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Literature Criticism
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThere are many misunderstandings regarding the concepts of tolerance and respect. This paper will explore its use in existential psychotherapy, proving that tolerance is insufficient and respect is necessarily required...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMotherhood is laden with age-old expectations and social messaging which are often unconsciously internalised or even positively embraced. This essay explores the crisis that can arise when one's experience fails to...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLittle guidance exists for the phenomenological conduct of a literature review within qualitative research. Here I reimagine literature-reviewing from first principles as a phenomenological enterprise central to the...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMetaphysical Animals: How four women brought philosophy back to life Clare Mac Cumhaill & Rachael Wiseman. 2022. London: Chatto & Windus. In 1926, the Countess of Bathurst complained that women had completely spoilt...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis paper explores the challenge racism presents to our ability to engage successfully with our clients. With the recent focus on anti-racism and psychological research on unconscious racial bias, our understanding of...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedCBT is a form of therapy that offers 'change' as an outcome, but it says little about how that change comes about. Eugene Gendlin's 'philosophy of the implicit' is offered as a possible contribution to philosophies of...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe heart of Daseinsanalysis is ethical. Each daseinsanalytic couple engages in a conjoint implicit or explicit quest for ethics, a search for the ec-static nature of being human from which originary ethics spring. Key...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Red of My Blood: A death and life story Clover Stroud. 2022. London: Penguin Books. I have read a lot of good books (and some less worthy too) but seldom does the universe place the one I need in my hands at the...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis paper seeks to address the 'black hole' in the literature on addiction: the experience of drunkenness. Intoxication is the starting point for addiction. It is the spell that bewitches addicts. Using the...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe following publications and films have been received for possible review. People who wish to be included in the list of book reviewers for Existential Analysis for these or other publications are requested to e-mail...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis open letter proposes, unsuccessfully, that Professor Friedrich-Wilhelm von Herrmann rather than Professor Peter Trawny should edit the Gesamtausgabe edition of Heidegger's Zollikoner Seminare. Key Words...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Touch Taboo in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life Tamar Swade. 2020. London: Routledge. My therapist has, over seven years, offered touch and I have found it, variously, powerfully healing, ordinary and terrifying....
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis paper seeks to draw the reader in to experience the imminence of encounter in Merleau Ponty's Chiasm. As we experience his philosophy, we become enmeshed, both moving and being moved by what we read. What does this...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedA Matter of Death and Life: Love, loss and what matters in the end Irvin D. Yalom & Marilyn Yalom. 2021. London: Piatkus. I am unsure how to start this review as there is something too confronting if I simply write...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThird culture kids (TCKs) are children who have spent a significant amount of their developmental years outside of their parents' culture(s), normally due to the mobility of their parents' jobs (such as diplomats,...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSince the last issue, with the invasion of Ukraine, the world has taken yet another lurch into instability and chaos. Should we be surprised? Perhaps it is not a coincidence, but readers may have noticed that the word...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMedard Boss (1903-1990), the founder of therapeutic daseinanalysis (Daseinsanalyse), introduced into existential analysis Carlos Alberto Seguin's notion of the therapeutic eros. This, the effective element of...
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From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMedard Boss and the Promise of Therapy Miles Groth. 2020. London: Free Association Books. Miles Groth is Emeritus Professor of Psychology, and, since 2021, founder and president of the American Daseinsanalytic...