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Ay, Constanza!!! la librería de la Biblioteca LGTBIQ+ Argentina / #ArchivoPIETRO te trae algunos libros curiosos y casi inconseguibles. #CompraArchivo
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ENVIOS A TODO EL MUNDO
Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identities in Families: Psychological Perspectives
Edited by
Charlotte J. Patterson
Anthony R. D'Auelli
Oxford University Press - 1998
Traditional understandings of families incorporate the assumption that both parents and children are heterosexual. Only quite recently have psychological research and theory examined lesbian, gay, and bisexual lives within the context of families. In Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identities in Families, Charlotte J. Patterson and Anthony R. D'Augelli draw together the psychological research and examine the entire multifaceted experience of such relationships. The editors bring together the most important recent scholarship and empirical research on family relationships and dynamics, and they identify directions for future research and theory in this area.
The first section of the book discusses different perspectives on sexual orientation in families. It focuses on evidence relevant to genetic contributions to sexual orientation, and looks at social interactions and their development. Ethnic identity and family dynamics along with cultural influences on conceptions of sexual orientation and family lives are examined. The next section focuses on key aspects of interpersonal relationships within the families of lesbians, gay men, and bisexual individuals. The interactions between children and parents of different sexual orientations and a variety of intergenerational processes in lesbian-headed families are explored. The final section of the book focuses on community and contextual issues. It explores economic issues, antilesbian/antigay attitudes, social structures, and social policies that affect lesbian and gay family lives. This volume, one of the first to discuss the family relationships of gay men, lesbians, and bisexual men and women, will be of interest to psychologists, sociologists, social workers, scholars of gay/lesbian/bisexual studies, as well as laypersons.
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Not Just a Passing Phase
Social Work with Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual People
George Alan Appleby and Jeane W. Anastas
Columbia University Press - 1998
This comprehensive textbook helps social workers understand and meet the needs of lesbian, gay, and bisexual people. It outlines approaches to a range of everyday problems associated with issues of oppression, family acceptance, shame, identity development, HIV disease, and addiction.
The first of the book's three sections provides an overview of what it means to be gay, lesbian, or bisexual, and locates the text within the ecological model of social work on individual, interpersonal, and institutional levels of intervention. This section includes definitions of sexual orientation, forms of heterosexism and homophobia, and issues of community among gay, lesbian, and bisexual people. The second section covers life transitions, including childhood, adolescence, and late life, as well as sexual relationships, parenting, and life in the workplace. The last part covers the special issues and challenges of mental health, substance abuse, violence (both "gay bashing" and domestic violence), and HIV disease. The final chapter pulls together the practice concepts introduced in the book and provides a blueprint for knowledge development and dissemination in the field.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jeane W. Anastas is professor of social work at NYU’s Silver Schoolof Social Work. From 2011 to 2014 she served as president of the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), which also named her a Social WorkPioneer in 2015. In 2007, she received the Council on Social Work Education'saward for the Greatest Recent Contribution to Social Work Education; in 2011 she received the Distinguished Teaching Medal at New York University; and in 2012 she received the Feminist Scholar Award from CSWE’s Women’s Council. Sheis the author of Doctoral Education in Social Work (Oxford, 2012). As of May, 2017, she is the US Delegate for Social Work for Oxford University Press.
Body Talk
Philosophical Reflections On Sex And Gender
by Jacquelyn N. Zita
Columbia University Press - 1998
An exploration of the body as a physical, psychological and cultural construct, the essays in this text explore the tension between the physical body and the constructed psyche. The text includes a revised version of the essay The Male Lesbian by the author. Other essays in the text deal with issues such as Magic Johnson's body and the way in which a celebrity can transcend his HIV-positive status and maintain his masculine image in the face of overwhelmingly negative attitudes toward people with the gay disease. Queer hatred and heterosexual society's antipathy toward homosexuality is also considered. The essay Prozac Feminism is a discussion of whether the culture of Prozac sustains the construct of the superwoman preferred by male-dominated society.
