Appealing spaces

R430.00

For a very long time healing and wholeness in caregiving and counselling were dominated by communication strategies and listening skills designed for psychotherapeutic strategies mostly based on personality theories, psychoanalyses and individualistic “self-realization”. With developments in, for example, family therapy with the emphasis on a systems approach, the paradigmatic scenario started to change from pathological thinking to networking thinking. Due to this paradigm shift, three important perspectives become imperative to enhance and broaden the scope of caregiving in the pastoral ministry of the church, namely:

  • the impact of dynamic interacting relationships embedded in ethical frameworks;
  • the value of a dialogical approach within the ontic dynamics of humane encounters;
  • the appeal of the other on human responsibility when one becomes aware that being present with other human beings in time and space, implies a metaphysical and transcendent horizon of unseen loyalties and needs.

The authors of Appealing spaces provide sound theory formation within the field and practice of contextual therapy and pastoral caregiving by focussing on three influential thinkers in this regard – Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy, Martin Buber and Emmanuel Levinas – and the impact of their theories on therapy, the value of human encounters, and the understanding of dialogue and ethics within relational networking.

An essential book for everyone involved in pastoral care, encouraging them to rediscover the challenging position and appealing space of the other/Other; the other/Other as disturbing countenance and conscience for authentic humane encounters.

SKU: 9781776160303 Categories: , , ,

Description

SUBTITLE: The ethics of humane networking. The interplay between justice and relational healing in caregiving

FORMAT: Book

PAGES: 442

SUMMARY: For a very long time healing and wholeness in caregiving and counselling were dominated by communication strategies and listening skills designed for psychotherapeutic strategies mostly based on personality theories, psychoanalyses and individualistic “self-realization”. With developments in, for example, family therapy with the emphasis on a systems approach, the paradigmatic scenario started to change from pathological thinking to networking thinking. Due to this paradigm shift, three important perspectives become imperative to enhance and broaden the scope of caregiving in the pastoral ministry of the church, namely:

  • the impact of dynamic interacting relationships embedded in ethical frameworks;
  • the value of a dialogical approach within the ontic dynamics of humane encounters;
  • the appeal of the other on human responsibility when one becomes aware that being present with other human beings in time and space, implies a metaphysical and transcendent horizon of unseen loyalties and needs.

The authors of Appealing spaces provide sound theory formation within the field and practice of contextual therapy and pastoral caregiving by focussing on three influential thinkers in this regard – Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy, Martin Buber and Emmanuel Levinas – and the impact of their theories on therapy, the value of human encounters, and the understanding of dialogue and ethics within relational networking.

An essential book for everyone involved in pastoral care, encouraging them to rediscover the challenging position and appealing space of the other/Other; the other/Other as disturbing countenance and conscience for authentic humane encounters.

CONTENT:

Preface

1. The interplay between relational ethics (Nagy) and conscience (Levinas)

2. Ethical entanglement as paradigm for a foundational contextual therapy: Exposition of Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy’s theory

3. The ethical dynamics of contextual encounters: On entering the unpredictable space of humane reciprocity

4. “The silent partner” and the founding of subjectivity (the subject) within the theoretic discourse between Nagy and Levinas

5. Retribution, forgiveness and release

6. Pastoral care within a contextual paradigm: In defence of “gratutious subjectivity”

Bibliography

Glossarial explanation of core concepts

Summary

AUTHOR: Dr Aat van Rhijn, Dr Hanneke Meulink-Korf