ABSTRACT
This fascinating book applies social theorist Georges Bataille’s revolutionary thinking to psychotherapy, offering clinicians a new and valuable context for practicing therapy.
In adding Bataille’s ideas to several different psychotherapeutic modalities, this book makes the notoriously obscure thinker more accessible while testing the validity of his far-reaching work in the treatment room. Through an in-depth examination of several clinical case studies, the book demonstrates how to balance an understanding of the social and historical contexts of participants with a therapeutic approach that offers empathy for individual distress. It also explains how Bataille’s innovative approach can be applied to work with couples, groups, institutions, and even one of Freud’s classic case studies. Both the content and form of each chapter demonstrate the therapeutic value of a reflexive, critical approach to one’s practice and exemplify how to write about it.
Offering an unprecedented opportunity to imagine how Bataille’s own interest in psychoanalysis and clinical psychology might have developed, this book will be of interest to both practitioners in the field and scholars of continental philosophy and social theory.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|115 pages
Psychotherapy with individuals
chapter Chapter 2|11 pages
The distance between spending and spent
part II|25 pages
Psychotherapy with couples
part III|14 pages
Psychotherapy with groups
part IV|22 pages
Psychotherapy with communities
part V|62 pages
The end(s) of psychotherapy
part |4 pages
Pandemic postscript