapter 10: Self Experience in Mourning. Chapter 11: Detachment and Continuity: The Two Tasks of Mourning, Robert Gaines. Chapter 12: Some Observations of the Mourning Process, Otto Kernberg, M.D. Chapter 13: Out of the Analytic Shadow: On the Dynamics of Commemorative Ritual, Joyce Slochower. Chapter 14: New Mourning.

About the Author

George Hagman, LCSW, is a psychoanalyst and clinical social worker practicing in New York City and Stamford, Connecticut. A member of the faculty of the Training and Research Institute for Intersubjective Self Psychology, his most recent Routledge title is Creative Analysis: Art, creativity and clinical process (2014).

Reviews

"In this remarkable book, Hagman and his fellow psychoanalytic contributors bring psychoanalytic theory in line with the contemporary study of bereavement. They find that rather than an individual psychological process, mourning is interpersonal and social, and not about detaching from the dead, but rather about finding ways to preserve the bond and making sense of the death and life now forever changed. This book is a major breakthrough in psychoanalytic thought. Readers inside and outside the psychoanalytic tradition can read it as a good account of contemporary models of bereavement and therapeutic practice."-Dennis Klass, Ph.D. Author of Dead but not Lost: Grief Narratives in Religious Traditions (2005), The Spiritual Lives of Bereaved Parents (1995) and Editor of Continuing Bonds: New Understandings of Grief (1996)."We owe our gratitude to George Hagman, a wise clinical elder and humanist. His vision, writings, and his selection of like-minded contributors, brings a much-needed change to our old, dead psychoanalytic narratives of loss and mourning. Their collective work offers a vision of mourning that is open-ending, social and relational, transformative perhaps even creative, and allows for the truth of the human need for continuity of loving attachments even after death."-Donna Bassin, Ph.D. Author, artist, film-maker. Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor at New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis and private practice, New York City.

In this remarkable book, Hagman and his fellow psychoanalytic contributors bring psychoanalytic theory in line with the contemporary study of bereavement. They find that rather than an individual psychological process, mourning is interpersonal and social, and not about detaching from the dead, but rather about finding ways to preserve the bond and making sense of the death and life now forever changed. This book is a major breakthrough in psychoanalytic thought. Readers inside and outside the psychoanalytic tradition can read it as a good account of contemporary models of bereavement and therapeutic practice.-Dennis Klass, Ph.D. Author of Dead but not Lost: Grief Narratives in Religious Traditions (2005), The Spiritual Lives of Bereaved Parents (1995) and Editor of Continuing Bonds: New Understandings of Grief (1996).We owe our gratitude to George Hagman, a wise clinical elder and humanist. His vision, writings, and his selection of like-minded contributors, brings a much-needed change to our old, dead psychoanalytic narratives of loss and mourning. Their collective work offers a vision of mourning that is open-ending, social and relational, transformative perhaps even creative, and allows for the truth of the human need for continuity of loving attachments even after death.-Donna Bassin, Ph.D. Author, artist, film-maker. Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor at New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis and private practice, New York City.

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