The Embodied Self: Movement and Psychoanalysis

Author:   Katya Bloom
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367327804


Pages:   244
Publication Date:   31 July 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Embodied Self: Movement and Psychoanalysis


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Overview

By integrating principles from her background as a movement psychotherapist and movement analyst with key concepts from contemporary psychoanalysis, the author offers a new perspective on exploring the interrelationships between nonverbal and verbal 'articulation' in any therapy setting. The Embodied Self provides a practical and experi

Full Product Details

Author:   Katya Bloom
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.458kg
ISBN:  

9780367327804


ISBN 10:   0367327805
Pages:   244
Publication Date:   31 July 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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 Contents

Foreword -- Preface -- Overview and Theory -- Laying the groundwork -- The language of movement: embodying psychic processes -- On the meaning of the body from a psychoanalytic perspective -- Embodied attentiveness: a synthesis of frameworks -- Psychoanalytic Observational Studies -- Introduction -- One infant's manic manipulation of space and time -- The infant's language -- Falling into space -- The social arena of the nursery -- Clinical Case Studies -- Introduction -- “I don't know where I come from” -- “I don't know where I'm going” -- Signals from the solar plexus -- Summary of Part III -- Conclusions

Reviews

The Embodied Self is a remarkable work written with the sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence only such a brilliant movement artist as Katya Bloom could bring to it. It speaks with equal relevance to both the informed lay person and the advanced scholar. Bloom has achieved a three dimensional work that includes inviting conscious shifts into the reader's bodily experience while reading. In describing her patient-therapist interactions with such artistry, Bloom enables us to live the experience and achieve embodied knowledge. Most importantly, Bloom provokes, incites and leaves one with many questions. I experienced many paragraphs as open invitations for intense discussion. This book informs and inspires. It is an invaluable resource for dance movement therapists, movement analysts and students of both. Readers will be truly moved! --Virginia Reed, President of the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies Faculty, Dance Movement Therapy Program In every analysis one has to arrive at the body-self if one wants to achieve deep and enduring change.' (Rey, 1994). Combining her understanding of movement therapy and psychoanalysis in writing The Embodied Self, Katya Bloom beautifully describes ways of sinking into this body-self to discover the most painful, repressed and neglected layers of the infantile psyche. This highly recommended book is essential reading for therapists and hospital professionals who need to develop more comprehensive understanding of the often neglected primitive spontaneous gestures of the body-self which are not yet able to be put into verbal dialogues. --Dr Jeanne Magagna, Ellern Mede Centre for Eating Disorders; Head of Psychotherapy Services Written with sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence, Bloom's rigorous attention to movement qualities, posture and gesture, and embodied imagery combine here with theoretical frameworks in both object relations and dance/movement therapy theory, making this book a valuable clinical tool. --American Journal of Dance Therapy Katya Bloom's newly published volume The Embodied Self--Movement and Psychoanalysis is most surely the book Dance and Movement Psychotherapists have all been waiting for. So many of us who explore and navigate in that emotional area between words and physical experience are aware of the numerous links between these two traditions of understanding and communicating about feeling. Never before have the strands of free association in movement and the theory of psychoanalysis been brought together in quite this imaginative way or articulated with such clarity. --Association of Dance Movement Therapy Newsletter Bloom's book is highly recommended for dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists, authentic movement practitioners and clinicians who respect and value the place of body and movement in the psychotherapeutic encounter, as well as those clinicians and psychoanalysts who utilize an object relations framework. This volume is particularly important for those dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists and Authentic Movement practitioners whose theoretical background is steeped in psychodynamic theory or psychoanalytically-informed....Bloom's work opens new pathways for cross-fertilization between the geographically-bound fields of dance/movement therapy in England and United States. It is a rich offering which could prompt fruitful collaborations between the two. The first book to describe the usage of effort theory within a psychoanalytically informed clinical work, Bloom's Embodied Self enriches our understanding of both theories and gives us ample breadth to integrate them into our clinical practice. --Arts in Psychotherapy This book should be required reading for students in psychoanalytic training as well as for those being trained in somatic and movement therapy. --PsycCritiques Katya Bloom, movement psychotherapist, has created a uniquely valuable exploration into the relationship between body, mind and emotions in her book, The Embodied Self. Primarily an overview of how dance movement therapy and psychoanalysis can inform and benefit each other, Bloom's book takes the reader into a fascinating exploration of how the language of movement can enhance therapy for both infants and adults....Bloom's work on transference will significantly advance the understanding of the therapeutic community in these areas and is a worthy addition to the field. --Psychotherapy and Politics International [The Embodied Self] serves as an important source for the experienced professional in either [psychoanalysis or movement analysis]. The content is complex, rich, and potentially challenging to current ways of clinical thinking. -- (03/01/2008) Katya Bloom, dancer and clinical movement psychotherapist, is bilingual, fluent in the languages of body and mind. Her present work, The Embodied Self, explores the language of emotion as manifested in the body...[This book] teaches us grammar, and we become adept at speaking with our bodies and our minds in the art and science of healing. --Lynn Somerstein, PhD


