We regret to say we are unable to supply this volume at a price that comes close to what IGH offers individuals. Yes, it would be so much easier for you if we could! This institute does offer this book as an open access title here . This book gathers proceedings from a conference of more than 1000 participants from across the world: the first joint AAGT (Association for the Advancement of Gestalt Therapy) and EAGT (European Association for Gestalt Therapy) conference – with the organizational support of the Italian association, the SIPG (Società Italiana Psicoterapia Gestalt). The conference theme, “The Aesthetic of Otherness in a Desensitized World,” expressed how the interests of the international Gestalt therapy communities converged in the last few years. This theme brought together three principal concepts from the wide range of developments in Gestalt therapy literature, practice and teaching. They were the “aesthetic values in psychotherapy,” our “interest in the other” and our concern for “changes in society”. What new ways have Gestalt psychotherapists developed that help clinicians to understand and address the needs of this world where we live? Seventy-two authors have contributed different types of articles – workshop narratives, panel or plenary presentations, and didactic papers. Now, looking over the table of contents of this book, seeing all the countries where the authors live and practice, we are especially happy and proud of our work of editors. As in the international conference at the crossroads of civilizations, you will “hear” different voices as you read different styles: a wonderful experience in which people transcended professional, personal and theoretical differences – to meet and value the otherness of the other. The major success of this conference confirmed that Gestalt therapy is a lively and developing approach well-grounded in theory and practice, addressing itself more and more to research. Dear readers, welcome to what has been called the “Taormina wave”! From the Introduction by the Editors Contents: Introduction, by the Editors Plenaries A. My Other’s Keeper: Resources for the Ethical Turn in Psychotherapy, by Donna M. Orange Comment, by Dan Bloom, Lynne Jacobs, Margherita Spagnuolo Lobb B. A Gestalt Research Program: Politics and Purity, by Leslie Greenberg, introduced by Jan Roubal C. Atmospheres and Pathic Aesthetics, by Tonino Griffero Comment, by Monica Alvim Botero, Gianni Francesetti, Jean-Marie Robine Workshops 1. Hunger for Relationship. From Desensitizing One’s Own Bodily Boundaries to Contacting the Other. A Gestalt Vision of Binge Eating Disorder Related to Obesity, by Silvia Alaimo (Italy) 2. Embodied Interventions and Experiments as Body-to-Body communication within a Relational Gestalt Approach, by Julianne Appel-Opper (Germany) 3. Please Mind the Gap, by Despoina Balliou, Exarmenia Pappa (Greece) 4. Evil: The Sight That Cannot Be Seen; the Speaking That Cannot Be Said, by Dan Bloom (USA) 5. The Aesthetics of Holding Space for Women, by Ann Bowman, Gail Feinstein (USA) 6. Gifts from the Underworld: Restoring Self, Other, and Field, by Rosie Burrows (Ireland) 7. Bodies, Images and Stories. How To Meet and Sensitize the Other in the Co-created Field, by Michele Cannavò, Jelena Zeleskov Doric (Italy-Australia) 8. Between You and Me, by Emilyn Claid (England) 9. Unique Adaptations of Methods from Psychodrama, Movement, and Couples and Family Therapy, by Victor Daniels (USA) 10. Soma-aesthetic Group Therapy: Moving Bodies, Changing Lives, by Billy Desmond (Ireland) 11. Falling Through the Bottom, Grounding in Bottomlessness, by Marianne De Wulf (Belgium) 12. What Does a Group Need To Become a Group. What Supports Individuals To Take the Risk of Contact in a Group?, by Ulla Diltsch, Günther Kuhn-Ditzelmüller (Austria) 13. The Aesthetic of Otherness: Creative Processes in Education, by