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Beyond the crisis of masculinity : a transtheoretical model for male-friendly therapy / Gary R. Brooks.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, c2010.Edition: 1st edDescription: xiii, 221 p. ; 27 cmISBN:
  • 9781433807169
  • 1433807165 (electronic bk.)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: OriginalDDC classification:
  • 616.890081 22
LOC classification:
  • B754 2010
Online resources: Also issued in print.
Contents:
The crisis of masculinity -- How psychotherapy has failed boys and men -- Therapeutic interventions outside the therapist's office -- On the doorstep-- engaging men in psychotherapy -- Male-friendly psychotherapy for boys and men -- The challenge of diverse masculinities -- A transtheoretical model.
Summary: "In this book, Gary Brooks explores the "psychopathology of men's everyday lives"-- the maladaptive strategies that men use to maintain a traditional male role that increasingly has come under assault. He then delves into the related question of why men overwhelmingly reject psychotherapy at a time when they need it the most. The key to engaging men in therapy, Brooks argues, is devising a "male-friendly" therapy, involving flexibility, consciousness-raising in men's groups and other "out-of-office" settings, and the therapist's emphasis on an authentic empathetic bond with the troubled male client to discover meaning in the client's relational pressures and problems at work, with loved ones, and, most of all, with himself. Standard therapeutic models don't work for men, Brooks argues, so therapists must be eclecticاtranstheoreticalاin negotiating therapeutic goals and tasks with their troubled male clients. The central tenets of multicultural counseling and therapy figure prominently in the transtheoretical model, as they allow the therapist to separate out and tackle peculiarly male problems that span different cultural and socioeconomic contexts. Inclusive cultural empathy and the transtheoretical model's stages-of-change framework can sustain men's initial interest in the therapeutic option and, beyond that, in a transformative relationship. In such a way. Brooks concludes, the transtheoretical model advances a hesitant male client from the level of consciousness-raising and awareness of gender role strain to the level of action and change, as the locus of therapeutic agency shifts from the therapist to the client himself"--Jacket. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).
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APA ebook

IT Carlow ebook

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The crisis of masculinity -- How psychotherapy has failed boys and men -- Therapeutic interventions outside the therapist's office -- On the doorstep-- engaging men in psychotherapy -- Male-friendly psychotherapy for boys and men -- The challenge of diverse masculinities -- A transtheoretical model.

"In this book, Gary Brooks explores the "psychopathology of men's everyday lives"-- the maladaptive strategies that men use to maintain a traditional male role that increasingly has come under assault. He then delves into the related question of why men overwhelmingly reject psychotherapy at a time when they need it the most. The key to engaging men in therapy, Brooks argues, is devising a "male-friendly" therapy, involving flexibility, consciousness-raising in men's groups and other "out-of-office" settings, and the therapist's emphasis on an authentic empathetic bond with the troubled male client to discover meaning in the client's relational pressures and problems at work, with loved ones, and, most of all, with himself. Standard therapeutic models don't work for men, Brooks argues, so therapists must be eclecticاtranstheoreticalاin negotiating therapeutic goals and tasks with their troubled male clients. The central tenets of multicultural counseling and therapy figure prominently in the transtheoretical model, as they allow the therapist to separate out and tackle peculiarly male problems that span different cultural and socioeconomic contexts. Inclusive cultural empathy and the transtheoretical model's stages-of-change framework can sustain men's initial interest in the therapeutic option and, beyond that, in a transformative relationship. In such a way. Brooks concludes, the transtheoretical model advances a hesitant male client from the level of consciousness-raising and awareness of gender role strain to the level of action and change, as the locus of therapeutic agency shifts from the therapist to the client himself"--Jacket. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).

Also issued in print.

Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. American Psychological Association 2010 Available via World Wide Web Access limited by licensing agreement s2010 dcunns

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