Online Learning - Lectures Series
These AAP/CONFER events are recordings of actual lectures which you might like to have attended in person, but were unable to. You can download them and make them available at any time with sound, text and pictures. A new lecture is regularly available for downloading. Subscribers also have access to a discussion forum with fellow participants.
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How does Psychotherapy work?
Start Date: Nov 01, 2004
There is wide belief in the value of psychotherapy, based on both subjective experience and the results of research. This series of fascinating lectures brings together established psychotherapists to explain what goes on in the therapeutic relationship that might account for the client or patient’s progress towards improved psychological well-being and what might be difficult about establishing this.
Sexuality
Start Date: Apr 05, 2005
This series of lectures goes to the heart of this complex subject and the ongoing project of re-locating sexuality in psychoanalytic theory and practice. The series is an enquiry into current thinking on psycho-sexuality, interlacing psychological, historical and social perspectives and aiming to increase our awareness of the sexual needs and difficulties faced by our clients or patients.
Depression
Start Date: Oct 01, 2004
In the twenty-first century depression represents an alarming and growing epidemic of misery and suffering. Worldwide there may be as many as 100 million depressed individuals. What psychological therapists are found to be most useful, and why? This multi-disciplinary programme of lectures brings online psychotherapists from different modalities to consider the nature and aetiology of depression and approaches to treatment.
Countertransference
Start Date: Jan 10, 2008
The powerful feelings that psychotherapists experience in the therapy relationship are the essence of therapy work - a barometer of object relations and affect, traditionally seen as separate from the patient’s process. Recent theorists have argued that countertransference is a product of intersubjectivity. This set of lectures is an exceptional opportunity to listen to a focused discussion on these questions.
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