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OverviewIn June 2016, the UK voted to leave the European Union. The decision plunged the five million EU residents in the UK into a toxic abyss of fear, anger, shock and shame. Suddenly they were ‘citizens of nowhere’ in a country they regarded as home and faced having to move back to their country of origin and start life again, often without their British partners and children. In 2019, a virus born in a little-known Chinese city over-ran the entire world, causing many millions of deaths and bringing national economies and people’s usual ways of life to a standstill. So much of what we took for granted crumbled to ashes as countries locked down and families mourned their dead. In this book, leading existential theorist and practitioner Emmy van Deurzen explores how we handle such existential crises, and how and what we can learn from them to better prepare ourselves psychologically for the future. Inevitably, we will face many more such calamities due to climate breakdown and the consequent international instability, she warns. One of those five million EU citizens, Emmy had to fight for her right to stay. Here she draws on her personal experiences of such crises, the accounts of others and on her extensive clinical, theoretical and research knowledge to argue that such events need not spell the end of life as we know it. Rather, they can open the door to different, richer and more thoughtful, relational ways of being in the world. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Emmy van DeurzenPublisher: PCCS Books Imprint: PCCS Books Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.350kg ISBN: 9781910919859ISBN 10: 1910919853 Pages: 228 Publication Date: 23 June 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface, Introduction – What is existential crisis? 1. Experiencing existential crisis, 2. Brexit: shattered lives and identitie, 3. Joan’s breakdown, 4. Lucie’s despair, 5. Making sense of life and loss, 6. Existential explorations, 7. When crisis destroys meaning, 8. Surviving a global pandemic, 9. Living with existential courage, ConclusionsReviews'With a rare blend of audacity and authenticity, van Deurzen acknowledges the genuine anguish that arises when lives fall apart, whether through extreme personal adversity, system-shattering socio-political events or an ineluctable and impersonal global pandemic. Her book comes as a wake-up call amid the rumble of the mundane to reclaim our lives...' - Professor Robert A. Neimeyer, Director of the Portland Institute for Loss and Transition; 'A major contribution to thinking and writing about the impact of political phenomena on the bodies, minds and souls of individuals.' - Professor Andrew Samuels; 'The stories contain a universal message of hope, resilience and overcoming in the face of adversity. Whatever happens to you, it's what you do next that matters.' - Roger Casale, Secretary General of New Europeans. Author InformationEmmy van Deurzen is an existential psychotherapist, philosopher and counselling psychologist. She is Principal of the New School of Psychotherapy and Counselling at the Existential Academy in London and runs her own private therapy practice, Dilemma Consultancy, in London. She is a Visiting Professor with Middlesex University, for whom she directs several doctoral and master’s programmes. She has published 17 books on existential therapy and the challenges of the human condition. Her work has been translated into more than a dozen languages and she has lectured worldwide in more than 35 countries across all continents. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |