ABSTRACT

Based on the wealth of experience gathered in the forty years of the life of the Adolescent Department at the Clinic, this covers a full range of clinical work with some of the most difficult areas of adolescence, but it also gives a conceptual framework of normal adolescence and traces the difficulties that arise when this goes wrong. Facing It Out presents new work which has not previously been fully described. The book will be vital reading for clinicians whose work includes work with adolescents. The Adolescent Department of the Tavistock Clinic in its long history has been engaging with young people and their families when the strains prove too great. In this book, staff of the Adolescent Dept examine in accessible language different clinical aspects of adolescent disturbance, exploring in particular the impact on the family. The chapters look at a range of severity of disturbance from adjustment crises to anorexia nervosa and psychosis as well as aspects of adolescent development in small families and in the formation of a sense of identity. With the exception of infancy, adolescence is the most radical of all developmental periods.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

‘How Does It Work Here, Do We Just Talk?’

Therapeutic Work with Young People Who Have Been Sexually Abused

chapter 7|14 pages

The Fear of Becoming a Man

A Study of Two Adolescents

chapter 8|14 pages

‘Is Anyone There?’

The Work of the Young People’s Counselling Service

chapter 9|15 pages

The Scapegoat

chapter 10|16 pages

The Heat of the Moment

Psychoanalytic Work with Families

chapter 11|14 pages

Play, Work and Identity

Taking Up One’s Place in the Adult World