by Salman Akhtar (Editor)
In this, the latest in a series of books examining emotional states and psychological life, Salman Akhtar and Aisha Abbasi critically discuss a concept that remains, appropriately perhaps, elusive and hard to define: privacy.
Overlapping with ideas of solitude, secrecy and anonymity, the concept of privacy poses several crucial questions for analysts. How do our ideas of privacy evolve from childhood through to adolescence and adulthood, for example, and when does the need for privacy become morbid and psychopathological? How is privacy conceived differently in different cultures and sub-cultures? Investigating the tension between anonymity and self-disclosure, the book also assesses the challenges posed to clinical privacy, as well as the analyst's own privacy, by the impact of social media and the wider digital age.
Privacy: Developmental, Clinical, and Cultural Realms represents an important contribution to psychoanalytic literature. It will be of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists in practice and training as well as to researchers interested in the concept of privacy from across the applied and social sciences and the humanities.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 252
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 02 Jul 2019
ISBN 10: 036719404X
ISBN 13: 9780367194048
Akhtar and Abbasi have brought together a number of illustrious contributors to elucidate a topic of vital importance. `Privacy' is relevant not only to psychotherapists and their patients but to all of us in our daily lives despite varying cultural, developmental and clinical definitions. All human beings have a private part of themselves that should be respected. The editors and their contributors underline and broaden the meaning of our precious `right' to physical and mental privacy. This discourse is urgently needed in this day and age in which the `right to privacy' is under siege. --Mary Kay O'Neil, Ph.D., Supervising and Training Psychoanalyst, Canadian Institute of Psychoanalysis, Toronto.