ABSTRACT

"Beyond the Anti-group: survival and transformation" builds on the success of Morris Nitsun's influential concept of the Anti-group, taking it into new domains of thought and practice in the current century. The concept focuses on anxiety and hostility within, towards and between groups, as well as the destructive potential of groups. In Beyond the Anti-group".  Morris Nitsun continues his inquiry into the clinical implications of the anti-group but also explores the concept beyond the consulting room, in settings as wide-ranging as cultural and environmental stress in the 21st century, the fate of public health services and the themes of contemporary art.

Groups are potentially destructive but also have the capacity for survival, creativity and transformation. Focusing on the interplay between the two, Morris Nitsun explores the struggle to overcome group impasse and dysfunction and to emerge stronger. By tracking this process in a range of cultural settings, the author weaves a rich tapestry in which group psychotherapy, organizational process and the arts come together in unexpected and novel ways. The author draws on group analysis and the Foulkesian tradition as his overall discipline but within a critical frame that questions the relevance of the approach in a changing world, highlighting new directions and opportunities.

Readers of Beyond the Anti-group: Survival and Transformation will be stimulated by the depth, breadth and creativity of the author’s analysis and by the excursion into new fields of inquiry. The book offers new impetus for psychotherapists, group analysts and group practitioners in general, students of group and organizational processes, and those working on the boundary between psychotherapy and the arts. 

epigraph I|12 pages

Introduction

part I|44 pages

The wider context

chapter 1|21 pages

The question of survival in the twenty-first century 1

Challenges to group analysis

chapter 2|21 pages

An anti-group perspective of organizational change

The case of the National Health Service (NHS)

part II|78 pages

The clinical setting

chapter 3|28 pages

Group analytic psychotherapy on the edge

chapter 5|25 pages

The group as refuge

Group psychotherapy in inner London

part III|48 pages

Developmental perspectives

chapter 6|23 pages

Being a group therapist

A journey through life

chapter 7|23 pages

Falling in love

A group analytic perspective

part IV|52 pages

Group analysis and the arts

chapter 8|26 pages

Group analysis and performance art

chapter 9|24 pages

Rebel without a cause

Authority and revolt as themes in the cinema

chapter 10|5 pages

Summary and conclusions

chapter 11|5 pages

Postscript