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Malcolm Pines 《Group》1989,13(3-4):212-216
The group analytic group-as-a-whole approach of Foulkes privileges the concept of the group matrix. The term matrix is a metaphor for the network of all individual mental processes, the psychological medium in which they meet, communicate, and interact. The developing group matrix acts both as a container and as a holding environment for the psychic processes of the individual members in the group context. The concept of coherency is evoked to describe the process of the developing capacity of a group to be therapeutic. The concept of coherency is applied both to conscious and to unconscious mental process.  相似文献   

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The theoretical position of this paper is that the essential character of the ego-ideal, a part of superego functioning, is unconscious, universal, and functions automatically. Precursors to superego development and ego-ideal formation begin at early preoedipal levels, and derivations in adult behavior contain primitive aspects. Ego-ideal is perfectionistic and impossible to obey;therefore, projection of this phenomenon as well as its activity leads to disappoinment, anger, anxiety, depression and despair. Pseudomoral injunctions frequently rationalize and disguise early primitive aspects of unconscious superego development and ego-ideal formation. These points are illustrated by clinical material, showing the therapeutic action in the group which leads to a modification of this critical, self-defeating aspect of adult functioning.Copyright, 1987, Washington Square Institute for Psychotherapy and Mental Health, which published this paper in No. 14 of the Group Psychotherapy Monograph Series, after the paper had been presented at the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Group Psychotherapy Department, and presented by invitation at the ninth congress of the International Association of Group Psychotherapy, Zagreb, Yugoslavia, August 1986.Dr. Edwards was formerly an Associate Supervisor and Faculty Member in the Group Department at the Postgraduate Center for Mental Health.  相似文献   

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The theoretical position of this paper is that the essential character of the ego-ideal, a part of superego functioning, is unconcious and functions automatically. Precursors to superego development and egoideal formation begin at early pre-oedipal levels, and derivations in adult behavior contain primitive aspects. Ego-ideal is perfectionistic and impossible to obey; therefore, projection of this phenomena as well as its activity leads to disappointment, anger, anxiety, depression and despair. Pseudomoral injunctions frequently rationalize and disguise early primitive aspects of unconscious superego development and egoideal formation. These points are illustrated and interpreted by clinical material. The therapeutic action of the group and its leader, through the complexity of transference and projection, to help modify this critical, selfdefeating aspect of adult functioning is described.  相似文献   

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This study reports the results of a questionnaire, applied to therapists and their patients in 14 analytic therapy groups. It was found that the patients studied had an accurate perception of the group reality in the following dimensions: therapists' preferences for the members in their groups; power position held by each member in the group; and therapeutic benefit achieved by members in the group. Support was given to the existence of a relation among popularity, power position and therapeutic benefit; members who rated high in one of these variables generally were assigned a high position in the other two, and vice versa. These results suggest that patients in analytic group psychotherapy can be objective in their perceptions of the group reality, and that these perceptions are not always distorted by transference. The idea that, no matter how low-disclosing therapists remain, the patients in their groups will perceive their attitudes and feelings was supported by patients' accuracy in perceiving their therapists' preferences for members in their groups. These findings indicate the important role played by reality and the real relationship in psychoanalytic group psychotherapy.  相似文献   

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Peer and sibling history, transference, and theory construction, have been neglected in analytic group psychotherapy. One main reason for this neglect has been the belief that current psychoanalytic theory, individual and group, sufficiently accounts for the understanding of peer and sibling phenomena. Furthermore, peer transferences in the therapy group have been considered derivative of transferences to the leader. An argument is made for considering peer and sibling history, transference, and theory construction important in their own right. This argument is supported by a therapy group example. Implications for practice and theory are discussed.  相似文献   

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The current debate over the conflicting interpersonal and intrapsychic views of the analytic process may or may not help us to distinguish between psychoanalysis and analytic psychotherapy. A comparison of psychoanalysis in the English-speaking world--especially in the United States--with French psychoanalysis reveals the features that unite and at the same time divide these different psychoanalytical tendencies, both of which are the heirs to Freud's thought, in terms, in particular, of the setting (couch and chair) and of technique (interpretation, transference analysis and technical neutrality). Whereas all psychoanalytic work belongs within the framework of an interpersonal relationship, that relationship becomes meaningful only when linked to the intrapsychic dimension, which alone can open the way to the unconscious and to infantile sexuality.  相似文献   

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In group processes, acting-out has diverse functions, all of them equally important. It has an intrapsychic, interpersonal, and group dynamic function. Not only may it be understood as a form of resistance, but also in its communicative and reparative potential. The authors investigate the thesis that acting-out also contains the seed for change, thus helping patients divest themselves of pathological behavior. Using a group process as an example, this article shows how boundaries can be drawn between past and present experiences while using the communicative and reparative functions of acting-out. Unconscious psychodynamics can then be transformed from acting-out into dreams.  相似文献   

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