Product information
€89.90
Stock: In Stock Online
Our USPs
- Free DeliveryExtended Range: Delivery 3-4 working days
- Dubray RewardsEarn 360 Reward Points on this title
Normal Child and Adolescent Development
Product information
Author:
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781585624362
Date: 30th October, 2013
Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Categories
- Child, Developmental
Description
Normal Child and Adolescent Development: A Psychodynamic Primer presents a
complete picture of mental development, informed by contemporary research and
psychodynamic thinking. Dr. Gilmore and Dr. Meersand have taught human
development to psychiatric residents, psychology doctoral students, and
psychoanalytic candidates for more than a decade, and found an acute need for
accessible material integrating recent findings in the psychodynamic literature
and psychology research with information on development as a dynamic interaction
of the growing mind (including the unconscious mind), the maturing body, and the
evolving demands of environment. The book is their response to this need, and it
is as unique as it is useful, as compelling as it is
comprehensive.
Replete with new ideas and fascinating connections, the
volume is also beautifully written and a pleasure to read. The clinical
vignettes in the text are vivid narratives that make the child at different
stages recognizable and memorable. In addition, online video illustrations
reinforce the key characteristics at each phase of normal development. In brief:
The authors begin with an introduction to the book's theoretical
orientation and end with a brief reprise of the importance of developmental
thinking in clinical practice, forming a clear framework for the authors'
perspective. The authors use familiar developmental demarcations, informed by
current thinking, to present chapters on infancy, toddlerhood, oedipal age,
latency, preadolescence, early and mid-adolescence, late adolescence, and the
still-controversial phase of emerging adulthood. The section on the oedipal-age
child merits two chapters, testament to the authors' belief in the critical
nature of this phase, which marks a momentous transition in mental development.
Grounded in the belief that an understanding of development is a building block
of clinical thinking, the book emphasizes that every patient encounter demands
familiarity with developmental concepts, as well as the understanding that past
and present are inextricably woven together, and that present consciousness is
an amalgam of all experience.
The book's multisystem approach shows the
complexity and diversity of human development. Truly, Normal Child and
Adolescent Development: A Psychodynamic Primer is a twenty-first century text,
and one that both students and practitioners in psychiatry, psychology, and
psychoanalysis will welcome as a valuable resource.