Psychology, Mental Health and Distress
Autor John Cromby, David Harper, Paula Reaveyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 feb 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780230549555
ISBN-10: 0230549551
Pagini: 452
Ilustrații: 32 black & white tables, 34 colour illustrations, 8 black & white halftones, 10 graphs, 12 diagrames
Dimensiuni: 216 x 276 x 23 mm
Greutate: 1.32 kg
Ediția:2013
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Red Globe Press
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0230549551
Pagini: 452
Ilustrații: 32 black & white tables, 34 colour illustrations, 8 black & white halftones, 10 graphs, 12 diagrames
Dimensiuni: 216 x 276 x 23 mm
Greutate: 1.32 kg
Ediția:2013
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Red Globe Press
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Includes
a
chapter
written
by
psychological-service
users
a
first
for
psychology
textbook
publishing,
ensuring
that
that
students
can
gain
a
crucial
perspective
of
that
other
than
the
psychologist/clinician
Notă biografică
John
Cromby
is
Senior
Lecturer
at
Loughborough
University,
UK.
Previously,
he
conducted
research
and
teaching
at
the
Universities
of
Nottingham
and
Bradford,
and
he
has
experience
of
working
in
mental
health,
drug
addiction,
and
learning
disability
settings.
His
work
engages
with
the
ways
that
bodies
and
social
processes
come
together
to
produce
experience,
including
experiences
of
distress.
In
recent
years
this
has
meant
exploring
topics
including
paranoia,
clinical
sadness,
emotion
and
fear
of
crime,
and
experimenting
with
methods
of
jointly
analysing
textual
data
and
embodied
activity.
He
is
a
former
editor
of
the
journal
Subjectivity.
David
Harper
is
Reader
in
Clinical
Psychology
at
the
University
of
East
London
(UEL),
UK.
He
trained
as
a
clinical
psychologist
at
the
University
of
Liverpool
and
worked
as
a
clinical
psychologist
in
National
Health
Service
mental
health
services
in
the
north-west
of
the
UK
for
nine
years.
For
a
number
of
years
he
combined
work
as
a
clinician
with
part-time
study
for
a
PhD
at
Manchester
Metropolitan
University.
He
has
been
at
UEL
since
2000
and
his
research
interests
are
in
applying
critical
psychology
and
social
constructionist
ideas
to
the
understanding
both
of
distress
(particularly
paranoia
and
unusual
experiences
and
beliefs)
and
the
work
of
mental
health
professions.
He
co-authored
Deconstructing
psychopathology
(1995)
and
co-edited
Qualitative
research
methods
in
mental
health
and
psychotherapy:
An
introduction
for
students
and
practitioners
(2012).
He
undertakes
a
small
amount
of
clinical
work
as
a
Consultant
Clinical
Psychologist
in
Newham
as
part
of
the
Systemic
Consultation
Service.
Paula
Reavey
is
Professor
of
Psychology
at
London
South
Bank
University,
UK,
where
she
delivers
a
module
on
the
psychology
of
mental
health
and
distress.
She
edited
the
volume
Visual
Psychologies:
Using
and
Interpreting
Images
in
Qualitative
Research
(2011)
and
also
co-edited
two
volumes,
New
Feminist
Stories
of
Child
Sexual
Abuse:
Sexual
Scripts
and
Dangerous
Dialogues
(with
Sam
Warner,
2003)
and
Memory
Matters:
Contexts
for
Understanding
Sexual
Abuse
Recollections
(with
Janice
Haaken,
2009).
She
is
currently
working
on
a
co-authored
book
Vital
Memory:
Ethics,
Affect
and
Agency
(with
Steven
D.
Brown,
2013)
and
has
also
published
numerous
articles
on
social
remembering,
child
sexual
abuse
and
sexuality,
mental
distress,
and
embodiment
and
space,
using
a
variety
of
methodologies,
including
memory
work,
discourse
analysis
and
visual
methods.
Cuprins
Foreword
1.
From
Disorder
to
Experience
2.
History
3.
Culture
4.
Biology
5.
Diagnosis
and
Formulation
6.
Causal
Influences
7.
Service
Users
and
Survivors
8.
Interventions
9.
Sadness
and
Worry
10.
Sexuality
and
Gender
11.
Madness
12.
Distressing
Bodies
and
Eating
13.
Disordered
Personalities?