03434nam 22006134a 450 991082866880332120200520144314.097866100514721-135-48091-51-280-05147-70-203-50166-70-203-61966-81-283-54649-397866138589481-135-48092-310.4324/9780203501665(CKB)2670000000238896(EBL)183260(OCoLC)85846333(MiAaPQ)EBC183260(OCoLC)56675887(MiAaPQ)EBC5121890(EXLCZ)99267000000023889620031119d2004 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierTalking over the years a handbook of dynamic psychotherapy with older adults /edited by Sandra Evans and Jane Garner1st ed.Hove ;New York, NY Brunner-Routledge20041 online resource (305 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-58391-143-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Old and new: Freud and others / Rachael Davenhill -- Loneliness in old age: Klein and others / Noel Hess -- On becoming an old man: Jung and others / Lorenzo Bacelle -- Attachment in old age: Bowlby and others / Sandra Evans -- The old self: Kohut, Winnicott and others / Sandra Evans -- Growing into old age: Erikson and others / Jane Garner -- Group psychotherapy: Foulkes, Yalom, Bion / Sandra Evans -- Inpatient dynamics: thinking, feeling, and understanding / Roger Wesby -- Ethical aspects of psychotherapy and clinical work with older adults / Mark Ardern -- Individual psychotherapy in the second half of life / Joan Reggiori -- Brief psychodynamic therapy with older people / Sian Critchley-Robbins -- Art therapy with older people / Kimberley Smith -- Music therapy / Rachel Darnley-Smith -- Dance and movement therapy for people with severe dementia / Marion Violets-Gibson -- Dementia / Jane Garner -- Elderly couples and their families / Sandra Evans -- Sexuality / Jane Garner, Lorenzo Bacelle -- Bereavement / Rosamund Oliver, Erdinch Suleiman.How can we work effectively with older people?What contribution can be made by the field of psychodynamics?It is now recognised that older adults can benefit from psychodynamic therapy and that psychodynamic concepts can help to illuminate the thorny issues of aging and the complications of later life.Talking Over the Years begins by examining how ideas of old age are represented by the key psychodynamic theorists of the twentieth century including Freud, Jung, Klein and Winnicott. Contributors go on to draw on their own experiences in a range of settings to dePsychotherapy for older peoplePsychodynamic psychotherapyPsychoanalysisPsychotherapy for older people.Psychodynamic psychotherapy.Psychoanalysis.618.97/689Evans Sandra1761955Garner JaneFRCPsych.1719550MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910828668803321Talking over the years4201654UNINA