In every analysis one has to arrive at the body-self if one wants to achieve deep and enduring change.' (Rey, 1994). Combining her understanding of movement therapy and psychoanalysis in writing The Embodied Self, Katya Bloom beautifully describes ways of sinking into this body-self to discover the most painful, repressed and neglected layers of the infantile psyche. This highly recommended book is essential reading for therapists and hospital professionals who need to develop more comprehensive understanding of the often neglected primitive spontaneous gestures of the body-self which are not yet able to be put into verbal dialogues. --Dr Jeanne Magagna, Ellern Mede Centre for Eating Disorders; Head of Psychotherapy Services The Embodied Self is a remarkable work written with the sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence only such a brilliant movement artist as Katya Bloom could bring to it. It speaks with equal relevance to both the informed lay person and the advanced scholar. Bloom has achieved a three dimensional work that includes inviting conscious shifts into the reader's bodily experience while reading. In describing her patient-therapist interactions with such artistry, Bloom enables us to live the experience and achieve embodied knowledge. Most importantly, Bloom provokes, incites and leaves one with many questions. I experienced many paragraphs as open invitations for intense discussion. This book informs and inspires. It is an invaluable resource for dance movement therapists, movement analysts and students of both. Readers will be truly moved! --Virginia Reed, President of the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies Faculty, Dance Movement Therapy Program Katya Bloom, movement psychotherapist, has created a uniquely valuable exploration into the relationship between body, mind and emotions in her book, The Embodied Self. Primarily an overview of how dance movement therapy and psychoanalysis can inform and benefit each other, Bloom's book takes the reader into a fascinating exploration of how the language of movement can enhance therapy for both infants and adults....Bloom's work on transference will significantly advance the understanding of the therapeutic community in these areas and is a worthy addition to the field. --Psychotherapy and Politics International Written with sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence, Bloom's rigorous attention to movement qualities, posture and gesture, and embodied imagery combine here with theoretical frameworks in both object relations and dance/movement therapy theory, making this book a valuable clinical tool. --American Journal of Dance Therapy Katya Bloom's newly published volume The Embodied Self--Movement and Psychoanalysis is most surely the book Dance and Movement Psychotherapists have all been waiting for. So many of us who explore and navigate in that emotional area between words and physical experience are aware of the numerous links between these two traditions of understanding and communicating about feeling. Never before have the strands of free association in movement and the theory of psychoanalysis been brought together in quite this imaginative way or articulated with such clarity. --Association of Dance Movement Therapy Newsletter Bloom's book is highly recommended for dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists, authentic movement practitioners and clinicians who respect and value the place of body and movement in the psychotherapeutic encounter, as well as those clinicians and psychoanalysts who utilize an object relations framework. This volume is particularly important for those dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists and Authentic Movement practitioners whose theoretical background is steeped in psychodynamic theory or psychoanalytically-informed....Bloom's work opens new pathways for cross-fertilization between the geographically-bound fields of dance/movement therapy in England and United States. It is a rich offering which could prompt fruitful collaborations between the two. The first book to describe the usage of effort theory within a psychoanalytically informed clinical work, Bloom's Embodied Self enriches our understanding of both theories and gives us ample breadth to integrate them into our clinical practice. --Arts in Psychotherapy This book should be required reading for students in psychoanalytic training as well as for those being trained in somatic and movement therapy. --PsycCritiques [The Embodied Self] serves as an important source for the experienced professional in either [psychoanalysis or movement analysis]. The content is complex, rich, and potentially challenging to current ways of clinical thinking. -- (03/01/2008) Katya Bloom, dancer and clinical movement psychotherapist, is bilingual, fluent in the languages of body and mind. Her present work, The Embodied Self, explores the language of emotion as manifested in the body...[This book] teaches us grammar, and we become adept at speaking with our bodies and our minds in the art and science of healing. --Lynn Somerstein, PhD