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Acts of Disclosure : The Coming-Out Process of Contemporary Gay Men
by Marc E. Vargo, MS
EL EJEMPLAR PRESENTA ALGUNOS SUBRAYADOS
Confronting the psychological, social, sexual, legal, and political issues at stake in the coming-out process, Acts of Disclosure: The Coming-Out Process of Contemporary Gay Men uses research findings and first-hand accounts to help gay adolescents and men accept and embrace their sexual identity as an integral part of their being. Offering helpful advice and specific suggestions that will guide you through the coming-out process, this text also teaches family, friends, and colleagues how they can support and encourage you in this challenge.A roadmap through the confusing process of coming to terms with your sexuality both privately and publicly, Acts of Disclosure walks you step-by-step through the stages of coming out, the emotions involved, the potential pitfalls, and the kinds of receptions you may meet. It points out both healthy and self-destructive coping strategies and teaches you how to take responsibility for your sexuality. You will find its discussions straightforward, honest, and direct, as it broaches the following topics:
coming out in American schools
expressing your sexual identity on the job
the harmful effects of involuntary public exposure
why some parents adjust better than others to the fact that they have a gay child
the damaging effects of social myths attached to homosexuality
the emotional and behavioral reactions wives have after discovering that their husbands are gay
how to anticipate a possible "outing" against oneself and the advantages of coming out to prevent such an act
compulsory social programming that may be deeply injurious to gay adolescents
disclosing your sexual identity after the onset of AIDSGay males of all ages, parents, friends, children, therapists, psychologists, social workers, and educators who read Acts of Disclosure will realize their error in treating gay sexual identity as undesirable, shameful, or second-rate. As you turn the last page of this comprehensive and enlightening book, you will likely find yourself with an appreciation of gay male sexuality as well as with a better understanding of the complexities of human nature.
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Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians
Contemporary Dynamic Approaches
By Jack Drescher, Ann D'Ercole, Erica Schoenberg
Harrington Park Press - 2003
COMO NUEVO
Book Description
Examine gay and lesbian psychoanalysis from a variety of perspectives!
Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians: Contemporary Dynamic Approaches presents case histories of psychotherapy sessions with gay and lesbian patients, focusing on today's psychoanalytical approaches. Dedicated to enhancing the emotional, psychological, and psychiatric treatment of gay men, lesbians, and bisexuals, the book features prominent analysts with a wide range of clinical and theoretical approaches. The foremost experts in the therapeutic field address issues affecting gay and lesbian patients from psychoanalytic perspectives that respect the patients' sexual identities.
Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians reflects the significant clinical and theoretical changes therapists face in dealing with issues of gender and sexuality. New ways of thinking coexist with traditional theory as paradigm shifts in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis affect the treatment of gay, lesbian, and bisexual patients. This book provides a forum to address those changes through clinical papers and discussions.
Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians includes discussion of case reports that deal with:
gay therapists treating gay patients
countertransferential enactments of sex and gender in treatment
rethinking the meanings of homosexuality
psychotherapeutic treatment of gay male patients with AIDS
and much more!
Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians is an essential forum for the exchange of clinical information on gay and lesbian psychotherapy. The book is a valuable resource for psychiatrists, psychologists, social work therapists, psychoanalysts, and anyone interested in today's psychoanalytic approaches to homosexuality.
Table of Contents
About the Editors
Contributors
Queering the Therapeutic Dyad: Introduction to Psychotherapy with Gay Men and Lesbians
SECTION I: GAY PATIENT—GAY THERAPIST
Chapter 1. Gay Patient—Gay Therapist: A Case Report of Stephen
Chapter 2. A Place of Recognition: Commentary on a Case Report (Gay Patient—Gay Therapist)
Chapter 3. Unspoken Questions: Unsayable Answers
Chapter 4. Discussion of Gay Patient—Gay Therapist: A Case Report of Stephen
Chapter 5. Reflections on Self-Disclosure, Desire, Shame, and Emotional Engagement in the Gay Male Psychoanalytic Dyad
Chapter 6. Dream a Little Dream of Me: A Case Discussion
SECTION II: EROTIC TRANSFERENCE/COUNTERTRANSFERENCE
Chapter 7. On Lust and Loathing: Erotic Transference/Countertransference Between a Female Analyst and Female Patients
Chapter 8. Cross-Gendered Longings and the Demand for Categorization: Enacting Gender Within the Transference-Countertransference Relationship
Chapter 9. Gay or Straight? Why Do We Really Want to Know?
