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Transactional Analysis
Journal
January 2008 Abstract
Volume 38, Number 1 Coeditor: Ann Heathcote
Letter from the Coeditor Ann
Heathcote pp. 2-3 |
Introduction of New Coeditor and New Editorial Board
Members pp. 4-7 |
Acceptance Speech on Receiving the 2007 Eric Berne
Memorial Award Helena Hargaden and Charlotte Sills pp. 8-16 download the pdf |
| This article expresses appreciation to those
responsible for the 2007 Eric Berne Memorial Award to Helena Hargaden and
Charlotte Sills and then goes on to review relational psychotherapy in the
context of the wider field, including some of the principles and philosophy of
the approach. The features of the original theory are summarized in order to
locate the work within the rapidly developing field of relational transactional
analysis. |
The Role Concept of Transactional Analysis and Other
Approaches to Personality, Encounter, and Cocreativity for All Professional
Fields Bernd Schmid pp. 17-30 download the pdf |
| This article is the final exposition of Bernd Schmid's
keynote speech presented at the 2007 International Transactional Analysis
Conference in San Francisco. Schmid is the winner of the 2007 Eric Berne
Memorial Award for his adaption of the transactional analysis concept of ego
states. His role model integrates transactional analysis approaches with
systemic ideas and can be used as both a personality model and a communication
model. It expands the ego state model, describing the individual as the
portfolio of his or her roles played on the stages of his or her world.
Background information about these ideas are provided along with perspectives
that are integrated in this role model. Familiar concepts-including intuition,
encounter, empathy, humanity, and spirituality-are described from the point of
view of an integrated approach. |
Cooperation, Relationship, and Change Richard
G. Erskine pp. 31-35 |
| This keynote speech explores various aspects of human
relationships and cooperation that are dependent on interpersonal connection
and involvement. Eight principles of relational group psychotherapy and four
homeostatic functions are considered as elements of cooperation, relationship,
and change. The eight concepts of tolerance, humility, compassion,
conscientiousness, curiosity, graciousness, creativity, and optimism are
described as enhancers to quality relationships. Predictability, identity,
continuity, and stability are presented as homeostatic functions. |
The Power Is in Our Process Adrienne
Lee pp. 36-42 |
| This article is the adapted transcript of a keynote
speech delivered on 9 August during the 2007 International Transactional
Analysis Conference in San Francisco. The conference theme was "Cooperation and
Power: Relationships, Choices, and Change," and this speech relates the theme
to "process analysis" using a basic attachment model derived from George
Kohlrieser that is related to Hegel's dialectic theory and Lacan's theories of
the development of self. The dialectic of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis
becomes a model to describe the experience of physis and unification in our
cocreated process. The process of the keynote speech was intended to parallel
the content. |
"Take It": A Sixth Driver Keith Tudor pp.
43-57 |
| "Take it" is considered as a sixth driver that
accounts, both in developmental and social terms, for the introjection by the
child of Parental messages to take and own objects in an inappropriate,
exploitative, and unsustainable way. As a negative driver message, "Take it" is
considered to support the development of narcissism. It also accounts for the
integration of messages that encourage the child to impact in a constructive
and sustainable way his or her environment. The author reflects on the nature
of theory and the impact of a new contribution to existing transactional
analysis theory, as well as on a number of theoretical implications of this
additional driver. This contribution to the literature is placed in the context
of transactional analysis as a social psychology and a radical psychiatry. |
Metacommunicative Transactions Mark
Widdowson pp. 58-71 |
| This article presents metacommunicative transactions as
a collaborative relational therapeutic method for exploring the unfolding of
the therapeutic relationship in the here and now. The theoretical basis of
metacommunicative transactions and their similarity to and difference from
empathic transactions (Clark, 1991; Hargaden & Sills, 2002) is discussed.
Metacommunicative transactions are firmly located within a framework of
transactional analysis psychotherapy, and the article describes how they relate
to Woollams and Brown's (1979) four rules of therapy. The use of
metacommunicative transactions to promote insight into ego states,
transactions, games, scripts, and impasses is illustrated along with ways they
can be used to invite both client and therapist into autonomous relating. The
article concludes with practical guidance for therapists in design and use of
metacommunicative transactions in therapeutic practice. |
Understanding Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: An
Integration of Transactional Analysis and Psychoanalysis Kieran
Nolan pp. 72-86 |
| This article presents a new model that elucidates the
etiology and adult manifestation of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The
author links transactional analytic and psychoanalytic concepts of symbiosis
together with the latest neurobiological research and evidence. This is related
to Winnicott's (1949/2004b) concept of overactive mental functioning and to
illustrations from clinical work. |
Letter to the Editor p. 87 |
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