ABSTRACT

Self-Evaluation and Psychotherapy in the Market System examines the ways in which the competitive, hierarchical nature of today’s market system contributes to the issues that many clients bring to therapy. Instead of seeing a lack of self-esteem as the root of clients’ problems, Glantz and Bernhard argue that self-evaluation—the struggle to achieve a high opinion of self—exacerbated by the market system, leads to stress and endless self-involvement. Beginning with an explanation of the connection between the market system and self-evaluation, this volume then goes on to describe an approach to therapeutic treatment designed to free clients from the negative effects of the market system by moving away from self-evaluation altogether. This is a must-read for therapists looking for a new approach to treating clients left questioning their place in a society that encourages competition and self-involvement.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Connections

chapter 2|6 pages

Ancient Emotions in a Strange New World

chapter 3|6 pages

Children of the Market System

chapter 4|9 pages

Work

Oppression or Opportunity?

chapter 5|16 pages

Imaginary Sticks, Imaginary Stones

Undoing Self-Generated Distress

chapter 6|6 pages

Farther Out?

Some Additional Interventions

chapter 7|12 pages

Some Sad Bedfellows of Self-Evaluation

chapter 8|8 pages

A Little More on Anxiety

chapter 9|10 pages

Self-Evaluation and Relationships

chapter 10|14 pages

Illustrations from the Files