Chapter 10. On Homoeroticism, Erotic Countertransference, and the Postmodern View of Life: A Commentary on Papers by Rosiello, Tholfsen, and Meyers
Chapter 11. The Analyst’s Erotic Subjectivity: A Reply to Karen Maroda’s “On Homoeroticism, Erotic Countertransference, and the Postmodern View of Life”
SECTION III: GENDER IDENTITY AND CREATIVITY
Chapter 12. Gender Identity and Creativity
SECTION IV: TWO CASES OF PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH PEOPLE WITH HIV/AIDS
Chapter 13. Psychoanalytic Treatment of an Asymptomatic HIV-Positive Gay Man
Chapter 14. On Love, AIDS, and Emotional Contact in Psychotherapy
Chapter 15. Two Cases of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy with People with HIV/AIDS: Commentary on Papers by Leli and Weinstein
Chapter 16. Working Outside the Frame: A Discussion of Papers by Robert Weinstein and Ubaldo Leli
Chapter 17. Questioning Some Traditional “Rules” in Psychotherapy
Index
Reference Notes Included
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Addictions in the Gay and Lesbian Community 1st Edición
de Jack Drescher (Author), Jeffrey Guss (Author)
COMO NUEVO
Gain fresh insights into the social, psychological, and biochemical aspects of substance and sexual addictions!
Addictions in the Gay and Lesbian Community explores the unique clinical considerations involved in addiction treatment for gay and lesbian clients. Using approaches ranging from Jungian analysis to cognitive therapy to twelve-step programs, the researchers and clinicians represented here share their expertise in working clinically with drug and alcohol problems as well as compulsive sexual behaviors in gay men and lesbians.
Effectively treating addictions in gay men and lesbians requires the clinician to understand not only the basic patterns of use and abuse, but also to recognize and address the clients’special concerns. Gay and lesbian clients often face a variety of social and emotional barriers to overcoming addictive behaviors, including:
internalized homophobia leading to deep feelings of shame about their sexual needs
the need to stay closeted or face unacceptable consequences affecting work, friends, and family
the temptations of circuit parties and gay bars
feelings of social isolation and a desperate desire to fit in through use of drugs or alcohol
the interlocking role of drugs and sex, homophobia, shame, secrets, and loneliness
mainstream treatment options that fail to address gay- and lesbian-specific issues and identities
Addictions in the Gay and Lesbian Community offers both personal experiences of addiction and recovery and insightful original research into the sources and treatment of addictions among gays and lesbians. It provides scholarly examinations of successful techniques for evaluating and treating gay and lesbian adolescents, professionals, and health-care workers, as well as a discussion of a treatment center geared to the needs of gays, lesbians, and bisexuals suffering from addiction. A perceptive study of Jungian techniques for treating sexual compulsions includes an appendix written by the client giving his point of view.
Addictions in the Gay and Lesbian Community offers well-written scholarly studies, moving personal testimony, and proven, practical ideas for successful evaluation and treatment of gay men and lesbians with addictive disorders.
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Affirmative Psychotherapy and Counseling for Lesbians and Gay Men (Inglés) Tapa blanda –
de Jeffrey N. Chernin (Autor), Melissa R. Johnson (Autor)
COMO NUEVO
Affirmative Psychotherapy and Counseling for Lesbians and Gay Men offers a broad base of research, practice, and advocacy information about the special counseling needs of gays and lesbians. Authors Jeffrey N. Chernin and Melissa R. Johnson discuss universal themes as they apply to lesbian and gay clients, as well as issues unique to lesbians and gay men, including the treatment of same-sex couples and families, ethnic minority issues, and living with HIV/AIDS. They present sensible information on how to provide a safe therapeutic environment and how to interpret and apply psychological assessments.
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