Literature DB >> 22122576

Review of Polarities of experience: Relatedness and self-definition in personality development, psychopathology, and the therapeutic process and Relatedness, self-definition and mental representation: Essays in honor of Sidney J. Blatt.

Robert S Wallerstein1.   

Abstract

Reviews the books, Polarities of experience: Relatedness and self-definition in personality development, psychopathology, and the therapeutic process by Sidney J. Blatt (see record 2008-01813-000) and Relatedness, self-definition and mental representation: Essays in honor of Sidney J. Blatt edited by John S. Auerbach, Kenneth N. Levy, and Carrie E. Schaffer (2005). These two volumes present a most impressive and fitting capstone to Sidney Blatt's very productive lifetime of almost unmatched threefold integration of (a) clinical experience, beginning with his astute observation of the strikingly different thematic preoccupations of two otherwise very similarly depressed patients whom Blatt was analyzing during his psychoanalytic training; (b) the theoretic conceptualization stemming from these clinical observations, which became the basic fabric of his lifetime major addition to our psychological explanatory universe; and (c) the painstaking systematic empirical data gathering, together with the creation of necessary-and truly appropriate-measures and instruments that, in ensemble, provide such strong data-based support for Blatt's clinically inspired theoretic harvesting. In the book Polarities of experience: Relatedness and self-definition in personality development, psychopathology, and the therapeutic process, Blatt draws upon a vast literature review of his own work with his collaborating authors-as well as a seemingly exhaustive list of contributors in all the linked and related areas. Blatt has organized his volume sequentially (after defining and describing his fundamental polarity of experience) into three logically following sections on personality development, personality organization and psychopathology, and lastly, the therapeutic process. Relatedness, self-definition and mental representation: Essays in honor of Sidney J. Blatt is put together by three of Blatt's former students, and now collaborating partners, although published 3 years earlier (2005), is best read as a supplement to, and a complement of, Blatt's own account. There are 18 chapters, about half of them by Blatt's former students who became working colleagues, and they are all well represented in Blatt's own volume as well as having ample references to papers by, and with, Blatt in their own chapters here (anywhere from a dozen references to their work together, and on up, per chapter). The other half are by eminent colleagues, at Yale University and elsewhere, contemporaries of Blatt, with shared or related interests, and some of their chapters are based on that shared interest, though usually approached from a differing perspective, and some are expositions of their own work, with only tangentially shared themes. This half is a set of most distinguished psychological colleagues, all joined in paying tribute to their admired colleague. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 22122576     DOI: 10.1037/a0015154

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychotherapy (Chic)        ISSN: 0033-3204


  17 in total

1.  Interpersonal problems across levels of the psychopathology hierarchy.

Authors:  Jeffrey M Girard; Aidan G C Wright; Joseph E Beeney; Sophie A Lazarus; Lori N Scott; Stephanie D Stepp; Paul A Pilkonis
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  2017-07-03       Impact factor: 3.735

2.  Striking the (Im)Proper Balance between Scientific Advances and Clinical Utility: Commentary on the DSM-5 Proposal for Personality Disorders.

Authors:  Paul A Pilkonis; Michael N Hallquist; Jennifer Q Morse; Stephanie D Stepp
Journal:  Personal Disord       Date:  2011-01-01

3.  When Are Therapists' Efforts to Bring about Cognitive Change Effective? Considering Interpersonal Vulnerabilities as Contextual Factors.

Authors:  Iony D Ezawa; Samuel T Murphy; Megan L Whelen; Daniel R Strunk
Journal:  Int J Cogn Ther       Date:  2021-08-31

4.  Directly observed interaction within adolescent romantic relationships: What have we learned?

Authors:  Deborah P Welsh; Shmuel Shulman
Journal:  J Adolesc       Date:  2008-11-04

5.  Clinical validity of a dimensional assessment of self- and interpersonal functioning in adolescent inpatients.

Authors:  Greg Haggerty; Mark Blanchard; Matthew R Baity; Jared A Defife; Michelle B Stein; Caleb J Siefert; Samuel J Sinclair; Jennifer Zodan
Journal:  J Pers Assess       Date:  2014-07-10

6.  Adult Attachment Ratings (AAR): an item response theory analysis.

Authors:  Paul A Pilkonis; Yookyung Kim; Lan Yu; Jennifer Q Morse
Journal:  J Pers Assess       Date:  2013-09-13

7.  Social Relatedness and Physical Health Are More Strongly Related in Older Than Younger Adults: Findings from the Korean Adult Longitudinal Study.

Authors:  Eunsoo Choi; Yuri Kwon; Minha Lee; Jongan Choi; Incheol Choi
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-01-19

8.  Attachment Styles and Suicide-Related Behaviors in Adolescence: The Mediating Role of Self-Criticism and Dependency.

Authors:  Giorgio Falgares; Daniela Marchetti; Sandro De Santis; Danilo Carrozzino; Daniel C Kopala-Sibley; Mario Fulcheri; Maria Cristina Verrocchio
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2017-03-10       Impact factor: 4.157

9.  Multigenerational links between mothers' experiences of autonomy in childhood and preschoolers' respiratory sinus arrhythmia: Variations by maltreatment status.

Authors:  Laura K Noll; Caron A C Clark; Elizabeth A Skowron
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2015-11

10.  Neural activity in relation to empirically derived personality syndromes in depression using a psychodynamic fMRI paradigm.

Authors:  Svenja Taubner; Daniel Wiswede; Henrik Kessler
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 3.169

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