Abstract
This paper is written for family therapists who may be curious but sceptical about psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. It examines a number of areas of misunderstanding within mainstream family therapy discourse (diversity, authoritarianism, terminology, blame, history and separation) which, the author believes, have acted to help maintain a false coherence for family therapy through a distorted construction of the otherness of psychoanalytic therapy and, in so doing, inhibited a potentially more productive relationship. © 2006 The Association for Family Therapy and Systemic Practice.
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CITATION STYLE
Pocock, D. (2006). Six things worth understanding about psychoanalytic psychotherapy. Journal of Family Therapy, 28(4), 352–369. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6427.2006.00357.x
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