"""[The Embodied Self] serves as an important source for the experienced professional in either [psychoanalysis or movement analysis]. The content is complex, rich, and potentially challenging to current ways of clinical thinking.""-- (03/01/2008) ""Bloom's book is highly recommended for dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists, authentic movement practitioners and clinicians who respect and value the place of body and movement in the psychotherapeutic encounter, as well as those clinicians and psychoanalysts who utilize an object relations framework. This volume is particularly important for those dance/movement therapists, body psychotherapists and Authentic Movement practitioners whose theoretical background is steeped in psychodynamic theory or psychoanalytically-informed....Bloom's work opens new pathways for cross-fertilization between the geographically-bound fields of dance/movement therapy in England and United States. It is a rich offering which could prompt fruitful collaborations between the two. The first book to describe the usage of effort theory within a psychoanalytically informed clinical work, Bloom's Embodied Self enriches our understanding of both theories and gives us ample breadth to integrate them into our clinical practice.""--Arts in Psychotherapy ""Katya Bloom, movement psychotherapist, has created a uniquely valuable exploration into the relationship between body, mind and emotions in her book, The Embodied Self. Primarily an overview of how dance movement therapy and psychoanalysis can inform and benefit each other, Bloom's book takes the reader into a fascinating exploration of how the language of movement can enhance therapy for both infants and adults....Bloom's work on transference will significantly advance the understanding of the therapeutic community in these areas and is a worthy addition to the field.""--Psychotherapy and Politics International ""Katya Bloom's newly published volume The Embodied Self--Movement and Psychoanalysis is most surely the book Dance and Movement Psychotherapists have all been waiting for. So many of us who explore and navigate in that emotional area between words and physical experience are aware of the numerous links between these two traditions of understanding and communicating about feeling. Never before have the strands of free association in movement and the theory of psychoanalysis been brought together in quite this imaginative way or articulated with such clarity.""--Association of Dance Movement Therapy Newsletter ""This book should be required reading for students in psychoanalytic training as well as for those being trained in somatic and movement therapy.""--PsycCritiques ""Written with sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence, Bloom's rigorous attention to movement qualities, posture and gesture, and embodied imagery combine here with theoretical frameworks in both object relations and dance/movement therapy theory, making this book a valuable clinical tool.""--American Journal of Dance Therapy ""In every analysis one has to arrive at the body-self if one wants to achieve deep and enduring change.' (Rey, 1994). Combining her understanding of movement therapy and psychoanalysis in writing The Embodied Self, Katya Bloom beautifully describes ways of sinking into this body-self to discover the most painful, repressed and neglected layers of the infantile psyche. This highly recommended book is essential reading for therapists and hospital professionals who need to develop more comprehensive understanding of the often neglected primitive spontaneous gestures of the body-self which are not yet able to be put into verbal dialogues.""--Dr Jeanne Magagna, Ellern Mede Centre for Eating Disorders; Head of Psychotherapy Services ""The Embodied Self is a remarkable work written with the sensitivity and kinesthetic intelligence only such a brilliant movement artist as Katya Bloom could bring to it. It speaks with equal relevance to both the informed lay person and the advanced scholar. Bloom has achieved a three dimensional work that includes inviting conscious shifts into the reader's bodily experience while reading. In describing her patient-therapist interactions with such artistry, Bloom enables us to live the experience and achieve embodied knowledge. Most importantly, Bloom provokes, incites and leaves one with many questions. I experienced many paragraphs as open invitations for intense discussion. This book informs and inspires. It is an invaluable resource for dance movement therapists, movement analysts and students of both. Readers will be truly moved!""--Virginia Reed, President of the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies Faculty, Dance Movement Therapy Program ""Katya Bloom, dancer and clinical movement psychotherapist, is ""bilingual,"" fluent in the languages of body and mind. Her present work, The Embodied Self, explores the language of emotion as manifested in the body...[This book] teaches us grammar, and we become adept at speaking with our bodies and our minds in the art and science of healing.""--Lynn Somerstein, PhD"


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Bloom, Katya

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