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Relational Being
von Kenneth J Gergen
Verlag: Hurst & Co.
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-530538-8
Erschienen am 30.07.2009
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 241 mm [H] x 166 mm [B] x 35 mm [T]
Gewicht: 780 Gramm
Umfang: 448 Seiten

Preis: 91,00 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

  • Prologue: Toward a New Enlightenment

  • Part I. From Bounded to Relational Being

  • 1: Bounded Being

  • 2: In the Beginning is the Relationship

  • 3: The Relational Self

  • 4: The Body as Relationship: Emotion, Pleasure and Pain

  • Part II. Relational Being in Everyday Life

  • 5: Multi-being and the Adventure of Everyday Life

  • 6: Bonds, Barricades, and Beyond

  • Part III. Relational Being in Practice

  • 7: Knowledge as Co-Creation

  • 8: Education in a Relational Key

  • 9: Therapy as Relational Recovery

  • 10: Organizing: The Precarious Balance

  • Part IV. From the Moral to the Sacred

  • 11: Beyond Moral Pluralism

  • 12: All Our Relations, Approaching the Sacred

  • Epilogue: The Coming of Relational Consciousness

  • Index



This book builds on two current developments in psychology scholarship and practice. The first centers on broad discontent with the individualist tradition in which the rational agent, or autonomous self, is considered the fundamental atom of social life. Critique of individualism spring not only from psychologists working in the academy, but also from communities of therapy and counseling. The second, and related development from which this work builds, is the search for alternatives to individualist understanding. Thus, therapists such as Steve Mitchell, along with feminists at the Stone Center, expand the psychoanalytic tradition to include a relational orientation to therapy.
The present volume will give voice to the critique of individualism, but its major thrust is to develop and illustrate a far more radical and potentially exciting landscape of relational thought and practice that now exists. Most existing attempts to build a relational foundation remain committed to a residual form of individualist psychology. The present work carves out a space of understanding in which relational process stands prior to the very concept of the individual. More broadly, the book attempts to develop a thoroughgoing relational account of human activity. In doing so, Gergen reconstitutes 'the mind' as a manifestation of relationships and bears out these ideas in a range of everyday professional practices, including family therapy, collaborative classrooms, and organizational psychology.


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