This book brings together over 40 papers presented at the 1992 International Construction Conflict Management & Resolution Conference held in Manchester, UK. Six themes are covered, including alternative dispute resolution, conflict management, claims procedures, litigation and arbitration, international construction, and education and the future. With papers from arbitrators, architects, barristers, civil engineers, chartered surveyors and solicitors, this book represents the first multi-disciplinary body of knowledge on Construction Conflict and will act as a unique source of reference for both legal and construction professionals.
Table of Contents:
Introduction 1. From Socialism to Pedagogy: Prelude to Adlerian Theory 2. From Medicine to Psychiatry: The Foundations of Adlerian Theory, Part I 3. From Medicine to Psychiatry: The Foundations of Adlerian Theory, Part II 4. Adler in Freud's Circle: I. The Vicissitudes of Discipleship 5. Adler in Freud's Circle: II. The Anatomy of Dissension 6. Adler in Freud's Circle: III. The Nervous Character and Its Critic 7. Adler in Freud's Circle: IV. The Psychology of Repudiation 8. The Psychologist as Pedagogue: Adler and the Education of the Child 9. The Psychologist as Prophet: Adler and Gemeinschaftsgefuehl Appendix: The Hidden Adler in Freud
About the Author :
Paul E. Stepansky received his doctorate in European intellectual history from Yale University, where he was named the first Kanzer Foundation Fellow for Psychoanalytic Studies in the Humanities. One of the foremost psychoanalytic editors in the country, he served as the Managing Director of Analytic Press until 2006. He is the author of numerous books on Sigmund Freud as well as The Memoirs of Margaret S. Mahler.
Review :
"This remarkable book is not only a carefully researched, closely reasoned intellectual biography of Alfred Adler but also much more. It is a major study in the much neglected field of non-partisan comparative psychoanalysis. The author creatively integrates psychoanalytic concepts with the views of many major intellectual figures who were not themselves psychoanalysts. The result is a provocative study of unusual breadth and multidisciplinary appeal."
- Merton M. Gill, M.D., Training and Supervising Analyst, Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis
"Alfred Adler has long been a victim of polemics - whether favorable or hostile - rather than the subject of study. Paul Stepansky corrects this unfortunate situation in this appealing and well-written book; he has rescued Adler for historical science. One need not agree with every word of Stepansky's assessment to find his book immensely illuminating. I certainly have."
- Peter Gay, Durfee Professor of History, Yale University
"Among the professional historians who have begun to elucidate the development of psychoanalysis, Paul Stepansky has for some years distinguished himself through his increasing intellectual mastery of the field and understanding of the cultural context in which it operates. Stepansky's promise is now brilliantly fulfilled in this study of the career of Alfred Adler. In Freud's Shadow illuminates the inevitable dissolution of the collaboration between Freud and his first major disciple. Stepansky's assessment of Individual Psychology as an independent system of thought and consideration of Adler's residual influence within psychoanalysis consitute a tour de force of intellectual history. This book is destined to become a fundamental text for students of psychoanalytic ideas."
- John E. Gedo, M.D., Training and Supervising Analyst, Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis
"This book is a scholarly work, the result of meticulous research and consideration, yet it is one which makes for easy, even compulsive reading, as it is so well constructed. It is not a biography, but rather explores the roots of Adler's thinking in his own intellectual and cultural background. I would recommend this book highly, not only to students of psychoanalysis, but also to those interested in the psychology of groups and in the history of ideas. It provides a particularly vivid and informative picture of aspects of one of the most productive cultures in our recent history."
- British Journal of Medical Psychology
"This book will displease ardent Freudians and Adlerians alike, but it sets a standard of scholarship and objectivity for the further elucidation of the development of psychoanalysis. It is strange that the discipline which psychologically shaped our century still fights shy of its own history. Paul Stepansky offers strong but beneficial medicine to remedy this miasma. The relatively young author of this excellent book is to be welcomed as a serious writer in a field recently dominated by amateurism and grandstanding."
- American Journal of Psychiatry