Claude Falgas (France) 14. World View of Ancient Mexican: Reflections on the Gestalt Theory, by Claudia Fernández Santoyo (Mexico) 15. Correlations of Gestalt Effectiveness Measurement Instrument (GIRL) with Psychiatric Diagnoses in Clinical Settings, by Susan Grossman, Alan Cohen (USA) 16. Presence, Rupture And Repair: At The Edges Of Contact, by Belinda Harris, Deborah Lane (UK) 17. The Aesthetic of Otherness. Gender as Other, by Di Hodgson (UK) 18. Relationships with Talent: Some Reflections on a Workshop in Progress, by Gerrie Hughes, Piergiulio Poli (UK Italy) 19. The Experience of Relationship in the Argentine Tango: “Haptics” Concept and Gestalt Experience Cycle, by Lina Jurkstaite-Pacesiene, Alvydas Soraka, Daina Milikauskiene, Kaylyn Kretschmer, Laima Sapezinskiene (Lithuania-Canada) 20. Existential Dimension of Supervision: Supervision of Psychotherapeutic Practice, by Elena Kaliteevskaya (Russia) 21. Infinite Desire in a Finite World: How Sharing Supports Belongingness, by Antonia Konstantinidou, Fotini Maroglou, Georgios Giaglis, Katerina Manolaki, Katerina Siampani (Greece) 22. The Outcome’s Research in Gestalt Therapy: the SIPG Project, by Roberta La Rosa, Silvia Tosi (Italy) 23. Aging and Beauty, Living and Dying: Through a Gestalt Lens, by Madelon Rudman Clark, Anne Leibig (USA) 24. Model of Diagnostics of Eating Disorders in Gestalt Approach, by Irina Lopatukhina (Russia) 25. Aesthetics of Contact and Alzheimer’s Disease: Which Support in a Desensitized World?, by Grace Maiorana (Italy) 26. The Beauty of Contact in “Chronic Situations”. Gestalt Therapy in Long-term Therapeutical Relations, by Riane Malfait (Belgium) 27. The Aesthetics of Otherness. The Communicative Dimension of the Felt Body: Introducing the New Phenomenology of Hermann Schmitz, by Friedhelm Matthies (Germany) 28. Fear and Seduction in Encountering the Other, by Alessandra Merizzi (Italy) 29. The Awarness and Responsability in a Desensitized World: the Challenge of Gestalt Therapy Here and Now, by Pilar Ocampo (Mexico) 30. Dancing the Aesthetics of Otherness, by Peter Philippson (UK) 31. Gestalt Approach in Support During and after Traumatic Experience, by Jasenka Pregrad (Croatia) 32. “Sib Dimension”: the Post Modern Experience of Siblinglike Relationships, by Alessia Repossi (Italy) 33. How Retrospective Client Interviewing Can Inform Psychotherapists’ Practice, by Jan Roubal, Tomáš Rihácek, Roman Hytych, Rolf Sandell (Czech Republic-Sweden) 34. Art in Supervision: Working with Professional Impasses and Family Themes, by Sandra Salomão Carvalho (Brazil) 35. A Clinical Experience with Suffering from Gambling Disorder. A Gestalt Therapy Approach, by Giovanna Silvestri (Italy) 36. Figure and Ground Experiences of the Self. Integrating Development and Psychopathology in Research and Clinical Practice, by Margherita Spagnuolo Lobb (Italy) 37. Undoing the Splits: A Relational Field Perspective on Trauma, by Miriam Taylor (UK) 38. The Eyes in Which I Was Mirrored: Eros, Sexuality and the Illusional Presence of the Other, by Petros Theodoru (Greece) 39. Spontaneity and Intentionality of Contact: A Modality of Working with Children, Their Parents and Their World, by Silvia Tosi (Italy) 40. Addictive Experiences and Gestalt Therapy: A(n) (Im)possible Relationship?, by Maya Van Zelst (Belgium) 41. Every Creativity Is Worth a Psychotherapy. The Architecture of Beauty in Everyday Life, by Alessandra Vela, Rosa Salvo (Italy) 42. Professional Competencies as Qualitative Inspirations for the Gestalt Therapist, by Ivana Vidakovic, Beatrix Wimmer (Serbia-Austria) 43. Defining Competencies: Heresy or Bringing Out an Intrinsic Quality of Gestalt Therapy?, by Andreas Weichselbraun (UK) 44. Every Creativity is Worth a Psychotherapy. The Beauty of Words, by Yianna Yiamarelou (Greece) Biographies Conference Planning Committee Conference Program Photo Gallery |