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Informationen zum Autor By Ronald A. Moline Klappentext This book provides an extensive narrative on the successful treatment of a patient whose syndrome of dissociative identity disorder (multiple personality disorder) emerged in the course of therapy, and a thoughtful examination and critique of the contemporary literature, pro and con, about the authenticity of this syndrome. Zusammenfassung This book provides an extensive narrative on the successful treatment of a patient whose syndrome of dissociative identity disorder (multiple personality disorder) emerged in the course of therapy! and a thoughtful examination and critique of the contemporary literature! pro and con! about the authenticity of this syndrome. Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsPrefaceSECTION I - CLINICALChapter One: "The therapist must be alert to personal problems"Chapter Two: "It is necessary to meet and directly interact with alter personalities"Chapter Three: "Therapy can be strenuous"Chapter Four: "Nothing happened to me!"Chapter Five: "Nice life" Chapter Six: "What is wrong with my mother?"Chapter Seven: "The intense symbiotic dyads are very hard for the therapist to penetrate"Chapter Eight: "God, I'm going to miss little Claire"Chapter Nine: "It would be premature to cast the syndrome into a rigid form"SECTION II - THEORETICALChapter Ten: Psychiatric DiagnosisChapter Eleven: The Syndrome IChapter Twelve: The Syndrome IIChapter Thirteen: The Syndrome IIIChapter Fourteen: Treatment: non-psychoanalytic techniquesChapter Fifteen: Treatment: psychoanalytic perspectives IChapter Sixteen: Treatment: psychoanalytic perspectives IIChapter Seventeen: NarrativeChapter Eighteen: Neurobiological considerationsChapter Nineteen: ConclusionPostscriptReferencesAbout the AuthorIndex