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Containment and Reciprocity: Integrating Psychoanalytic Theory Child Development Research for Work with Children
Barnes and Noble
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Containment and Reciprocity: Integrating Psychoanalytic Theory Child Development Research for Work with Children in Franklin, TN
Current price: $130.00

Barnes and Noble
Containment and Reciprocity: Integrating Psychoanalytic Theory Child Development Research for Work with Children in Franklin, TN
Current price: $130.00
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Size: Hardcover
Containment and Reciprocity
shows how the psychoanalytic concept of containment and the child development concept of reciprocity can be used together to inform clinical work with young children and their families. Using extracts of mother/child and therapist/child interactions, Hazel Douglas explores, for the first time, the relationship between these concepts, and shows how they underpin the quality of an attachment.
Using clinical examples from the author’s own psychoanalytic work with very young children as well as her recent research, the book explores these two concepts with important implications for psychotherapeutic technique.
will make valuable reading for all those working in the field of infant mental health.
shows how the psychoanalytic concept of containment and the child development concept of reciprocity can be used together to inform clinical work with young children and their families. Using extracts of mother/child and therapist/child interactions, Hazel Douglas explores, for the first time, the relationship between these concepts, and shows how they underpin the quality of an attachment.
Using clinical examples from the author’s own psychoanalytic work with very young children as well as her recent research, the book explores these two concepts with important implications for psychotherapeutic technique.
will make valuable reading for all those working in the field of infant mental health.
Containment and Reciprocity
shows how the psychoanalytic concept of containment and the child development concept of reciprocity can be used together to inform clinical work with young children and their families. Using extracts of mother/child and therapist/child interactions, Hazel Douglas explores, for the first time, the relationship between these concepts, and shows how they underpin the quality of an attachment.
Using clinical examples from the author’s own psychoanalytic work with very young children as well as her recent research, the book explores these two concepts with important implications for psychotherapeutic technique.
will make valuable reading for all those working in the field of infant mental health.
shows how the psychoanalytic concept of containment and the child development concept of reciprocity can be used together to inform clinical work with young children and their families. Using extracts of mother/child and therapist/child interactions, Hazel Douglas explores, for the first time, the relationship between these concepts, and shows how they underpin the quality of an attachment.
Using clinical examples from the author’s own psychoanalytic work with very young children as well as her recent research, the book explores these two concepts with important implications for psychotherapeutic technique.
will make valuable reading for all those working in the field of infant mental health.

















