Self-structure and self-transformation in group psychotherapy. |
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Authors: | B D Cohen M F Ettin |
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Institution: | Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA. |
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Abstract: | This article first outlines a theory of self-structure as a hierarchically organized multiplicity of versions of self. It then describes self-transformation as a two-part process: (Part 1) the articulation and strengthening of individual self-boundaries, and (Part 2) the reclaiming of split-off, denied, or projected aspects of self. Clinically, both parts are products of the communicative interaction among members, the therapist, and the group as a whole. A parallel conception of group development posits that the group, as an object and as a social system, also needs to: (a) articulate and strengthen its boundaries so that it may (b) contain the sustained interdependent, sometimes conflictual, interactivity among members that is essential to the self-reclaiming process. |
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