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9781853029011 Academic Inspection Copy

Hidden Self-Harm

Narratives from Psychotherapy
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Maggie Turp is a Lecturer in Counselling at the University of Reading and a psychotherapist and supervisor in private practice. She began her career in psychology and social work and has worked extensively in the field of mental health. Her training in psychoanalysis began at the Tavistock Centre and was completed at the Institute for Psychotherapy and Social Studies. Maggie is known particularly for her development and extension of the work of D.W. Winnicott. Her publications include a number of journal papers and one previous book, Psychosomatic Health: The Body and the Word.
1. Introduction. 2. What do we mean by self-harm? 3. The capacity for self-care: Observations of Esther. 4. Bodily integrity and psychic skin: Observations of Esther. 5. Themes and theoretical frameworks. 6. Trauma and dramatic repetition: Working with Lorraine. 7. The skin in question: Working with Ellen May. 8. Acting, feeling and thinking: Working with Tracey. 9. A body in pieces: Working with Peter. 10. Self-harm by omission: Working with Kate. 11. Reflections on the case study material. 12. The self-harming individual and 'the system'. References. Index.

This is a very welcome text, which covers substantial ground in a way that is both scholarly and accessible. It is intended for a broad readership including teachers, police and lay helpers as well as social workers and psychotherapists. The narratives in the book can act as a stimulus to social workers and other professionals to be active in seeking to establish the reflective environment, stimulus and support required to connect helpfully and analytically with personal experience. This text can be used on a number of levels with students and qualified workers. Significantly it offers social workers and other professionals the possibility of seeing self-harm as a continuum in which we have relevant personal experience and resources. It offers a clear strategy for practice, which would support preventive and early intervention for young people and adults and is part of the growing literature that supports service users right to needs-led care.' - British Journal of Social Work

'This is an eloquent plea for revising clinical approaches to self- harm. Central to Turp's argument is the understanding of self-harm as the individual's attempt to find a way of being in her/his body - this remains a powerful argument for a more humane response to self-harming behaviours of many kinds.

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