ABSTRACT

In this new edition Blake gives a personal account of his professional experience of working with children and adolescents over the last 45 years. Providing a wonderful integration of the conceptual and the practical, this book clarifies complex theory while giving practical advice for clinicians through a nuts and bolts description of how to interview parents, emotionally assess a child and adolescent, set up a consulting room and conduct a therapy session. The addition of chapter summaries, questions and suggested further readings provides a valuable structure to those in child and adolescent training programmes.

The author’s experience, gained from public and private work, is vividly described with the use of clinical examples to illustrate his thinking and way of working. This third edition highlights his evolution from a more traditional epistemological (knowing) approach, with its emphasis on interpretation and insight, to a more ontological (being) framework. He explores a more intuitive and unconscious way of working and argues this is more developmentally appropriate to children and adolescents. His accessible writing style transports the reader into his clinical world: a world full of fascinating stories of children talking through their play; of adolescents exploring who they are through their discussions about music, films, sport and computer games; of helping parents to understand and thoughtfully manage their child’s emotional struggles.

This new edition, an amalgam of theoretical orientations (Kleinian, Bionian, Winnicottian, relational, non-linear and neurological), draws from recent developments, both in theory and technique. It will be of immense value to psychotherapists, psychoanalysts and all those involved in the treatment of children’s mental health.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction to third edition

A plea for playing: making the conscious unconscious

chapter Chapter 1|17 pages

The analytic legacy

chapter Chapter 2|34 pages

Conceptual framework

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

Psychoanalytic observation

chapter Chapter 4|24 pages

Referral and initial interview

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Individual assessment

chapter Chapter 6|28 pages

Developmental considerations

chapter Chapter 7|11 pages

Assessment for therapy

chapter Chapter 8|23 pages

Working with parents

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

The setting, physical and mental, and limits

chapter Chapter 10|11 pages

Interpretation

A case for the abolition of interpretation to children

chapter Chapter 11|19 pages

The role of play

chapter Chapter 12|21 pages

The challenges of play

chapter Chapter 13|10 pages

Playing with transference and countertransference

chapter Chapter 14|22 pages

Interpretation, play, and transference and countertransference in practice

Paul’s story

chapter Chapter 15|12 pages

Adolescents

chapter Chapter 16|15 pages

Endings

chapter Chapter 17|2 pages

Conclusion